1PFT(1)                User Contributed Perl Documentation               PFT(1)
2
3
4

NAME

6       pft - Hacker friendly static blog generator
7

SYNOPSIS

9       pft <command> [options]
10

DESCRIPTION

12       PFT It is a static website generator written in Perl.  PFT stands for
13       Plain F. Text, where the meaning of F is up to personal interpretation.
14       Like Fancy or Fantastic.
15
16       Static means that your content is compiled once and the result can be
17       served by a simple HTTP server, without need of server-side dynamic
18       content generation. Actually it doesn't need a server either: you can
19       use it as note-taking application and browse trough your local files.
20
21       PFT is designed to be Hacker Friendly: it's a command-line application
22       with unicode support, which handles your website's boilerplate, but
23       stays out of the way. It comes with number of subcommands:
24
25init: Initialize a pft site in the current directory;
26
27edit: Create a content text (e.g. page or blog entry);
28
29make: Build the website;
30
31gen-rss: Generate RSS feed XML;
32
33pub: Publish the website;
34
35clean: Clear built tree;
36
37grab: Grab a file as attachment or picture;
38
39ls: List content and properties;
40
41show: Show the compiled site in a web browser;
42
43help: Show this manual.
44
45       The manual of each sub-command is available in form of manpages or by
46       invoking it with the "--help" flag.
47

FILES

49       A new site can be initialized by running the "pft init" command inside
50       a directory. In this document such directory will be called ROOT.
51
52       The initialization command produces the following filesystem structure:
53
54           ROOT
55           |-- pft.yaml            - Configuration file
56           |-- content
57           |   |-- attachments     - Location for attachments
58           |   |-- blog            - Root location for blog entries source files
59           |   |-- pages           - Location for pages source files
60           |   |-- pics            - Location for pictures lookup
61           |   `-- tags            - Location for tag pages source files
62           |-- build               - Location of the built website
63           |-- inject              - Content to bulk inject the online site root
64           `-- templates           - Location for templates
65
66   "pft.yaml": configuration file
67       The configuration file is created automatically by the pft-init(1)
68       command, and populated with sensible defaults.  It is expected to be in
69       YAML format. For more information consult the manual of "pft init".
70
71   "content": files generated by the user
72       This is where your content is stored. The pft-edit(1) and pft-grab(1)
73       commands will add text and binary files respectively in the appropriate
74       subdirectories. The pft-make(1) command will scan the "content"
75       directory while building the website.
76
77   "build": where the built website is placed
78       The pft-make(1) command will place the HTML pages resulting from the
79       compilation in this directory. The pft-pub(1) command will publish what
80       here is contained. The pft-clean(1) command will erase it.
81
82   "inject": a place for auxiliary files
83       It's common practice to add files in the root directory of your online
84       website. The pft-make(1) command will add any arbitrary file which is
85       found in the "inject" directory to the "build" directory after
86       compilation.
87
88       A good use case for this feature is the ".htaccess" file used by the
89       Apache webserver.
90
91   "templates": HTML templates for compilation
92       Each text entry in your "content" directory will be mapped by
93       pft-make(1) to an HTML file. The output is created by expanding the
94       content into the structure defined by a template file.
95
96       Multiple template files can be stored in the "template" directory. Some
97       default files installed by pft-init(1).
98
99       Among other things, the "pft.yaml" configuration defines which default
100       template page should be used for the site. Single content entries can
101       override this setting by declaring a different template name in their
102       header. More details about the header can be found in the pft-edit(1)
103       manual page. Templates are documented in the pft-make(1) manual page.
104

SEE ALSO

106       pft-clean(1), pft-edit(1), pft-gen-rss(1), pft-grab(1), pft-help(1),
107       pft-init(1), pft-ls(1), pft-make(1), pft-pub(1), pft-show(1)
108
109
110
111perl v5.34.0                      2021-07-22                            PFT(1)
Impressum