a command-line based blogging platform running on tilde.town
ttbp
stands for “tilde.town blogging platform”, the original working name for
this project.
to use, run ~endorphant/bin/ttbp
while logged in to tilde.town
you can also try ~endorphant/bin/ttbp-beta
for a more colorful, but
potentially volatile experience; i sometimes announce in irc or on twitter when
i’m testing a new feature.
entries are recorded as plaintext files in your ~/.ttbp/entries directory. you can edit them there directly, or fix old entries, or delete entries.
warning: changing old entries might cause strange things to happen with timestamps. the main program looks at the filename first for setting the date, then the last modified time to sort recent posts. it expects YYYMMDD.txt as the filename; anything else won’t show up as a valid entry. yes, this means you can post things out of date order by creating files with any date you want.
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to have them show up
in the feed but not render in a browser (but people can still read
them with view-source)when you start your ttbp, you have the option of publishing or not publishing your blog.
if you opt to publish, the program creates a directory ~/.ttbp/www
where it stores all html files it generates, and symlinks this from your
~/public_html
with your chosen blog directory. your blog will also be listed
on the main ttbp page.
if you opt to not publish, your entires will never be accessible from outside
of the tilde.town network; other tilde.town users will still be able to read
your entries through the ttbp interface, or by directly accessing your
~/.ttbp/entries
directory.
if you want to further protect your entries, you can chmod 700
your entries
directory.
you can modify how your blog looks by editing the stylesheet or header and footer files. the program sets you up with basic default. if you break your page somehow, you can force the program to regenerate your configuration by deleting your ~/.ttbp directory entirely. you might want to back up your ~/.ttbp/entries directory before you do this.
alias ttbp="~endorphant/bin/ttbp"
to your .bash_aliases for fewer keystrokesalias ttbp-beta="~endorphant/bin/ttbp-beta"
)these are a few ideas being kicked around, or under active development: