forked from github/pelican
486 lines
17 KiB
ReStructuredText
486 lines
17 KiB
ReStructuredText
Getting started
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###############
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Installing Pelican
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==================
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Pelican currently runs best on Python 2.7.x; earlier versions of Python are
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not supported. There is provisional support for Python 3.3, although there may
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be rough edges, particularly with regards to optional 3rd-party components.
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You can install Pelican via several different methods. The simplest is via
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`pip <http://www.pip-installer.org/>`_::
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$ pip install pelican
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If you don't have ``pip`` installed, an alternative method is
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``easy_install``::
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$ easy_install pelican
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(Keep in mind that operating systems will often require you to prefix the above
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commands with ``sudo`` in order to install Pelican system-wide.)
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While the above is the simplest method, the recommended approach is to create
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a virtual environment for Pelican via virtualenv_ before installing Pelican.
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Assuming you have virtualenv_ installed, you can then open a new terminal
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session and create a new virtual environment for Pelican::
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$ virtualenv ~/virtualenvs/pelican
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$ cd ~/virtualenvs/pelican
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$ . bin/activate
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Once the virtual environment has been created and activated, Pelican can be
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be installed via ``pip install pelican`` as noted above. Alternatively, if
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you have the project source, you can install Pelican using the distutils
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method::
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$ cd path-to-Pelican-source
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$ python setup.py install
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If you have Git installed and prefer to install the latest bleeding-edge
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version of Pelican rather than a stable release, use the following command::
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$ pip install -e git://github.com/getpelican/pelican#egg=pelican
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If you plan on using Markdown as a markup format, you'll need to install the
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Markdown library as well::
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$ pip install Markdown
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If you want to use AsciiDoc you need to install it from `source
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<http://www.methods.co.nz/asciidoc/INSTALL.html>`_ or use your operating
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system's package manager.
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Basic usage
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-----------
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Once Pelican is installed, you can use it to convert your Markdown or reST
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content into HTML via the ``pelican`` command, specifying the path to your
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content and (optionally) the path to your settings file::
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$ pelican /path/to/your/content/ [-s path/to/your/settings.py]
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The above command will generate your site and save it in the ``output/``
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folder, using the default theme to produce a simple site. The default theme
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consists of very simple HTML without styling and is provided so folks may use
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it as a basis for creating their own themes.
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You can also tell Pelican to watch for your modifications, instead of
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manually re-running it every time you want to see your changes. To enable this,
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run the ``pelican`` command with the ``-r`` or ``--autoreload`` option.
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Pelican has other command-line switches available. Have a look at the help to
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see all the options you can use::
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$ pelican --help
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Continue reading below for more detail, and check out the Pelican wiki's
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`Tutorials <https://github.com/getpelican/pelican/wiki/Tutorials>`_ page for
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links to community-published tutorials.
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Viewing the generated files
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---------------------------
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The files generated by Pelican are static files, so you don't actually need
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anything special to view them. You can either use your browser to open the
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files on your disk::
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firefox output/index.html
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Or run a simple web server using Python::
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cd output && python -m SimpleHTTPServer
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Upgrading
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---------
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If you installed a stable Pelican release via ``pip`` or ``easy_install`` and
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wish to upgrade to the latest stable release, you can do so by adding
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``--upgrade`` to the relevant command. For pip, that would be::
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$ pip install --upgrade pelican
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If you installed Pelican via distutils or the bleeding-edge method, simply
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perform the same step to install the most recent version.
