simpleGen is a simple static website/blog generator that just does what it is supposed to do no more and no less.
I built simpleGen beceause I needed something dead simple to make my static sites, I could have used something like pelican or jekyll but I think they are bloated so hacking on the code will be some much harder, simpleGen is about 400 lines of python code.
simpleGen does not do things it not intended to do, instead it does just what a sane person wants from a site generator, TO GENERATE THE DAMN MARKDOWN (or whatever markup language you use), simpleGen does not provide solutions to deploy the static content, or providing a development server, that is another problem that I think does not overlap with the basic functioning of a static website generator.
You can install simpleGen from the Python package index using pip (I maintain this package).
$ pip install simplegen
or you could get it from github using (using the https protocol) using
$ pip install git+https://github.com/mohamed-aziz/simplegen.git
you also can install the development version from the development branch using
$ pip install git+https://github.com/mohamed-aziz/simplegen.git@development
Grab a coffee (or two if you have slow connection).
And then you want to initialize the site config, so use:
$ initsite input_dir output_dir
A config file with name sconfig.py will be generated, edit that with what suits you and your theme you are using or planning to make.
then you can write you content in markdown in the input_dir, then run:
$ makesite
to actually generate your content.
deploying your website is up to you, I myself use git submodules and github pages.
You can define any option really to use in your template, but these are the ones that simplegen knows.
Option name | Type | Default Value | Description |
---|---|---|---|
CONTENT_DIR | String | "content/" | From where to get the input |
OUTPUT_DIR | String | "output/" | Where to save the output |
PAGINATOR_MAX | Int | 20 | How many articles per page |
MINIFY_HTML | Boolean | False | Minify the ouptput HTML |
ASSETS_PATH | String | None | The path of the user assets |
simpleGen uses jinja2 as its templating language so making themes should be fairly easy.
This is the theme I made for my technical blog
and this is my sconfig.py file:
CONTENT_DIR = 'content/'
OUTPUT_DIR = 'output'
PAGINATOR_MAX = 5
SITE_URL = 'https://mohamed-aziz.github.io/technical-blog'
DESCRIPTION = 'Mohamed Aziz Knani techincal blog, follow me @moonflock.'
SITE_TITLE = 'Mohamed\'s blog'
LINKS = [
('Home Page', 'https://mohamed-aziz.github.io/'),
('<i class="fa fa-github" aria-hidden="true"></i> Github', 'https://github.com/mohamed-aziz'),
('<i class="fa fa-google-plus" aria-hidden="true"></i> Google plus', 'https://plus.google.com/+mohamedazizknani'),
('<i class="fa fa-envelope" aria-hidden="true"></i> [email protected]', 'mailto:[email protected]')
]
Many people like to use the github pages service mainly because it's free and it uses git.
I also do that for my personal website.
So for deploying I have written this shell script:
#!/bin/sh
makesite
cd output
git add .
git commit -m "New deploy"
git push origin master
cd ..
cd content
git add .
git commit -m "New version"
git push origin master
cd /home/mohamed/programming/mohamed-aziz.github.io/technical-blog
git pull
cd ..
git add technical-blog
git commit -m "New deploy"
git push origin master
My folder looks like this:
.
├── build.sh
├── content
│ ├── somefile.md
│ └── someotherfile.md
├── output
│ ├── somefile.html
│ ├── someotherfile.html
│ └── index.html
└── sconfig.py
I also version control my markdown files which is also nice.
If you don't like git (or versioning) just write some fabric file to do the deploy for your site.
You can test the code using:
$ mktmpenv
$ git clone --recursive https://github.com/mohamed-aziz/simplegen.git
$ cd simplegen
$ python setup.py test
If you like simpleGen and use it for your website, I would be pleased if you let me know, also pull requests are welcome :)
SimpleGen is Free Software: You can use, study share and improve it at your will. Specifically you can redistribute and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
- Write tests.
- Make a paging system.
- Transform it into a package.
- Upload it to pypi.
- Use armin's click.
- Support Python3.
- Add tags support.