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BARF - emit HTML DESCRIPTION BARF utilizes rc(1) and command line tools to compile a structured directory of files into a single page of HTML. Tagging and RSS 2.0 feeds have been implemented. SETUP To enable BARF, add: conf_enable_barf to _werc/config under the site root. To configure BARF, copy or create the following files under the site root (example files have been included in this distribution): _werc/barf/config A list of variables that control various site options: barf_type=paste # blog, image, log, paste posts_per_page=10 show_ascending=0 show_footer=0 show_header=0 show_sidebar=0 require_login=0 # if not logged in, redirect to /login allow_anon=1 # allow posts without logging in show_disqus=0 # include disqus comments template # from _werc/barf/disqus _werc/barf/footer HTML or markdown that will appear as the foot of the BARF content area. _werc/barf/header HTML or markdown that will appear at the head of the BARF content area. _werc/barf/sidebar HTML or markdown that will appear on one side of the BARF content area. Finally, sample stylesheets are provided in the directory pub/. Copy any of these to _werc/pub/style.css to try them out. POSTS Posts are stored in the directory src/ relative to the site root. Directory names in src/ that do not match the regular expression ^[0-9]*$ will not be included in the listing of posts that are displayed in the browser. However, such directories are still accessible when called directly via an appropriately constructed URL. A post's directory contains the following files and directories (an example post's directory has been included in this distribution): body date img/ link tags/ title The img/ directory contains images uploaded to the image board, including the original image and a thumbnail version, resized to no greater than 500 pixels wide and 600 pixels tall. The tags/ directory contains one empty file named for each tag associated with the post. The site root contains a file named tags that is compr- ised of an index of the tags associated with each post. This index is consulted when searching for a given tag in the web browser. UTILS bin/gf Parse Livejournal and Tumblr RSS feeds into BARF posts. (Abandoned, may no longer work.) bin/gk Create a list of known tags in the site root in a file named known_tags. bin/gr Parse Google Reader bundles into BARF posts. bin/gt Create an index of tags in the site root in a file named tags. For more information on these tools, read the source. ADMIN Any tool that can create, alter, or delete flat files and directories is sufficient to administer a BARF. Web-based login and administration utilizes werc's built-in user authentication: http://domain.com/login After login, links to edit and delete will appear in each post's meta data. Web-based administration requires that the src/ directory and its sub-directories are writable by the web server process. REQUIREMENTS Unix Plan9port or 9base are required. Site type image requires ImageMagick and curl. Site type url also requires curl if the user employs the option to download remote URLs. These utilities may be swapped out for others by altering the source. SOURCE http://plan9.stanleylieber.com/werc/apps/barf.tgz https://only9fans.com/sl/barf/HEAD/info.html EXAMPLES blog http://read.stanleylieber.com RSS feeds are converted by the utility rrss[0] and stored as individual blog posts. image http://img.stanleylieber.com Hybrid public/private image board. Requires standard werc authentication to post, but all posts are visible to the public. paste http://okturing.com Public pastebin. No authentication required to post. url http://url.stanleylieber.com Private index of URL bookmarks, similar in functionality to the old delicious.com. (In fact, most of the index was imported from delicious.) SEE ALSO [0] https://only9fans.com/sl/rrss/HEAD/info.html LICENSE Public domain. BUGS On Plan 9, if the web server process is run as user none (typically the case), directories used for entering posts or uploading/downloading files from the browser must be set world writable. This could prove problematic on multiuser systems.