📚 boxed - Awesome Go Library for Software Packages
Dropbox based blog engine.
Detailed Description of boxed
[NO LONGER ACTIVE]
Boxed
A Dropbox based blog engine
This project started as a blog as a service platform, but it quickly ended up to be my personal blog. It does its job, it's far away to be pretty and polished but you maybe find it useful. It allows you to manage your blog in markdown format from your dropbox folder.
You can run it on your machine without installing anything, It's all bundled in the executable (html and css too), and it saves the data in a bolt database. It's performance wise too, my personal blog is served by a raspberry pi behind my crappy DSL router.
Try it
If you want to try it without compile it by yourself you can grab the executable from the aplha releases page
You have to create a dropbox app and select the following:
- Dropbox API app
- Files and datastores
- Yes My app only needs access to files it creates.
- webhook url: http://yoursitehost.com/webhook
then you need to modify the .env.sample
file accordingly and in your terminal:
# set env variables
source .env.sample
# link local app to dropbox (follow the instructions)
./boxed --oauth
# put a markdown file in the published folder in your dropbox directory and publish it with:
./boxed --refresh
#run the server with
./boxed
# visit localhost:8080 to see the result
if you have correctly set the webhook path you don't need to refresh, it will be published when the article will been synchronized to your dropbox.
Articles metadata
Boxed will try its best to figure out the publication date and title from the markdown article. If this is not enough for you, you can specify some metadata with a markdown/json comment like this:
<!--{
"created-at": "2013-11-11",
"permalink": "a-brand-new-blog",
"title": "A brand new blog"
}-->
Images
Boxed supports images out of the box, you have to put them in the images
folder, and then reference them like: ![cool image](../images/image.jpeg "Cool image")
Template customization
Boxed comes with the excellent default hyde template. If you want to change it, like i did it for my blog, you have to be able to compile go code, then you have to change the template/css files and then use go rice to bundle them back in the executable.
Future versions will allow to customize the look and feel directly from the dropbox folder.
Tests
You can run boxed tests with:
go test ./...
Licence
This project is licensed under a Simplified BSD license. Please read the LICENSE file.
TODO & Development
- make onboarding easier
- allow look and feel customization from dropbox folder without requiring code compilation.
- add tests for the http flow
- blog live updates with SSE or websockets
- allow articles to be published in the future