An intentionally non-pluggable, all-in-one, opinionated static site generator. Built with the zen of kartoffeldruck.
Image CC BY-SA 2.0, Walter Stempelo
kartoffeldruck is a full fledged site generation solution. An incomplete list of features:
- Markdown and Nunjucks templating support
- Front matters
- Pagination
- Draft posts
- Fetch tags and generate tag clouds
- Generate table of contents
- Custom urls (slugify, ...)
- Custom helpers
- Custom content processors
We intentionally do not provide any css processing pipelines or asset copy utilities. Use other tools that do the job.
Place a kartoffeldruck.js
file in your current project directory:
/**
* @param { import('kartoffeldruck').Kartoffeldruck } druck
*/
module.exports = async function(druck) {
// initialize the kartoffeldruck instance
// you may specify (global) template locals
// as well as the place for templates, pages, assets and dest more
druck.init({
locals: {
site: {
title: 'My Site'
}
}
});
await druck.generate({
source: '*.md',
dest: ':name/index.html'
});
};
Install the kartoffeldruck
globally via npm:
$ npm i -g kartoffeldruck
Run kartoffeldruck
in the current directory. It will pick up your runner file and generate the site into the dist
directory (or whatever is specified as dest
via druck.init(options)
.
$ kartoffeldruck
Generating site in /some-dir
Done
Alternatively, run kartoffeldruck
directly via npx
:
$ npx kartoffeldruck
Check out the example project to learn more about what is possible with the library.
You would like to spend hours composing a site generation solution yourself? Try out metalsmith. You would rather like to use Ruby anyway? Try jekyll. You want to experiment? Role your own.
Simply add the following task to your Gruntfile.js
:
grunt.registerTask('kartoffeldruck', function() {
var done = this.async();
var {
Kartoffeldruck
} = require('kartoffeldruck');
Kartoffeldruck.run({
logger: {
debug: grunt.log.ok,
info: grunt.log.ok
}
}).then(
() => done(),
(err) => done(err)
);
});
It will pick up your local kartoffeldruck.js
file and generate the blog from there.
MIT