A blog created with Pollen. The live site is at https://gooseandquill.blog. See LICENSE
for copyright/licensing information.
Pollen is really optimized for books, where the sections are finite and can be prearranged according to the logic of the subject matter. It takes some extra work to put it to use as a blog, which by analogy is a loose sheaf of papers that need constant reshuffling before any use can be made of them.
Nonetheless, it works pretty well as a static blog generator. Pollen comes with no opinions about your site so there's no cruft to clean out or hack around. Pollen also gives me capabilities I can no longer live without — first among which is, it allows you to design your own markup and control how it works, forever. More thoroughly tedious rationale for my design choices will eventually go on the site’s About page.
- An RSS Feed
- Generates PDF versions of every post
- Makefile for incremental builds
- Pollen tags for perma-embedding Tweets in web and PDF output (no JavaScript)
- Example dynamically generated
index.ptree
— no need to edit every time you add a new post - Semantic line wrapping
- You'll need
xelatex
installed and in yourPATH
to generate PDFs. On Mac, installing MacTeX is easy and will do the job. python3
is required for the script that sanitizes file content for HTML display.- You'll need to install Racket, and the Pollen package
- Ideally you'll be on a system that can run Bash scripts and the GNU
make
utility - If you do use the included makefile to build the site, you will want to install HTML5 Tidy — or remove references to the
tidy
command in the makefile. (Note: Many operating systems come with a version oftidy
pre-installed, but it is usually very out of date and will throw errors when used with this repo.) - A
Dockerfile
is included if you wish to serve the blog as a container. For local testing and development, you'll needpodman
ordocker
installed.
Next, just plop all the files from this repository in a folder. Run make all
from the command line in this folder to build all the static HTML files. Run make pdfs
to build the PDF versions of each post. (This is done separately because it is so much slower than building the HTML.)
To start writing your own content, move the included posts
directory out of the way. You may wish to keep it around under a different name in order to refer to it for examples:
mv posts posts.example; make zap;
The make zap
cleans out the top-level pages and the SQLite cache used to build them.
Finally, edit feed.xml.pp
, filling in your own RSS metadata.
Blog posts should be named your-post-name.poly.pm
and placed in the posts/
subfolder. Make sure the first line is #lang pollen
and use â—Šdefine-meta
to specify the title and publish date. Check out the existing .poly.pm
files in that folder for more examples of how things are done.
If you really want to customize anything, you will need to learn all about Pollen!
As in any Pollen project, you can test-run the site locally by running raco pollen start
from the project folder. Then browse to http://localhost:8080
in your browser.
From the project folder, run make all
to generate all the static HTML files for the site. This is an incremental rebuild: if you’ve built the site once and since done nothing but add a new post, make all
will build the HTML files for that post, rebuild the Index and rebuild the RSS feed. If you change any of the Racket code (.rkt
files) or any of the template files, it will rebuild the HTML files for every single post, depending on what you changed.
Use make zap
to clean out all the generated pages, which will force a complete rebuild next time you do make all
.
In order to speed up rendering of index.html
and other top-level pages, I have implemented an additional caching system in an SQLite database. See the post Using SQLite to Speed Up Pollen Renders to understand how it works.
Finally, you can use make publish
to push all necessary static files to your web server. See makefile
for more details; you'll need to configure a couple of environment variables and you also need to be able to ssh into your server passwordlessly.
See Contributions for guidance on submitting issues and pull requests to this repo.
Please feel free to fork this repo! If you do so, be sure to edit CONTRIBUTIONS.md
to reflect your preferred guidance for potential contributors. Also note you must abide by the license terms, so please review those carefully.
If you want your improvements and customizations to be more generally known, feel free to let me know; I’ll be happy to add a link to it in the section below. (Alternatively, add a link to it in this file yourself and submit a pull request.)
None yet!