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Dependencies
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------------
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When Pelican is installed, the following dependent Python packages should be
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automatically installed without any action on your part:
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* `feedgenerator <http://pypi.python.org/pypi/feedgenerator>`_, to generate the
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Atom feeds
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* `jinja2 <http://pypi.python.org/pypi/Jinja2>`_, for templating support
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* `pygments <http://pypi.python.org/pypi/Pygments>`_, for syntax highlighting
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* `docutils <http://pypi.python.org/pypi/docutils>`_, for supporting
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reStructuredText as an input format
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* `pytz <http://pypi.python.org/pypi/pytz>`_, for timezone definitions
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* `blinker <http://pypi.python.org/pypi/blinker>`_, an object-to-object and
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broadcast signaling system
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* `unidecode <http://pypi.python.org/pypi/Unidecode>`_, for ASCII
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transliterations of Unicode text
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* `six <http://pypi.python.org/pypi/six>`_, for Python 2 and 3 compatibility
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utilities
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* `MarkupSafe <http://pypi.python.org/pypi/MarkupSafe>`_, for a markup safe
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string implementation
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If you want the following optional packages, you will need to install them
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manually via ``pip``:
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* `markdown <http://pypi.python.org/pypi/Markdown>`_, for supporting Markdown as
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an input format
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* `typogrify <http://pypi.python.org/pypi/typogrify>`_, for typographical
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enhancements
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Kickstart your site
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===================
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Once Pelican has been installed, you can create a skeleton project via the
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``pelican-quickstart`` command, which begins by asking some questions about
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your site::
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$ pelican-quickstart
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Once you finish answering all the questions, your project will consist of the
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following hierarchy (except for "pages", which you can optionally add yourself
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if you plan to create non-chronological content)::
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yourproject/
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├── content
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│ └── (pages)
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├── output
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├── develop_server.sh
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├── Makefile
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├── pelicanconf.py # Main settings file
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└── publishconf.py # Settings to use when ready to publish
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The next step is to begin to adding content to the *content* folder that has
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been created for you. (See *Writing articles using Pelican* section below for
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more information about how to format your content.)
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Once you have written some content to generate, you can use the ``pelican``
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command to generate your site, which will be placed in the output folder.
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Alternatively, you can use automation tools that "wrap" the ``pelican`` command
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to simplify the process of generating, previewing, and uploading your site. One
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such tool is the ``Makefile`` that's automatically created for you when you use
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``pelican-quickstart`` to create a skeleton project. To use ``make`` to
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generate your site, run::
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$ make html
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If you'd prefer to have Pelican automatically regenerate your site every time a
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change is detected (which is handy when testing locally), use the following
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command instead::
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$ make regenerate
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To serve the generated site so it can be previewed in your browser at
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http://localhost:8000::
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$ make serve
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Normally you would need to run ``make regenerate`` and ``make serve`` in two
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separate terminal sessions, but you can run both at once via::
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$ make devserver
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The above command will simultaneously run Pelican in regeneration mode as well
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as serve the output at http://localhost:8000. Once you are done testing your
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changes, you should stop the development server via::
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$ ./develop_server.sh stop
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When you're ready to publish your site, you can upload it via the method(s) you
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chose during the ``pelican-quickstart`` questionnaire. For this example, we'll
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use rsync over ssh::
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$ make rsync_upload
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That's it! Your site should now be live.
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Writing content using Pelican
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=============================
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Articles and pages
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------------------
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Pelican considers "articles" to be chronological content, such as posts on a
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blog, and thus associated with a date.
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The idea behind "pages" is that they are usually not temporal in nature and are
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used for content that does not change very often (e.g., "About" or "Contact"
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pages).
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.. _internal_metadata:
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File metadata
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-------------
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Pelican tries to be smart enough to get the information it needs from the
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file system (for instance, about the category of your articles), but some
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information you need to provide in the form of metadata inside your files.
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If you are writing your content in reStructuredText format, you can provide
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this metadata in text files via the following syntax (give your file the
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``.rst`` extension)::
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My super title
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##############
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:date: 2010-10-03 10:20
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:tags: thats, awesome
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:category: yeah
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:slug: my-super-post
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:author: Alexis Metaireau
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:summary: Short version for index and feeds
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Pelican implements an extension to reStructuredText to enable support for the
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``abbr`` HTML tag. To use it, write something like this in your post::
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This will be turned into :abbr:`HTML (HyperText Markup Language)`.
