wrote quickstart
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@@ -47,7 +47,7 @@ To get up and running, see the [quickstart page][quickstart].
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[quickstart]: doc/quickstart.md
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[quickstart]: doc/quickstart.md
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## building
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## building & installing
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Dependencies:
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Dependencies:
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@@ -57,6 +57,8 @@ Dependencies:
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Then do the standard:
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Then do the standard:
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```
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```
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$ git clone git://git.nytpu.com/comitium # you could also download a tarball
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$ cd comitium
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$ make
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$ make
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# make install
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# make install
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```
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```
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@@ -1,3 +1,70 @@
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# comitium quickstart
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# comitium quickstart
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comitium is meant to be very easy to get up and running, even in a shared
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hosting environment where you don't have root access. All you need is a Gemini
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server capable of hosting static pages and a way to run a program in regular
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intervals, such as cron.
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## installing
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If you can write to `/usr/local/` then you can just follow the instructions
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including `make install` on the [README][]. If you only have access to your
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home directory, you can instead find the binary and man page in `build/` after
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running `make`. You can then copy or symlink `comitium` to your preferred bin
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directory and you can access the man page with `man -l build/comitium.1`.
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[README]: README.md
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## getting set up
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### data directory
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Once you have the binary all set up, you need figure out where you want your
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data directory to be. If you're serving from `~/public_gemini` or something like
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that, then just put `export $COMITIUM_DATA="~/public_gemini"` in your shell's rc
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file and the files will all be set up there.
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If you're serving from `/var/gemini` or something similar where the directory is
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owned by a user other than your main user, then for security purposes it's
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preferable to use the default data directory and symlink `feeds.gmi` and
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`subscriptions.gmi` into your directory. This way you don't have to run
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comitium as root, nor do you need to give users inordinate access to other parts
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of the system, nor do you need to log into your gemini user every time you want
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to add a feed.
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### adding feeds
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Now you need to add your subscriptions. If you don't have an existing list of
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feeds, then just go `comitium add <url>` whenever you find a new one and you'll
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be all set (see [`man comitium`][man] for more details on the `add` command).
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You don't need to run `comitium refresh` after adding a new feed, `add`
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automatically fetches the new feed and updates your .json and .gmi files with
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the new entries.
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If you do have an existing list of feeds, it's pretty trivial (for most formats
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anyways :P) to write a shell script or similar to parse whatever format they're
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currently in and run `comitium add` for each of them.
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[man]: comitium.1.scd
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### refreshing regularly
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I just put it in my crontab to refresh on a six hour interval:
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```
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* */6 * * * /usr/local/bin/comitium refresh
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```
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If you set the data directory with an environment variable like mentioned
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earlier, make sure to do something like this, because the environment variable
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isn't passed to cron:
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```
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* */6 * * * /usr/local/bin/comitium refresh -d /home/somebody/public_gemini
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```
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And there you go! You're all set up, now just browse to `feeds.gmi` and get to
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browsin'!
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