1.4.0 • Published 5 years ago

ember-ghost v1.4.0

Weekly downloads
1
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
5 years ago

ember-ghost

This project is designed to be a fully-functional, static site implementation of a blog system that is mostly compatible with Ghost and is built on EmberJS with fully working out of the box SEO friendly output. It supports being hosted on AWS S3 or any other static site hosting solution.

This system supports the use of shallow forks of Ghost themes and currently supports

If you are interested in writing your own theme for Ember Ghost please check out create-ember-ghost-template which allows you to run npm init ember-ghost-template <name> right now to get started (without the need to install anything). Check out the readme for more information.

If you want an example of the this "in production" then check out the Stone Circle Blog.

You do not need to be a web developer to be able to use this system. You just write markdown files and the rest of the work is performed by EmberJS' build system.

Super Quick Start

If you want to get your new Ember-Ghost blog deployed on Netlify in less than a minute then you can just click this button:

Deploy to Netlify

If you want to instead work with your blog locally before deploying then you can continue reading

Quick Start

# if you don't have ember-cli installed already
npm install -g ember-cli

ember new super-blog
cd super-blog

# you can replace the template with the one you want to use
ember install ember-ghost ember-ghost-casper-template

It will ask you if you want to update the index.html file and you should say yes 👍

To build the static output directory, run the standard build process for a production Ember application:

ember build -e production

This will generate a fully static output of your site in the dist folder.

If you want to see the blog system running on your local machine just run npm start and you will be able to navigate to http://localhost:4200 to see the blog in action.

Usage

Creating Content

This addon comes with helpful blueprints to generate posts and authors for you in the structure it expects. The first thing you should do is generate an author as follows:

ember g author your-name

Then you should be able to edit the file author/your-name.md to update the details.

Next you will want to generate some posts. If you only have one author generated (in a single user blog) you can generate a post as simply as running:

ember g post "this is a post I want to write"

Configuring

If you have already generated some content (see above) you will know that you are able to configure certain details about your posts. If you want to edit the global configuration you will need to provide a section in the Environment config file for your host Ember app (located in config/environment.js). You will see a let ENV = { declaration near the top of the file, you will need to add a blog key to that object with your configuration. Here is an example with the exact contents of that blog config object from the Stone Circle blog

let ENV = {

  // leave all the other config in tact and add the following key

  blog: {
    title: "The Write Blog",
    description: "Here is where I lay my words",
    logo: "/images/logo-white.png",
    rssLogo: '/images/logo.png',
    coverImage: "/images/cover-image.jpg",
    coverMeta: {
      attribution: "by Conor Luddy",
      attributionLink: "https://unsplash.com/photos/QkQXTxJ7TLg"
    },
    twitter: "emberjs",
    navigation: [
      { label: 'Ember Consulting', link: 'https://simplabs.com' },
      { label: 'Blog Home', route: 'index' },
    ]
  },
}

This example config shows you how to set a title and general description for your blog, have a logo and a cover image, a link to your twitter account and how to add some navigation to your blog.

Note: the images like /images/logo.png will need to be in your public folder in your host app.

Configuring your host & enabling RSS

The above configuration allows you to make your blog look a lot better but there is one piece of configuration that will enable some awesome features like automatically creating an RSS feed for you 🎉

Although because of the nature of some RSS aggregators you need to be very careful with this because it can mess up a cache that you have no control over, this is why it's dealt with differently than the above.

If you're not familiar with Ember configuration, you are able to specific some environment config depending on what environment you are targeting. This allows you to have some config only available in production (like Google Analytics for example).

If you go to the end of your config/environment.js file you will see something that is checking if the environment is production. You can add your host config to the blog config object as follows:

if (environment === 'production') {

  // ... any other production config you might have ...

  ENV.blog.host = 'https://blog.stonecircle.io';
}

when ember-casper-template sees that you have host defined it will start generating the rss feed.

Contributing

Installation

  • git clone <repository-url>
  • cd ember-ghost
  • npm install

Linting

  • npm run lint:js
  • npm run lint:js -- --fix

Running tests

  • ember test – Runs the test suite on the current Ember version
  • ember test --server – Runs the test suite in "watch mode"
  • ember try:each – Runs the test suite against multiple Ember versions

Running the dummy application

For more information on using ember-cli, visit https://ember-cli.com/.

License

This project is licensed under the MIT License.