Awesome
Gozer!
Gozer is a fast & simple static site generator written in Golang.
- Converts Markdown to HTML.
- Allows you to use page-specific templates.
- Creates an XML sitemap for search engines.
- Creates an RSS feed for feed readers.
Sample websites using Gozer:
- Simplest possible example
- My personal website: site - source
Installation
You can install Gozer by first installing a Go compiler and then running:
go install git.sr.ht/~dvko/gozer@latest
Usage
Run gozer new
to quickly generate an empty directory structure.
├── config.toml # Configuration file
├── content # Posts and pages
│ └── index.md
├── public # Static files
└── templates # Template files
└── default.html
Then, run gozer build
to generate your site.
Any Markdown files placed in your content/
directory will result in an HTML page in your build directory after running gozer build
.
For example:
content/index.md
creates a filebuild/index.html
so it is accessible over HTTP at/
content/about.md
creates a filebuild/about/index.html
so it is accessible over HTTP at/about/
.
Commands
Run gozer
without any arguments to view the help text.
Gozer - a fast & simple static site generator
Usage: gozer [OPTIONS] <COMMAND>
Commands:
build Deletes the output directory if there is one and builds the site
serve Builds the site and starts an HTTP server on http://localhost:8080
new Creates a new site structure in the given directory
Options:
-r, --root <ROOT> Directory to use as root of project (default: .)
-c, --config <CONFIG> Path to configuration file (default: config.toml)
Content files
Each file in your content/
directory should end in .md
and have TOML front matter specifying the page title:
+++
title = "My page title"
+++
Page content here.
Templates
The default template for every page is default.html
. You can override it by setting the template
variable in your front matter.
+++
title = "My page title"
template = "special-page.html"
+++
Page content here.
Templates are powered by Go's standard html/template
package, so you can use all the actions described here.
Every template receives the following set of variables:
Pages # Slice of all pages in the site
Posts # Slice of all posts in the site (any page with a date in the filename)
Site # Global site properties: Url, Title
Page # The current page: Title, Permalink, UrlPath, DatePublished, DateModified
Title # The current page title, shorthand for Page.Title
Content # The current page's HTML content.
The Page
variable is an instance of the object below:
type Page struct {
// Title of this page
Title string
// Template this page uses for rendering. Defaults to "default.html".
Template string
// Time this page was published (parsed from file name).
DatePublished time.Time
// Time this page was last modified on the filesystem.
DateModified time.Time
// The full URL to this page, including the site URL.
Permalink string
// URL path for this page, relative to site URL
UrlPath string
// Path to source file for this page, relative to content root
Filepath string
}
To show a list of the 5 most recent posts:
{{ range (slice .Posts 0 5) }}
<a href="{{ .Permalink }}">{{ .Title }}</a> <small>{{ .DatePublished.Format "Jan 02, 2006" }}</small><br />
{{ end }}
Contributing
Gozer development happens on Sourcehut. Patches are accepted over email.
License
Gozer is open-sourced under the MIT license.