@slybridges/kiss

Keep It Simple and Static site generator


Keywords
static-site-generator, static-site, ssg, blog, generator, website, html, markdown, nunjucks
License
MIT
Install
npm install @slybridges/kiss@0.5.2

Documentation

😚 kiss: keep it simple and static site generator

Low-tech static site generator

kiss is released under the MIT license. kiss current version on npm

What kiss is

  • Low-tech: VanillaJS, small codebase, little abstractions.
  • Minimal: No framework, no code transpiler, little dependencies.
  • Batteries included: Comes out of the box with everything you need to make an SEO friendly website
  • Developer friendly: kiss start will watch your changes and reload the browser after every build so that you can iterate quickly.
  • Powerful: Dynamic data computations, page data cascade and derived content generation.
  • Extensible: Easily add support for more content types, dynamic computations, writers, post build commands via hooks, etc.

How it works:

  • Write your content in markdown, html, json, or javascript
  • Organize your articles in folders the way you want your urls to look like (like in the good ole days!)
  • Write your site design in Nunjucks and get access to the full site data while doing so
  • Use top-down data cascade to enrich your content metadata as it is crawled
  • Write small functions to compute dynamic data during data cascade (e.g. generate default title based on permalink or default cover image based on content)
  • Create custom pages derived from the main data (e.g list of articles by tags or articles by author's)
  • Pre-compute derived data views based (e.g. compute the list of categories and subcategories for generating the navigation bar)

kiss will automatically make your site SEO friendly by default:

  • Optimize images and make them responsive
  • Data cascade makes it trivial to generate meta and Open Graph tags
  • Generate RSS feed
  • Generate sitemap
  • Generate a dump of your full site as JSON for debug or to implement actions via workers (like site search)

DISCLAIMER

Concept is being tuned until reaching v1. Things might break. Use at your own risk.

Requirements

Node 12 or above.

Quick start

Use the kiss-starter boilerplate to get started in no time: https://github.com/slybridges/kiss-starter

DYI install

npm install --save @slybridges/kiss

Then create a kiss.config.js to set your config.

Default folder structure

Here is how your project directory would look like:

content/                          # this where your source content reside
├── blog/                         # create sub-folders as you see fit to match your site URL structure.
│   │                             # kiss automatically generates folder index pages listing all children
│   ├── my-first-blog-post/       # content piece that is a directory with post.md/.html file inside
│   │   ├── post.md               # generated permalink will be /blog/my-first-blog-post/ (you can override it if you want)
│   │   └── blog-post-cover.jpg   # pictures in content directory are copied as is
│   └── another-blog-post.md      # content piece that is a single file
└── index.js                      # index file data (.js/.md/.html) are merged with parent data and cascade to their children
public/                           # this is where generated static files will be written
theme/                            # this is where you create your site design
└── templates/                    # this is where your nunjucks template live
    ├── default.njk               # default nunjucks template
    ├── collection.njk            # template for collection (index) pages
    └── post.njk                  # template for post (article) pages
kiss.config.js                    # kiss config file
package.json

Launch dev server

npx kiss start

Launches the build, watch for content or config changes and reload the browser after every build.

Generate a production build

NODE_ENV=production npx kiss build

Documentation

Read the code, Luke.

  • Obi-Wan Kenobi, had he been the creator of kiss

kiss codebase is small and easy to navigate:

  • start with config/defaultConfig.js to get an understanding of how you can configure your project.
  • then, head over build.js build() method to understand the lifecycle of a build.
  • finally, head over to data/initialPageData.js and scroll down to the bottom to read about the default page metadata and dynamic computations

Alternatively check out kiss-starter for a real life minimal example.