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# vienna
## a tiny, tasty ssg

`vienna` is my (current) Platonic Ideal of a simple and extensible static site
generator.  I've written a couple of these over the years, and I think I've
finally got something that I really like.  Anyway, lemme tell you how it works.

## `vienna` invocation

`vienna` has a similar command-line interface to `make`; that is, it runs
commands on the files in a given folder and produces output.  It has
command-line switches as well as subcommands.  By default, `vienna` simply
builds the pages in the current directory into the output directory.

### command-line arguments

- `-r URL`: Use URL as the root url for the site.  The default is the useless
  https://example.com/, since you really should set this either on the command
  line, in the config file, or in an environment variable.
- `-C DIRECTORY`: Build the site from pages in DIRECTORY, instead of the current
  directory.
- `-o DIRECTORY`: Build the site to DIRECTORY, instead of the default `out`.
- `-c FILE`: Use FILE as the configuration file, instead of `.vienna.sh`.
- `-h`: Show a usage note and exit.
- `-q`: Disable any logging.

### subcommands

- `init`: Initialize a site by creating a `.vienna.sh` in the site directory.
- `clean`: Delete the output directory and temporary files before building.
- `preview`: Preview the website on your local machine.  By default, `vienna`
  doesn't define a `preview` function, so you'll want to write your own.  I've
  included one in the `.vienna.sh` made with `vienna init` to get you started.
- `publish`: Publish the website to your production server.  By default,
  `vienna` doesn't define a `publish` function, though I do include a sample in
  the default `.vienna.sh` made with `vienna init`.

## file layout

Pretty much any SSG is a mapping from input files to output files, with various
amounts of processing along the way.  Usually, the input files are in some
text-ish format like markdown, the output files are in html, and processing
includes templating, static file copying, and other such mixins.

`vienna` is similar, except it uses a mostly-html input language and uses POSIX
shell as its templating and extension language.  I chose these because they
require the smallest number of dependencies, and because shell scripting is fun!
[citation required]

But more about the markup later.  Let's talk about the structure `vienna`
expects your files to be in:

```
/
/some-page.htm
/some-other-page.htm
[...]
/.vienna.sh
/.page.tmpl.htm
/.index.tmpl.htm
/.feed.tmpl.htm
/.plugins/[...]
```

The content files of your site are all of the ones *not* beginning with a dot,
while all of `vienna`'s are the ones that *are*.  In UNIX-like environments,
this makes them "hidden," so you can focus on your content by default.  However,
your content is not something I can talk about in this README, because you still
have to write it!  Let's talk about `vienna`'s files next.

### .vienna.sh

`vienna` is a POSIX shell script.  Before it builds any pages, it reads a
configuration file.  By default, this file is `.vienna.sh` in your site folder,
but you can make it anything you want by passing `-c <config>` on the command
line or by setting the `$VIENNA_CONFIG` environment variable (more on the
command line and environment variables below).

Because the configuration file is written in the same language as `vienna`
itself, you can redefine any variable *or function* that's in `vienna`, fully
customizing your experience.  The main knobs you'll want to turn include

#### variables

- `$DOMAIN`: The domain (and, well, protocol) of your published website.  Used
when building indexes and feeds.  *Default: `https://www.example.com`*
- `$OUTDIR`: The output directory where `vienna` will put the built site.
*Default: `out`*
- `$PLUGINDIR`: The directory where plugins can be found and sourced by
`vienna`.  *Default: `.plugins`*
- `$PAGE_TEMPLATE`: The template to use for pages.  *Default: `.page.tmpl.htm`*
- `$INDEX_TEMPLATE`: The template to use for an index.  *Default:
  `.index.tmpl.htm`*
- `$FEED_TEMPLATE`: The template to use for an RSS feed.  *Default:
  `.feed.tmpl.htm`*

#### functions

- `publish`: How to publish a finished site.  By default, this function does
nothing.  `vienna init` defines a basic `publish` function in `.vienna.sh`.
- `preview`: How to preview a site locally.  By default, this function does
nothing.  `vienna init` defines a basic `preview` function in `.vienna.sh`.
- `sort_items`: How to sort items when generating a list.  By default, don't
sort files at all.
- `index_item`: How to build each item in an index.  The default outputs `<li><a
href=[LINK]>TITLE</a></li>`, where TITLE is the page's title and LINK is a link
to the published page.
- `feed_item`: How to build each item in a feed.  The default outputs an RSS
`<item>` tag suitable for inclusion in an RSS 2.0 feed.
- `filters`: UNIX pipes that each page is run through as it's being built.  The
default just uses `phtml`, but in my personal site I also pipe it through
`expand` so I can use shell expansion as well.

### templates

- `.page.tmpl.htm`: The template for individual pages.
- `.index.tmpl.htm`: The template for the root index.html.
- `.feed.tmpl.htm`: The template for the RSS feed.

### plugins

- `.plugins/*.sh`: Files matching this pattern will be sourced before building
the site.  They can define new functions, export variables, or do whatever, so
make sure you know what's in these files!

## content

Now for the stuff *you're* in charge of: your content.  `vienna` takes a flat-
or no-hierarchy approach to sites.  Your site will just be one flat folder full
of pages, though each page will be its own folder with an `index.html` for nicer
urls.  This might not be for you, and that's okay!  You can change it
(complicated) or use another ssg (probably easier).  It's up to you.

