website/content/blog/2020-10-15-setting-up-blogging-with-emacs.md
2024-04-06 00:28:37 +02:00

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Markdown

+++
title = "Setting Up Blogging with Emacs"
[categories]
tags = [ "emacs" ]
categories = [ "apps" ]
+++
I\'d like to blog more notes on stuff I do and it would be nice to have
a smooth workflow in my editor of choice.
It is too late to explain a lot, but all these things were proudly found
elsewhere. See the references list at the end of this post.
# Creating the blog project
To deploy to github as a personal blog you have to create a repo in the
form **\<username\>.github.io**. Since I name my projects the same as
the repos the name was a quick choice.
The structure is as follows:
```
<root> -+- blog -+- posts -+- <blog posts>
| +- org-template -+- <templates>
| +- css -+- <css files>
+- public -+- <built website>
+- .github -+- workflow --- main.yml <github actions>
+- publish.el
+- Makefile <local develop actions>
```
# Configuring org-publish
This is what the **publish.el** file is for.
Prepare some snippets for the HTML pages
First off, a link to the CSS:
``` lisp
(setq website-html-head "<link rel=\"stylesheet\" href=\"css/site.css\"
type=\"text/css\"/>")
```
Let\'s also add a navigation menu at the top of each page:
``` lisp
(setq website-html-preamble
"<div class=\"nav\">
<ul>
<li><a href=\"/\">Home</a></li>
<li><a href=\"https://github.com/ptillemans\">GitHub</a></li>
</ul>
</div>")
```
And a footer :
``` lisp
(setq website-html-postamble "<div class=\"footer\"> Copyright 2020 %a (%v
HTML).<br> Last updated %C.<br> Built with %c. </div>")
```
And now we can all tie it together by creating the
**org-publish-project-alist**:
``` lisp
(setq org-publish-project-alist
`(("posts"
;; configure project structure
:base-directory "blog/posts/"
:base-extension "org"
:publishing-directory "public/"
:recursive t
:publishing-function org-html-publish-to-html
;; configure index creation
:auto-sitemap t
:sitemap-title "Blog Index"
:sitemap-filename "index.org"
:sitemap-style tree
:sitemap-file-entry-format "%d - %t"
:sitemap-sort-files anti-chronologically
:html-doctype "html5"
:html-html5-fancy t
:html-head ,website-html-head
:html-preamble ,website-html-preamble
:html-postamble ,website-html-postamble
:author "Peter Tillemans"
:email "pti@snamellit.com"
:with-creator t)
("blog-static"
:base-directory "blog/posts/"
:base-extension "png\\|jpg\\|gif\\|pdf\\|mp3\\|ogg\\|swf"
:publishing-directory "public_html/"
:recursive t
:publishing-function org-publish-attachment)
("css"
:base-directory "blog/css/"
:base-extension "css"
:publishing-directory "public/css"
:publishing-function org-publish-attachment
:recursive t)
("all" :components ("posts" "css" "blog-static"))))
```
# Make local testing easy
The commands to build the blog are not hard, but hard to remember and
hard to type.
Let\'s make a makefile to help:
``` makefile
.PHONY: all publish publish_no_init
all: publish
publish: publish.el
@echo "Publishing... with current Emacs configurations."
emacs --batch --load publish.el --funcall org-publish-all
publish_no_init:
@echo "Publishing... with --no-init"
emacs --batch --no-init --load publish.el --funcall org-publish-all
clean:
@echo "Cleaning up..."
rm -rf public
@rm -rvf *.elc
@rm -rvf public
@rm -rvf ~/.org-timestamps/*
serve: publish
@echo "Serving site"
python -m http.server --directory public
```
For local testing just do:
``` sh
$ make clean serve
```
If the only change is new content then not cleaning is much faster.
# Deploy to Github Pages
A slightly modified version of the initial workflow will do the
publishing:
``` yaml
# This is a basic workflow to help you get started with Actions
name: CI
# Controls when the action will run. Triggers the workflow on push or pull request
# events but only for the master branch
on:
push:
branches: [ master ]
pull_request:
branches: [ master ]
# A workflow run is made up of one or more jobs that can run sequentially or in parallel
jobs:
# This workflow contains a single job called "build"
build:
# The type of runner that the job will run on
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
# Steps represent a sequence of tasks that will be executed as part of the job
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@master
with:
fetch-depth: 1
- name: build
uses: docker://iquiw/alpine-emacs
if: github.event.deleted == false
with:
args: emacs --batch --load publish.el --funcall org-publish-all
- name: deploy
uses: peaceiris/actions-gh-pages@v1.1.0
if: success()
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.PERSONAL_ACCESS_TOKEN }}
PUBLISH_BRANCH: gh-pages
PUBLISH_DIR: ./public
```
Note that you need to put a secret **PERSONAL~ACCESSTOKEN~** with an
access token which has basic push access to the repo to push the built
site to the gh-pages branch.
For the emacs call, I just copied the command from the **Makefile**.
After a push the site is usually up by the time I check, say in about a
minute.
# Setting up a Capture Template
This proved to be the hardest part to get working.
I am using **Doom Emacs** so I wrap everything in
**with-eval-after-load**.
The challenge was that the title is needed to create the slug for the
filename and then again as title for the post. So my ugly solution is to
stuff it in a variable and get the variable back in the template.
``` lisp
(with-eval-after-load 'org-capture
(defvar snamellit/blog-title "test-title")
(setq snamellit-blog-template "#+title: %(progn snamellit-blog-title)
#+date: %t
#+author: Peter Tillemans
#+email: pti@snamellit.com
%?")
(defun snamellit/capture-blog-post-file ()
(let* ((title (read-from-minibuffer "Post Title: "))
(slug (replace-regexp-in-string "[^a-z0-9]+" "-" (downcase title))))
(setq snamellit/blog-title title)
(format "~/Projects/ptillemans.github.io/blog/posts/%s-%s.org"
(format-time-string "%Y-%m-%d" (current-time))
slug)))
(add-to-list 'org-capture-templates
'("b" "Blog Post" plain
(file snamellit/capture-blog-post-file)
(file "~/.doom.d/tpl-blog-post.org"))))
```
The **tpl-blog-post.org** template file :
```
#+title: %(progn snamellit/blog-title)
#+date: %<%Y-%m-%d>
%?
```
It is very minimal and I\'d like to keep it that way.
# In use
To create a blog post
- SPC-X b will create the post
- Give a title for the post
- A template file is created (unfortunately in plain text)
- Enter the idea, hook and save with C-c C-c
- Open the org file with SPC-f r (open recent file)
- Flesh out the post using org-mode goodness
- save, commit and push to git
After push the github action will bring it live
# References
Following links were useful in setting this up:
- [How to blog with Emacs Org
mode](https://opensource.com/article/20/3/blog-emacs)
- [GitHub Pages
documentation](https://docs.github.com/en/free-pro-team@latest/github/working-with-github-pages/about-github-pages)
- [The Org Mode Manual](https://orgmode.org/org.html)
- [The Meg in Progress post on building a static blog with
org-mode.](https://meganrenae21.github.io/Meg-in-Progress/posts/blogging-with-org-mode.html)
- [Website with org-mode](https://thenybble.de/projects/orgsite.html)
- [Richard Kallos\' post on site generation with Org
Mode](https://rkallos.com/blog/2017/01/02/static-site-generation-with-org-mode/)
- [Blogging with Org
mode](https://www.brautaset.org/articles/2017/blogging-with-org-mode.html)
- [Org Capture Tricks from
Storax](https://storax.github.io/blog/2016/05/02/org-capture-tricks/)