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You can also use Markdown syntax (with a file ending in ``.md``,
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``.markdown``, ``.mkd``, or ``.mdown``). Markdown generation requires that you
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first explicitly install the ``Markdown`` package, which can be done via ``pip
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install Markdown``. Metadata syntax for Markdown posts should follow this
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pattern::
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Title: My super title
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Date: 2010-12-03 10:20
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Category: Python
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Tags: pelican, publishing
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Slug: my-super-post
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Author: Alexis Metaireau
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Summary: Short version for index and feeds
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This is the content of my super blog post.
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Pelican can also process HTML files ending in ``.html`` and ``.htm``. Pelican
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interprets the HTML in a very straightforward manner, reading metadata from
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``meta`` tags, the title from the ``title`` tag, and the body out from the
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``body`` tag::
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<html>
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<head>
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<title>My super title</title>
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<meta name="tags" contents="thats, awesome" />
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<meta name="date" contents="2012-07-09 22:28" />
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<meta name="category" contents="yeah" />
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<meta name="author" contents="Alexis Métaireau" />
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<meta name="summary" contents="Short version for index and feeds" />
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</head>
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<body>
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This is the content of my super blog post.
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</body>
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</html>
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With HTML, there is one simple exception to the standard metadata: ``tags`` can
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be specified either via the ``tags`` metadata, as is standard in Pelican, or
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via the ``keywords`` metadata, as is standard in HTML. The two can be used
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interchangeably.
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Note that, aside from the title, none of this article metadata is mandatory:
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if the date is not specified and ``DEFAULT_DATE`` is set to ``fs``, Pelican
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will rely on the file's "mtime" timestamp, and the category can be determined
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by the directory in which the file resides. For example, a file located at
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``python/foobar/myfoobar.rst`` will have a category of ``foobar``. If you would
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like to organize your files in other ways where the name of the subfolder would
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not be a good category name, you can set the setting ``USE_FOLDER_AS_CATEGORY``
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to ``False``. When parsing dates given in the page metadata, Pelican supports
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the W3C's `suggested subset ISO 8601`__.
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__ `W3C ISO 8601`_
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If you do not explicitly specify summary metadata for a given post, the
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``SUMMARY_MAX_LENGTH`` setting can be used to specify how many words from the
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beginning of an article are used as the summary.
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You can also extract any metadata from the filename through a regular
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expression to be set in the ``FILENAME_METADATA`` setting. All named groups
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that are matched will be set in the metadata object. The default value for the
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``FILENAME_METADATA`` setting will only extract the date from the filename. For
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example, if you would like to extract both the date and the slug, you could set
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something like: ``'(?P<date>\d{4}-\d{2}-\d{2})_(?P<slug>.*)'``
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Please note that the metadata available inside your files takes precedence over
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the metadata extracted from the filename.
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Pages
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-----
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If you create a folder named ``pages`` inside the content folder, all the
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files in it will be used to generate static pages, such as **About** or
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**Contact** pages. (See example filesystem layout below.)
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You can use the ``DISPLAY_PAGES_ON_MENU`` setting to control whether all those
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pages are displayed in the primary navigation menu. (Default is ``True``.)
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If you want to exclude any pages from being linked to or listed in the menu
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then add a ``status: hidden`` attribute to its metadata. This is useful for
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things like making error pages that fit the generated theme of your site.
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Linking to internal content
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---------------------------
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From Pelican 3.1 onwards, it is now possible to specify intra-site links to
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files in the *source content* hierarchy instead of files in the *generated*
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hierarchy. This makes it easier to link from the current post to other posts
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and images that may be sitting alongside the current post (instead of having
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to determine where those resources will be placed after site generation).
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To link to internal content (files in the ``content`` directory), use the
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following syntax: ``|filename|path/to/file``::
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website/
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├── content
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│ ├── article1.rst
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│ ├── cat/
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│ │ └── article2.md
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│ └── pages
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│ └── about.md
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└── pelican.conf.py
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In this example, ``article1.rst`` could look like::
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The first article
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#################
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:date: 2012-12-01 10:02
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See below intra-site link examples in reStructuredText format.
