* Support custom sanitization policy Allowing the gitea administrator to configure sanitization policy allows them to couple external renders and custom templates to support more markup. In particular, the `pandoc` renderer allows generating KaTeX annotations, wrapping them in `<span>` elements with class `math` and either `inline` or `display` (depending on whether or not inline or block mode was requested). This iteration gives the administrator whitelisting powers; carefully crafted regexes will thus let through only the desired attributes necessary to support their custom markup. Resolves: #9054 Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alexander.m.scheel@gmail.com> * Document new sanitization configuration - Adds basic documentation to app.ini.sample, - Adds an example to the Configuration Cheat Sheet, and - Adds extended information to External Renderers section. Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alexander.m.scheel@gmail.com> * Drop extraneous length check in newMarkupSanitizer(...) Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alexander.m.scheel@gmail.com> * Fix plural ELEMENT and ALLOW_ATTR in docs These were left over from their initial names. Make them singular to conform with the current expectations. Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alexander.m.scheel@gmail.com>
2.8 KiB
date | title | slug | weight | toc | draft | menu | ||||||||||
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2018-11-23:00:00+02:00 | External renderers | external-renderers | 40 | true | false |
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Custom files rendering configuration
Gitea supports custom file renderings (i.e., Jupyter notebooks, asciidoc, etc.) through external binaries, it is just a matter of:
- installing external binaries
- add some configuration to your
app.ini
file - restart your Gitea instance
Installing external binaries
In order to get file rendering through external binaries, their associated packages must be installed.
If you're using a Docker image, your Dockerfile
should contain something along this lines:
FROM gitea/gitea:{{< version >}}
[...]
COPY custom/app.ini /data/gitea/conf/app.ini
[...]
RUN apk --no-cache add asciidoctor freetype freetype-dev gcc g++ libpng python-dev py-pip python3-dev py3-pip py3-zmq
# install any other package you need for your external renderers
RUN pip3 install --upgrade pip
RUN pip3 install -U setuptools
RUN pip3 install jupyter matplotlib docutils
# add above any other python package you may need to install
app.ini
file configuration
add one [markup.XXXXX]
section per external renderer on your custom app.ini
:
[markup.asciidoc]
ENABLED = true
FILE_EXTENSIONS = .adoc,.asciidoc
RENDER_COMMAND = "asciidoctor -e -a leveloffset=-1 --out-file=- -"
; Input is not a standard input but a file
IS_INPUT_FILE = false
[markup.jupyter]
ENABLED = true
FILE_EXTENSIONS = .ipynb
RENDER_COMMAND = "jupyter nbconvert --stdout --to html --template basic "
IS_INPUT_FILE = true
[markup.restructuredtext]
ENABLED = true
FILE_EXTENSIONS = .rst
RENDER_COMMAND = rst2html.py
IS_INPUT_FILE = false
If your external markup relies on additional classes and attributes on the generated HTML elements, you might need to enable custom sanitizer policies. Gitea uses the bluemonday
package as our HTML sanitizier. The example below will support KaTeX output from pandoc
.
[markup.sanitizer]
; Pandoc renders TeX segments as <span>s with the "math" class, optionally
; with "inline" or "display" classes depending on context.
ELEMENT = span
ALLOW_ATTR = class
REGEXP = ^\s*((math(\s+|$)|inline(\s+|$)|display(\s+|$)))+
[markup.markdown]
ENABLED = true
FILE_EXTENSIONS = .md,.markdown
RENDER_COMMAND = pandoc -f markdown -t html --katex
You may redefine ELEMENT
, ALLOW_ATTR
, and REGEXP
multiple times; each time all three are defined is a single policy entry. All three must be defined, but REGEXP
may be blank to allow unconditional whitelisting of that attribute.
Once your configuration changes have been made, restart Gitea to have changes take effect.