# This is the configuration file for geminer. # It is not intended to be executed. # locale (for templates, for example dates rendering) locale = "en_US.utf8" # path to directory containing markdonw files to convert md_path = "/srv/gemini/example/md" # path to gemini blog root directory gmi_path = "/srv/gemini/example/gmi" # directory within gmi_path which will contains converted posts posts_dir = "posts" # path to directory containing templates tpl_path = "/srv/gemini/example/templates" # list of markdown files extensions # Any file with a different extension will be ignored. md_extensions = [ ".markdown", ".mdown", ".mkdn", ".md", ".mkd", ".mdwn", ".mdtxt", ".mdtext", ".text", ".Rmd" ] # Specify gemini files extension. Set to empty string to disable extension. # Warning: disabling could have unwanted side effects. # Check out README for more informations. gmi_extension = ".gmi" # replacement map # Some CMS make you use some placeholders (for instance for assets URL). # You have to inform geminer of them here. replace = [ ("%assets_url%", "https://example.com/assets") ] # md2gemini settings # Check the documentation at https://pypi.org/project/md2gemini/l code_tag="" img_tag="[IMG]" indent=" " ascii_table=False links="copy" plain=True strip_html=False base_url="" table_tag="table" # default template for posts that don't specify one default_post_template = "post" # per-post properties to fetch in frontmatter post_props = [ "date", "title" ] # indexable properties to fetch in frontmatter # A lot of CMS will manage properties like tags ans authors, which are written # in the frontmatter, and are used to make subgroups of posts. # This setting enables to do the same for any frontmatter property you wish. # # Each indexable property generate two views: # * per-value post index: This is a list of links to posts that have a given # value of the property. There are as many per-value # indexes as properties values. # * property values index: This is a list of links to per-value indexes. # There is only one page of this kind, and it can be # disabled. # # Exemple: if the property is tags, then it will generate a tag index tags.gmi, # which will link to some subindexes like tags/computer (assuming computer is # an existing tag). # # Specify here a list of dictionnary, each one with the following keys: # * property (mandatory): name of the property present in the frontmatter # * list (facultative): set to True if the property is a list of values # * item_dir (facultative): directory containing per-value posts indexes # * item_tpl (facultative): template of the per-value posts indexes # * index_name (facultative): filename of the property values index # * index_tpl (facultative): template of the property values index # # Filenames are relative to meta_dir and extensions are automatically added. # If filename contains an extension, it will override gmi_extension value. # When a string value is facultative, it defaults to property name, except for # index_name, which disables property values global index if not specified. index_props = [ { "property": "tags", "list": True, "item_dir": "tags", "item_tpl": "tag", "index_name": "tags", "index_tpl": "tags_index" }, { "property": "author", "list": False, "item_dir": "authors", "item_tpl": "author", "index_name": "authors", "index_tpl": "authors_index" } ] # custom extra pages to generate # Each entry will generate a single page. # This is the place to define homepage and feed page for instance. # Templates will have to handle the full unsorted list of posts. # "name" key is mandatory. It is the filename of the page. # If filename contains an extension, it will override gmi_extension value. # "tpl" key is facultative, defaults to name (without extension if any) custom_pages = [ { "name": "index", "tpl": "index" }, { "name": "atom.xml", "tpl": "atom" } ]