![Logo](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/srid/rib/master/assets/rib.png) # rib [![BSD3](https://img.shields.io/badge/License-BSD-blue.svg)](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BSD_License) [![Hackage](https://img.shields.io/hackage/v/rib.svg)](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/rib) [![built with nix](https://builtwithnix.org/badge.svg)](https://builtwithnix.org) Rib is a Haskell library for writing your own **static site generator**. How does it compare to Hakyll? - Use the [Shake](https://shakebuild.com/) build system - Builtin support for using Haskell DSL to define the HTML ([Lucid](https://chrisdone.com/posts/lucid2/)) & CSS ([Clay](http://fvisser.nl/clay/)) of your site - Like Hakyll, Rib uses [Pandoc](https://pandoc.org/) for parsing the source documents. It also supports [MMark](https://github.com/mmark-md/mmark) if you need a lightweight alternative. - Remain as simple as possible to use (see example below) - Optional Nix based workflow for easily reproducible environment Rib prioritizes the use of *existing* tools over reinventing them, and enables the user to compose them as they wish instead of having to write code to fit a custom framework. Here is how your code may look like if you were to generate your static site using Rib: ```haskell -- Main.hs -- | A generated page is either an index of documents, or an individual document. data Page doc = Page_Index [Document doc] | Page_Doc (Document doc) -- | Type representing the metadata in our Markdown documents -- -- Note that if a field is not optional (i.e., not Maybe) it must be present. data Meta = Meta { title :: Text , description :: Maybe Text } deriving (Show, Eq, Generic, FromJSON) main :: IO () main = Rib.run [reldir|a|] [reldir|b|] $ do -- Copy over the static files Rib.buildStaticFiles [[relfile|static/**|]] -- Build individual markdown files, generating .html for each. -- -- NOTE: We use TypeApplications to specify the type of the `doc` type -- variable, as used in the `Markup doc` constraint in the functions below. -- There are currently two possible values: `MMark` (if you choose to use the -- `mmark` parser) and `Pandoc` (if using pandoc). posts <- Rib.buildHtmlMulti @MMark [relfile|*.md|] (renderPage . Page_Doc) -- Build an index.html linking to the aforementioned files. Rib.buildHtml [relfile|index.html|] $ renderPage $ Page_Index posts -- | Render the given page as HTML renderPage :: Markup doc => Page doc -> Html () renderPage page = with html_ [lang_ "en"] $ do head_ $ do meta_ [httpEquiv_ "Content-Type", content_ "text/html; charset=utf-8"] title_ pageTitle style_ [type_ "text/css"] $ Clay.render pageStyle body_ $ with div_ [id_ "thesite"] $ do -- Main content with a_ [href_ "/"] "Back to Home" hr_ [] case page of Page_Index docs -> div_ $ forM_ docs $ \doc -> li_ $ do let meta = Rib.getDocumentMeta doc b_ $ with a_ [href_ (Rib.getDocumentUrl doc)] $ toHtml $ title meta case description meta of Just s -> em_ $ small_ $ toHtml s Nothing -> mempty Page_Doc doc -> with article_ [class_ "post"] $ do h1_ $ toHtml $ title $ Rib.getDocumentMeta doc Rib.renderDoc doc where pageTitle = case page of Page_Index _ -> "My website!" Page_Doc doc -> toHtml $ title $ Rib.getDocumentMeta doc -- | CSS pageStyle :: Css pageStyle = div # "#thesite" ? do marginLeft $ pct 20 marginTop $ em 4 "h1" ? do fontSize $ em 2.3 ``` (View full [`Main.hs`](https://github.com/srid/rib-sample/blob/master/Main.hs) at rib-sample) ## Getting Started The easiest way to get started with [Rib](/) is to [use the template](https://help.github.com/en/articles/creating-a-repository-from-a-template) repository, [**rib-sample**](https://github.com/srid/rib-sample), from Github. ### Directory structure Let's look at what's in the template repository: ```shell $ git clone https://github.com/srid/rib-sample.git mysite ... $ cd mysite $ ls -F a/ default.nix Main.hs README.md rib-sample.cabal ``` The three key items here are: 1. `Main.hs`: Haskell source containing the DSL of the HTML/CSS of your site. 1. `a/`: The source content (eg: Markdown sources and static files) 1. `b/`: The target directory, excluded from the git repository, will contain _generated_ content (i.e., the HTML files, and copied over static content) The template repository comes with a few sample posts under `a/`, and a basic HTML layout and CSS style defined in `Main.hs`. ### Run the site Now let's run them all. Clone the sample repository locally, install [Nix](https://nixos.org/nix/) and run your site as follows: ```shell nix-shell --run 'ghcid -T main' ``` (Note even though the author recommends it Nix is strictly not required; you may simply run `ghcid -T main` instead of the above command if you do not wish to use Nix.) Running this command gives you a local HTTP server at http://localhost:8080/ (serving the generated files) that automatically reloads when either the content (`a/`) or the HTML/CSS/build-actions (`Main.hs`) changes. Hot reload, in other words. ### How Rib works How does the aforementioned nix-shell command work? 1. `nix-shell` will run the given command in a shell environment with all of our dependencies (notably the Haskell ones including the `rib` library itself) installed. 1. [`ghcid`](https://github.com/ndmitchell/ghcid) will compile your `Main.hs` and run its `main` function. 1. `Main.hs:main` in turn calls `Rib.App.run` which takes as argument your custom Shake action that will build the static site. 1. `Rib.App.run`: this parses the CLI arguments and runs the rib CLI "app" which can be run in one of a few modes --- generating static files, watching the `a/` directory for changes, starting HTTP server for the `b/` directory. By default---without any explicit arguments---this will run the Shake build action passed as argument on every file change and spin up a HTTP server. Run that command, and visit http://localhost:8080 to view your site. ### Editing workflow Now try making some changes to the content, say `a/first-post.md`. You should see it reflected when you refresh the page. Or change the HTML or CSS of your site in `Main.hs`; this will trigger `ghcid` to rebuild the Haskell source and restart the server. ### What's next? Great, by now you should have your static site generator ready and running! What more can you do? Surely you may have specific needs; and this usually translates to running custom Shake actions during the build. Rib provides helper functions in `Rib.Shake` to make this easier. Rib recommends writing your Shake actions in the style of being [forward-defined](http://hackage.haskell.org/package/shake-0.18.3/docs/Development-Shake-Forward.html) which adds to the simplicity of the entire thing. ## Examples * [rib-sample](https://github.com/srid/rib-sample): Use this to get started with your own site. * Author's own website. Live at https://www.srid.ca/