#coding: utf8 # This is the sample configuration file for a blitiri blog engine. # If you omit a variable, the default will be used. # # If you prefer, you can set the values directly inside blitiri.cgi and not # have a configuration file. # Directory where entries are stored data_path = "/tmp/blog/data" # Are comments allowed? (if False, comments_path option is not used) enable_comments = False # Directory where comments are stored (must be writeable by the web server) comments_path = "/tmp/blog/comments" # Path where templates are stored. Use an empty string for the built-in # default templates. If they're not found, the built-in ones will be used. templates_path = "/tmp/blog/templates" # URL to the blog, including the name. Can be a full URL or just the path. blog_url = "/blog/blitiri.cgi" # Style sheet (CSS) URL. Can be relative or absolute. To use the built-in # default, set it to blog_url + "/style". css_url = blog_url + "/style" # Blog title title = "I don't like blogs" # Default author author = "Hartmut Kegan" # Article encoding encoding = "utf8" # You can customize the captcha engine by providing a Captcha class with this # interface: # Constructor: # Captcha(article) -> constructor, takes an article[1] as argument # Attributes: # puzzle -> a string with the puzzle the user must solve to prove he is # not a bot (can be raw HTML) # help -> a string with extra instructions, shown only when the user # failed to solve the puzzle # Methods: # validate(form_data) -> based on the form data[2], returns True if # the user has solved the puzzle uccessfully # (False otherwise). # # Note you must ensure that the puzzle attribute and validate() method can # "communicate" because they are executed in different requests. You can pass a # cookie or just calculate the answer based on the article's data, for example. # # Example: a captcha class to completely disable the captcha feature # class Captcha (object): # def __init__(self, article): # self.puzzle = '' # self.help = '' # def validate(form_data): # return True # Remove the captcha input field from the form template, and that's it! # # [1] article is an object with all the article's information: # path -> string # created -> datetime # updated -> datetime # uuid -> string (unique ID) # title -> string # author -> string # tags -> list of strings # raw_contents -> string in rst format # comments -> list of Comment objects (not too relevant here) # [2] form_data is an object with the form fields (all strings): # author, author_error # link, link_error # catpcha, captcha_error # body, body_error # action, method