Almanac is the most elegant mountable blog engine that can be easily hooked up in the existing Rails application. You can read more about it in this blog post.
- Slick default design that can be easily customized.
- kramdown (better Markdown) for all input fields.
- Drafts that make sense.
- Easy Google Analytics support.
- Akismet support for spam filtering in comments.
- Built-in social sharing with Facebook and Twitter.
- RSS support.
- Tags for posts.
- Photo uploading.
- Complete integration with Devise and CanCan.
- Tested with RSpec and FactoryGirl
- Uses haml, scss, CoffeeScript and Bootstrap for views.
gem "almanac"
And run bundle install
.
To hook up Almanac routes to your current Rails app simply put this code in your config/routes.rd
file
mount Almanac::Engine, :at => '/blog'
You can obviously setup any route you want. E.g. /posts
or /almanac
.
First off, install Almanac migrations:
rake almanac:install:migrations
Then migrate your database:
rake db:migrate
Almanac relies on Devise and CanCan properly configured in your app. In short, the current_user
variable and CanCan ability.rb
file has to exist. You can setup permissions for the following Almanac models:
can :manage, Almanac::Post
can :manage, Almanac::Blog
can :manage, Almanac::Comment
can :manage, Almanac::Image
These particular rules will allow the specified user to do anything with any Almanac record in the database.
Almanac relies on the Dragonfly gem for file uploads. Configure Dragonfly in your app by adding the following line to config/initializers/dragonfly.rb
:
require 'dragonfly/rails/images'
Lastly, you'll have to specify the name of your user model. Create a config/initializers/almanac.rb
file and add the following line there:
Almanac.user_class = "User" # other possibilities: "Author", "Writer", etc.
Kramdown is the superset of Markdown. All input fields can use it. Check out all syntax rules for kramdown. One of the best examples of kramdown usage is code highlighting that is part of Almanac. In your post you can simply write:
def foo
puts "bar"
end
And it will generate a nice looking block of Ruby code once your post is published.
Almanac is a mountable Rails engine, which means that all of its controllers, views and models can be rewritten in your main application. E.g. if you want to change the main layout view, create a app/views/layouts/almanac/application.html.haml
file in your project directory that will be used automatically by Rails instead of the default Almanac layout.
This applies to all other views, models and controllers. Basically, add an almanac
folder to any abstraction that you are willing to change and replace almanac files with your own.
Almanac's models and controllers are tested with RSpec and FactoryGirl. Rails engines, such as Almanac, are normally tested with a dummy app that is located inside the 'spec' folder. Migrate your test database from the spec/dummy
directory:
rake db:migrate RAILS_ENV=test
Go back to the almanac
directory and run rspec spec
.
- Fork the project.
- Write code for a feature or bug fix.
- Add Rspec tests for it.
- Commit, do not make changes to rakefile or version.
- Submit a pull request.