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A blogging engine in C
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spc476/mod_blog
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Finally, an update to the very outdated mod_blog that's been available since September 3, 2009. There still isn't much documentation because, as of yet. I doubt what's here is enough but for the most dedicated to go through the code to see how this works. REQUIREMENTS If you don't meet these requirements, then you probably won't get very far. The software was written in C (don't bother asking for Perl code---there isn't any, and there won't be any) and as such, makes certain assumptions, such as: * Linux (or any POSIX compilant UNIX system) * GCC (or any C99 compiler that may come with your system) * Apache * Lua 5.1 or higher The code right now assumes you'll be running this under Apache. COMPILATION You'll need to install my CGILIB library (6.6 or higher) to compile this blog software. You can install it from https://github.com/spc476/CGILib To install it once it's downloaded, all it should take is "make" and then "make install" as root. The library assumes a POSIX environment and should compile as is on most modern Unix systems. Once that is installed, you should be able to do a "make" and generate the blog engine. It's built as a setuid program to avoid having a world-writable directory, but if that is a concern, you can certain remove the setuid'ness of it, but make sure the data directories are writable by Apache. INSTALLATION The assumption on the blog engine is that the executable resides in a directory visible to Apache and runnable from within Apache's docroot for the the site in question. I have my copy named as "boston.cgi" and Apache configured to execute such programs via CGI. The htdocs/ subdirectory contains a sample website to run the blog. There's also a sample htaccess file that shows the method I use to run the blog engine. In the journal/ subdirectory is out-of-band files (which should not be served up by Apache). There you will find a sample configuration file and a sample entry to see how the data is stored (each entry is a separate file, stored under a Year/Month/Day directory structure). And yes, there is code to do email notifications, but it's not enabled by default. I only left the code in to support the half dozen people that did sign up to receive email notifications. The HTML entry form works, but it's not my primary method for new entries---for that, I use email. I have the following line in '/etc/aliases': myjournal: "/path/to/boston.cgi --config /path/to/config --email --cmd new" To make an entry, I format an email to the journal address as: +-----[top of file]---------------------------- |author: [who you set at author---exact match] |title: [title of entry] |class: [keywords] |status: [status repeated on Facebook] |adtag: [keyword used for advertising network] | |body of entry, usually including HTML | ... +---------------------------------------------- And that's pretty much it. Good luck.
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