Pyblosxom is a file-based weblog engine.
Project description
What is Pyblosxom
Pyblosxom is a lightweight blog system. It was originally a Python clone of Blosxom but has since evolved into a blog system of its own reminiscent of Blosxom.
Pyblosxom focuses on three things:
simplicity
Pyblosxom stores all data on the file system in plain text files. This allows you to use any text editor to create, update and manipulate entries. You can also use existing text-manipulation tools, version control, scripts, grep, … for managing your blog.
Pyblosxom can run as a CGI script, WSGI component or you can use it to statically compile your website into HTML/XML files.
Your workflow is your workflow.
extensibility
Pyblosxom has a plugin framework enabling you to augment and enhance Pyblosxom’s default behavior. Plugins are written in Python. We maintain a list of plugins in the plugin registry on the website.
Plugins aren’t hard to write. We’re happy to help you write plugins.
community
There are several hundred Pyblosxom users out there all of whom have different needs. Pyblosxom is used on a variety of operating systems in a variety of environments. We have the standard open source project fare: mailing lists, IRC channel, wiki, …
Pyblosxom is built to let you use existing text-manipulation tools without having to build the whole ecology from scratch.
Pyblosxom can be run as:
a “static renderer” and compile your blog
a CGI script
a WSGI application
You can learn more about Pyblosxom on the website.
Why you might not want to use Pyblosxom
Pyblosxom is a small open source project and while there is a community, it’s pretty small. Pyblosxom’s features are great but make it a niche blog system.
Pyblosxom is a file-based blog system. Each blog entry is a separate file stored in a directory hierarchy on your file system. By default, the hierarchy is a category tree meaning each blog entry belongs in a single category. By default, mtimes are used as the blog entry timestamp. There are plugins that change this behavior, but require extra configuration to use.
There are a lot of other blog systems out there. If it’s apparent that Pyblosxom won’t work for you, don’t force it—use something else.
Overview of Pyblosxom
Entries, categories, storage:
Pyblosxom stores everything as files on the file system—there is no database.
Each blog entry is a file.
Blog entry files are stored in a directory hierarchy in your datadir.
Each subdirectory in your datadir corresponds to a category of your blog.
Themes:
Themes in Pyblosxom are called flavours.
A flavour consists of a set of templates.
Flavours are stored in a directory called the flavourdir.
Pyblosxom comes with several flavours: html, rss20, and atom.
The website maintains a flavour registry for flavours contributed by people like you.
There’s more information on flavours and templates in the Flavours and Templates chapter of the manual (docs/flavours_and_templates.rst if you’re looking at the source).
Plugins:
Pyblosxom has a plugin system.
Plugins are written in Python.
Plugins are loaded using the plugin_dirs and load_plugins configuration variables.
The website maintains a plugin registry for plugins submitted by people like you.
For more information on using plugins, see Plugins in the manual (docs/plugins.rst if you’re looking at the source).
For more information on writing plugins see Writing Plugins (docs/dev_writing_plugins.rst if you’re looking at the source).
Project details, contact information, and where to go for help
See the website for details on the mailing lists, IRC, source code, issue tracker, and everything else.
Requirements
Python 2.5 or higher—does not work with Python 3 or higher
(optional) Sphinx for building documentation
(optional) other things depending on what plugins you install
How to install Pyblosxom
If you’re installing for the first time, be sure to read Installing Pyblosxom in the manual (INSTALL if you’re looking at the source).
If you’re upgrading from a previous Pyblosxom version, read Upgrading Pyblosxom in the manual (UPGRADE if you’re looking at the source) as well as What’s New in the manual (WHATSNEW if you’re looking at the source) which covers what’s new in this version and what you’ll need to change in your blog.
How to find comprehensive documentation
The source tarball comes with a docs/ directory which contains the Pyblosxom manual for that version of Pyblosxom.
The manual for the most current version and past versions of Pyblosxom can be found on the website.
How to join the community
Pyblosxom is written for and by people like you. If you’re using Pyblosxom, please contribute something back whether it’s reporting a bug, fixing something, adding a new flavour, blogging about Pyblosxom, telling your friends, writing a plugin, or hanging out with us on IRC.
Details on where we hang out and such are on the website.
How to report bugs, send in patches, fix problems
If you have a problem with Pyblosxom, please report it!
There are several different ways to report a bug, but all bugs should eventually make their way into our issue tracker.
Let someone know on IRC: #pyblosxom on irc.freenode.net
Send a mail to the pyblosxom-users or pyblosxom-devel mailing lists. Details are on the website.
Write up a bug report in the issue tracker. Details are on the website.
If you’re able to fix the bug, that helps a ton! Please attach a patch file to the bug report or send the patch as an attachment to the pyblosxom-devel mailing list.
When sending a patch, it helps a lot to know the details of the bug as well as how you fixed it and whether there are outstanding issues.
How to run unit tests
Tests are written with the Python unittest module and don’t require any additional test frameworks.
To run the tests, do:
python setup.py test
This will build Pyblosxom, then run the tests.
If you would like to add tests to the test suite, please do and send us patches!
Project details
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