### pages

By default, files matching the pattern `*.htm` will be processed by `vienna` and
turned into finished pages.  `.htm` was chosen because it'll be picked up as
html in most text editors (for the format they're written in, see the **phtml**
section below), but it's also *unfinished html* (get it?!).

You can change this&mdash;you can change anything with `vienna`&mdash;but I'll
leave that as an exercise for you to figure out.

### static files

Every other non-hidden file in the `vienna` folder will be copied as-is to the
output folder.

## `phtml`: *pretty much* html

While lightweight markup languages like Markdown are nice (I'm using it to write
this README, for example), I realized that for my blogging needs it's not really
necessary.  html is *pretty much* good enough for authoring, if I'm being
honest&mdash;it's just a little too verbose for fully-fluent drafting.

Thus, `phtml` was born.  It's a function in the `vienna` source that consists of
one sed call:

```
sed -E '
    /./ {H;$!d}; x              # Hold lines til empty, then exchange to pattern
    s#^[ \n\t]+([^<].*)#\1#     # Replace non-HTML paragraph with itself
    t par; b end                # If successful, branch to :par; else :end
    :par
        s#([^\\])&#\1\&amp;#g   # Replace & with &amp;
        s#([^\\])<#\1\&lt;#g    # Replace < with &lt;
        s#([^\\])>#\1\&gt;#g    # Replace > with &gt;
        s#\\([&<>])#\1#g        # Replace \-escaped &,<,> with raw
        s#.*#<p>&</p>#          # Wrap the pattern space with <p> tags
    :end                        # [:par falls through to :end]
        s#^[ \n\t]+##           # Remove leading whitespace
        $!a                     # Add a final newline unless last line
'
```

To clarify the comments above: `phtml` allows a writer to leave out `<p>` tags,
which I consider are the most annoying parts of html.  Paragraphs that don't
begin with `<` are wrapped in `<p>` tags, and html reserved characters `<`, `>`,
and `&` are turned into entities.

You can still write html, of course&mdash;either by backslash-escaping the
reserved characters or by starting a paragraph with an html tag (really, the
character `<`).  Those paragraphs are passed through unprocessed.

This rule may seem as though it negates the benefits of leaving out `<p>` tags.
*After all*, you might think, *if I want to add a link or even emphasize text,
I'll have to escape the tags or wrap the whole thing in html!*  While you'd be
right about that, I use plaintext paragraphs enough that it's worth it.

## `expand`: templating with here-docs

Here-docs are some of the most useful structures in any programming language,
and in shell they can be especially powerful.  I first came across using
here-docs for templating on some Github repo I've since lost, but there are many
other projects that do something similar.  `expand` is pretty minimal, and uses
here-docs and a little bit of escaping to provide lots of expressive power.

A template that looks like this:

```
Donuts now cost $$${CURRENT_DONUT_COST}, a $$(donut_perc_delta)% 
$$(if [ $$(donut_perc_delta) -ge 0 ]
then echo increase
else echo decrease
) from last week.
```

will turn into this, given that donuts currently cost $1.99 and $1.89 last week
(`donut_perc_delta` truncates percentages to two digits):

```
Donuts now cost $1.99, a 5%
increase
from last week.
```

Single `$` and <code>\`</code> characters are escaped with backslashes so they
won't be expanded by the shell.  Two `$$` are converted to one `$`, and three
`$$$` in a row are converted to `\$$$`, since usually you'll want the second
pair of dollar signs to introduce a variable or function, not the first pair.

Other than that, `expand` simply `eval`s the templates given on the command line
as here-docs.  Pages to be templated are passed into the function's standard
input, and everything just works.  It's pretty cool!

### page metadata

`vienna` also supports colon-separated metadata in html comments in source
files.  I put something like the following at the tops of my pages:

```
<!--
	title: My really cool page
	date: 2023-01-01
-->
```

`vienna` processes these as simple key-value pairs, accessible with the `meta`
function.  So in templates, you can access the title with `$$(meta title)`, or
the value of a key called `foo` with `$$(meta foo)`.

`vienna` provides convenience functions `title` for the page `title` and
`pubdate` for its `date`.

## tweaking the behavior of phtml and expand (without re-writing the functions)

Of course, you can always rewrite `phtml` or `expand` to suit your needs, or
rewrite `filters` to use other processers like `markdown`, `asciidoc`, or
whatever you desire.  However, for the "vanilla" experience, `vienna` includes a
variable that tweaks the behavior of `phtml`: `$PHTML_OPTIONS`.

`$PHTML_OPTIONS` can be one or more of the following values, separated by
spaces:

- `expand`: Run `expand` on the content after it's processed by `phtml`.
- `entities`: Convert `&`, `<`, and `>` into html entities.

The default is `expand entities`.

## using plugins

`vienna` also supports the use of plugins, which are shell scripts sourced
before building the site.  Plugins are placed in `$VIENNA_PLUGINDIR`, or
`.plugins` by default, and must end in `.sh` to be sourced.

You can see the `plugins` directory of this repo for some example plugins that I
found useful.

## installing `vienna`

Clone this repository and copy or link `vienna` to somewhere in your `$PATH`.
That's what I do anyway.

## contributing

Comments, bug reports, and merge requests are welcome!
[Send me an email](mailto:vienna@code.acdw.net) or 
[contact me on Mastodon](https://tilde.zone/@acdw).

## license

`vienna` is licensed under the Good Choices License.  See COPYING for details.