Awesome
Search: A Plugin for Pelican
This plugin generates an index for searching content on a Pelican-powered site.
Why would you want this?
Static sites are, well, static… and thus usually don’t have an application server component that could be used to power site search functionality. Rather than give up control (and privacy) to third-party search engine corporations, this plugin adds elegant and self-hosted site search capability to your site. Last but not least, searches are really fast. 🚀
Want to see just how fast? Try it out for yourself. Following are some sites that use this plugin:
Installation
This plugin uses Stork to generate a search index. Follow the Stork installation instructions to install this required command-line tool and ensure it is available within /usr/local/bin/
or another $PATH
-accessible location of your choosing. For example, Stork can be installed on macOS (Intel) via:
export STORKVERSION="v1.5.0"
wget -O /usr/local/bin/stork https://files.stork-search.net/releases/$STORKVERSION/stork-macos-10-15
chmod +x /usr/local/bin/stork
For macOS on ARM, install via Homebrew:
brew install stork-search/stork-tap/stork
Confirm that Stork is properly installed via:
stork --help
Once Stork has been successfully installed and tested, this plugin can be installed via:
python -m pip install pelican-search
If you are using Pelican 4.5+ with namespace plugins and don’t have a PLUGINS
setting defined in your configuration, then the Search plugin should be auto-discovered with no further action required. If, on the other hand, you do have a PLUGINS
setting defined (because you also use legacy plugins or because you want to be able to selectively disable installed plugins), then you must manually add search
to the PLUGINS
list, as described in the Pelican plugins documentation.
Settings
This plugin’s behavior can be customized via Pelican settings. Those settings, and their default values, follow below.
STORK_INPUT_OPTIONS = {}
In addition to plain-text files, Stork can recognize and index HTML and Markdown-formatted content. The default behavior of this plugin is to index generated HTML files, since Stork is good at extracting content from tags, scripts, and styles. But that mode may require a slight theme modification that isn’t necessary when indexing Markdown source (see HTML selector setting below). That said, indexing Markdown means that markup information may not be removed from the indexed content and will thus be visible in the search preview results. With that caveat aside, if you want to index Markdown source content files instead of the generated HTML output, you can set base_directory
to your content path.
Any other setting then the output path will toggle the plugin to switch to "source" mode.
Example:
STORK_INPUT_OPTIONS = {
"base_directory" : PATH
}
Stork HTML Selector
By default, Stork looks for <main>[…]</main>
tags to determine where your main content is located. If such tags do not already exist in your theme’s template files, you can either (1) add <main>
tags or (2) change the HTML selector that Stork should look for.
To use the default main
selector, in each of your theme’s relevant template files, wrap the content you want to index with <main>
tags. For example:
article.html
:
<main>
{{ article.content }}
</main>
page.html
:
<main>
{{ page.content }}
</main>
For more information, refer to Stork’s documentation on HTML tag selection.
Example:
To set it to a different selector (for example, primary
), you can set it like this:
STORK_INPUT_OPTIONS = {
"html_selector" : "primary"
}
Additional Input Options can be added here as a dict
.
Example:
STORK_INPUT_OPTIONS = {
"url_prefix" : SITEURL
}
STORK_OUTPUT_OPTIONS = {}
Output Options can be configured as a dict
.
Keep in mind that keys are case-sensitive and must be lower case.
Example:
STORK_OUTPUT_OPTIONS = {
"debug" : True
}
Static Assets
There are two options for serving the necessary JavaScript, WebAssembly, and CSS static assets:
- Use a content delivery network (CDN) to serve Stork’s static assets
- Self-host the Stork static assets
The first option is easier to set up. The second option is provided for folks who prefer to self-host everything. After you have decided which option you prefer, follow the relevant section’s instructions below.
Static Assets — Option 1: Use CDN
CSS
Add the Stork CSS before the closing </head>
tag in your theme’s base template file, such as base.html
:
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://files.stork-search.net/basic.css" />
If your theme supports dark mode, you may want to also add Stork’s dark CSS file:
<link
rel="stylesheet"
media="screen and (prefers-color-scheme: dark)"
href="https://files.stork-search.net/dark.css"
/>
JavaScript
Add the following script tags to your theme’s base template, just before your closing </body>
tag, which will load the most recent Stork module along with the matching WASM binary:
<script src="https://files.stork-search.net/releases/v1.5.0/stork.js"></script>
<script>
stork.register("sitesearch", "{{ SITEURL }}/search-index.st");
</script>
Static Assets — Option 2: Self-Host
Download the Stork JavaScript, WebAssembly, and CSS files and put them in your theme’s respective static asset directories:
export STORKVERSION="v1.5.0"
cd $YOUR-THEME-DIR
mkdir -p static/{js,css}
wget -O static/js/stork.js https://files.stork-search.net/releases/$STORKVERSION/stork.js
wget -O static/js/stork.js.map https://files.stork-search.net/releases/$STORKVERSION/stork.js.map
wget -O static/js/stork.wasm https://files.stork-search.net/releases/$STORKVERSION/stork.wasm
wget -O static/css/stork.css https://files.stork-search.net/basic.css
wget -O static/css/stork-dark.css https://files.stork-search.net/dark.css
CSS
Add the Stork CSS before the closing </head>
tag in your theme’s base template file, such as base.html
:
<link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ SITEURL }}/{{ THEME_STATIC_DIR }}/css/stork.css">
If your theme supports dark mode, you may want to also add Stork’s dark CSS file:
<link rel="stylesheet" media="screen and (prefers-color-scheme: dark)" href="{{ SITEURL }}/{{ THEME_STATIC_DIR }}/css/stork-dark.css">
JavaScript & WebAssembly
Add the following script tags to your theme’s base template file, such as base.html
, just before the closing </body>
tag:
<script src="{{ SITEURL }}/{{ THEME_STATIC_DIR }}/js/stork.js"></script>
<script>
stork.initialize("{{ SITEURL }}/{{ THEME_STATIC_DIR }}/js/stork.wasm")
stork.downloadIndex("sitesearch", "{{ SITEURL }}/search-index.st")
stork.attach("sitesearch")
</script>
Search Input Form
Decide in which place(s) on your site you want to put your search field, such as your index.html
template file. Then add the search field to the template:
Search: <input data-stork="sitesearch" />
<div data-stork="sitesearch-output"></div>
For more information regarding this topic, see the Stork search interface documentation.
Deployment
Ensure your production web server serves the WebAssembly file with the application/wasm
MIME type. For folks using older versions of Nginx, that might look like the following:
…
http {
…
include mime.types;
# Types not included in older Nginx versions:
types {
application/wasm wasm;
}
…
}
For other self-hosting considerations, see the Stork self-hosting documentation.
Contributing
Contributions are welcome and much appreciated. Every little bit helps. You can contribute by improving the documentation, adding missing features, and fixing bugs. You can also help out by reviewing and commenting on existing issues.
To start contributing to this plugin, review the Contributing to Pelican documentation, beginning with the Contributing Code section.
License
This project is licensed under the AGPL 3.0 license.