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A tiny little Python app that compiles Markdown + Jinja2 into static HTML and (optionally) uploads it to Amazon S3.

Kirby is still in it's infancy. Be aware that the API could change dramatically until the first release.

Installing

Kirby is installable with pip (recommended):

$ pip install git+git://github.com/kylefox/kirby.git

You can also clone the repository and install:

$ git clone git://github.com/kylefox/kirby.git
$ cd kirby
$ python setup.py install

Creating a Kirby site

You create a new Kirby site with

$ kirby new example.com

which creates the resulting directory structure:

  • example.com
    • _public
    • content
    • media
    • templates

Here is the purpose of each directory:

  • _public contains your compiled Kirby site after you publish it. You should not modify this folder's contents.
  • content contains your Markdown files (pages & blog posts).
  • media contains images, CSS, JavaScript, and other static media.
  • templates contains your Jinja2 template files.

Running the development server

After creating your site, spark up the development server:

$ cd example.com
$ kirby serve

The development server compiles your markdown and templates on the fly. This is useful while you're working on the site design and for previewing content.

Creating pages

A Page is simply a markdown file located inside the content directory. The URL to the page is the file path (relative to content) with the .md extension stripped.

Some examples:

The only exception to this convention is the index page:

Template Context

Inside your templates you can access your page data through the page context object. This object contains all dynamic YAML fields from your markdown file, as well as a content field taken from all content after the - - - delimiter.

Some examples:

  • {{ page.title }} is a string mapped from the YAML element title: My Title
  • {{ page.date }} is date mapped from the YAML element date: date: 2010-11-16

With the exception being the content:

  • {{ page.content }} contains the markdown-rendered HTML content of your page

Uploading to Amazon S3

Once you're happy with the current state of your site, you can generate static HTML files and upload them to Amazon S3.

First, make sure you've set these environment variables. A good place is in your ~/.profile

AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID='Your Access Key'
AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY='Your Secret Key'

Then you need to create an S3 bucket (you only need to do this once):

$ kirby aws

Now whenever you want to upload your Kirby site to S3, just run:

$ kirby s3

Running Tests

We use nose to test Kirby:

$ git clone git://github.com/kylefox/kirby.git
$ cd kirby
$ nosetests

Contributing

Please fork and send pull requests.

If you want something to work on, see our issues list. We can also use help with:

  • Tests
  • Documentation
  • Template tags
    • Fetching content (ex: show 5 blog posts on homepage)
    • Site-wide variables (site name, admin email, etc).

About

** This repo has been abandoned in favour of a new one (private for now) **

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