testdata | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
go.mod | ||
go.sum | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md | ||
zs_build_test.go | ||
zs_test.go | ||
zs.go |
zs
zs is an extremely minimal static site generator written in Go.
It's inspired by zas
generator, but is even more minimal.
The name stands for 'zen static' as well as it's my initials.
Features
- Zero configuration (no configuration file needed)
- Cross-platform
- Highly extensible
- Works well for blogs and generic static websites (landing pages etc)
- Easy to learn
- Fast
Installation
Download the binaries from Github or build it manually:
$ go get github.com/zserge/zs
Ideology
Keep your texts in markdown, amber or HTML format right in the main directory of your blog/site.
Keep all service files (extensions, layout pages, deployment scripts etc)
in the .zs
subdirectory.
Define variables in the header of the content files using YAML:
title: My web site
keywords: best website, hello, world
---
Markdown text goes after a header *separator*
Use placeholders for variables and plugins in your markdown or html
files, e.g. {{ title }}
or `{{ command arg1 arg2 }}.
Write extensions in any language you like and put them into the .zs
subdiretory.
Everything the extensions prints to stdout becomes the value of the placeholder.
Every variable from the content header will be passed via environment variables like title
becomes $ZS_TITLE
and so on. There are some special variables:
$ZS
- a path to thezs
executable$ZS_OUTDIR
- a path to the directory with generated files$ZS_FILE
- a path to the currently processed markdown file$ZS_URL
- a URL for the currently generated page
Example of RSS generation
Extensions can be written in any language you know (Bash, Python, Lua, JavaScript, Go, even Assembler). Here's an example of how to scan all markdown blog posts and create RSS items:
for f in ./blog/*.md ; do
d=$($ZS var $f date)
if [ ! -z $d ] ; then
timestamp=`date --date "$d" +%s`
url=`$ZS var $f url`
title=`$ZS var $f title | tr A-Z a-z`
descr=`$ZS var $f description`
echo $timestamp \
"<item>" \
"<title>$title</title>" \
"<link>http://zserge.com/$url</link>" \
"<description>$descr</description>" \
"<pubDate>$(date --date @$timestamp -R)</pubDate>" \
"<guid>http://zserge.com/$url</guid>" \
"</item>"
fi
done | sort -r -n | cut -d' ' -f2-
Hooks
There are two special plugin names that are executed every time the build
happens - prehook
and posthook
. You can define some global actions here like
content generation, or additional commands, like LESS to CSS conversion:
# .zs/post
#!/bin/sh
lessc < $ZS_OUTDIR/styles.less > $ZS_OUTDIR/styles.css
rm -f $ZS_OUTDIR/styles.css
Syntax sugar
By default, zs
converts each .amber
file into .html
, so you can use lightweight Jade-like syntax instead of bloated HTML.
Also, zs
converts .gcss
into .css
, so you don't really need LESS or SASS. More about GCSS can be found here.
Command line usage
zs build
re-builds your site.
zs build <file>
re-builds one file and prints resulting content to stdout.
zs watch
rebuilds your site every time you modify any file.
zs var <filename> [var1 var2...]
prints a list of variables defined in the
header of a given markdown file, or the values of certain variables (even if
it's an empty string).
License
The software is distributed under the MIT license.