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`a link relative to content root <|filename|/cat/article2.md>`_
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`a link relative to current file <|filename|cat/article2.md>`_
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and ``article2.md``::
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Title: The second article
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Date: 2012-12-01 10:02
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See below intra-site link examples in Markdown format.
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[a link relative to content root](|filename|/article1.rst)
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[a link relative to current file](|filename|../article1.rst)
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Embedding non-article or non-page content is slightly different in that the
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directories need to be specified in ``pelicanconf.py`` file. The ``images``
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directory is configured for this by default but others will need to be added
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manually::
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content
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├── images
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│ └── han.jpg
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└── misc
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└── image-test.md
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And ``image-test.md`` would include::
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Any content can be linked in this way. What happens is that the ``images``
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directory gets copied to ``output/static/`` upon publishing. This is
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because ``images`` is in the ``settings["STATIC_PATHS"]`` list by default. If
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you want to have another directory, say ``pdfs`` you would need to add the
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following to ``pelicanconf.py``::
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STATIC_PATHS = ['images', 'pdfs']
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And then the ``pdfs`` directory would also be copied to ``output/static/``.
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Importing an existing blog
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--------------------------
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It is possible to import your blog from Dotclear, WordPress, and RSS feeds using
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a simple script. See :ref:`import`.
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Translations
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------------
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It is possible to translate articles. To do so, you need to add a ``lang`` meta
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attribute to your articles/pages and set a ``DEFAULT_LANG`` setting (which is
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English [en] by default). With those settings in place, only articles with the
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default language will be listed, and each article will be accompanied by a list
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of available translations for that article.
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Pelican uses the article's URL "slug" to determine if two or more articles are
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translations of one another. The slug can be set manually in the file's
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metadata; if not set explicitly, Pelican will auto-generate the slug from the
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title of the article.
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Here is an example of two articles, one in English and the other in French.
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The English article::
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Foobar is not dead
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##################
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:slug: foobar-is-not-dead
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:lang: en
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That's true, foobar is still alive!
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And the French version::
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Foobar n'est pas mort !
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#######################
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:slug: foobar-is-not-dead
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:lang: fr
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Oui oui, foobar est toujours vivant !
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Post content quality notwithstanding, you can see that only item in common
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between the two articles is the slug, which is functioning here as an
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identifier. If you'd rather not explicitly define the slug this way, you must
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then instead ensure that the translated article titles are identical, since the
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slug will be auto-generated from the article title.
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If you do not want the original version of one specific article to be detected
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by the ``DEFAULT_LANG`` setting, use the ``translation`` metadata to specify
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which posts are translations::
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Foobar is not dead
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##################
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:slug: foobar-is-not-dead
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:lang: en
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:translation: true
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That's true, foobar is still alive!
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Syntax highlighting
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-------------------
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Pelican is able to provide colorized syntax highlighting for your code blocks.
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To do so, you have to use the following conventions inside your content files.
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For reStructuredText, use the code-block directive::
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.. code-block:: identifier
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<indented code block goes here>
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For Markdown, include the language identifier just above the code block,
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indenting both the identifier and code::
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A block of text.
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:::identifier
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<code goes here>
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The specified identifier (e.g. ``python``, ``ruby``) should be one that
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appears on the `list of available lexers <http://pygments.org/docs/lexers/>`_.
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Publishing drafts
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-----------------
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If you want to publish an article as a draft (for friends to review before
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publishing, for example), you can add a ``status: draft`` attribute to its
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metadata. That article will then be output to the ``drafts`` folder and not
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listed on the index page nor on any category page.
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.. _virtualenv: http://www.virtualenv.org/
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.. _W3C ISO 8601: http://www.w3.org/TR/NOTE-datetime
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