newswriter

0.2.38 • Public • Published

NewsWriter

Overview

NewsWriter is a tool for maintaining front-page news and announcements. This might seem a trivial task: we have a standard for exchanging calendar data (RFC 5546), and another for publishing news (RFC 4287), and plenty of kit that does a good job of reading and presenting both (from Android tablets to the iPad, from Google Calendar to the venerable MS Outlook, and on to the swelling gaggle of smartphone brands and versions). Consuming news and schedules is now simple enough at the user end, but production is, unfortunately, another matter -- and it should not be.

In a university context, in particular, news feeds and machine-readable calendar objects are natural partners. Properly applied, they can bring activity in eclectic, separately managed projects into clear focus across the local community. There are surely corporate publishing platforms around that effectively integrate the two, but where territorial incentives dominate, and the start-line is a passel of static project websites composed with DreamWeaver and the like, that may not be an option. That is the case at my place of work, so I scratched the itch by writing this tool. I hope you find it useful.

NewsWriter simplifies the deployment of integrated news and calendar information at both ends. Input is controlled through a simple one-page view into an SQLite database, with search-as-you-type input of reusable content, and widgets for quick entry of date details. Content is published as an integrated set of page, feed and calendar objects through a flexible template mechanism, and can be placed on the target website via rsync. The result can be viewed on the site of the Nagoya University Graduate School of Law, for which NewsWriter was originally built.

Demo Installation

Playing with a demo installation is the best and quickest way to explore the operation of the tool. NewsWriter is a node.js application that relies no rsync, so those two utilities must be installed on your system. With that in place, install the NewsWriter package:

npm install newswriter

NewsWriter contains a (very) small webserver that can be used for a quick demo. Run it by opening a terminal and running the following command (or creating a node.js script with the same content):

> require('newswriter').runDemoServer();
Listening on http://localhost:8082

You can view the demo website at its URL:

http://localhost:8082/

The website is initially empty, and will return a 404 page. To give it some content, open a second terminal and create a file with the following line to use as a run script (the script will require an argument, so it cannot be executed easily from within node.js, hence the need for a script file):

require('newswriter').run();

The demo server provides a runtime NewsWriter configuration for the demo, tied to the port on which NewsWriter itself will run. If the line above is saved in a file writer.js, you can bring up NewsWriter with the following command:

$ node writer.js -p 8081

Visit NewsWriter by pointing your browser at its URL:

Reading config from newswriter-8081.cfg

Admin URL: http://localhost:8081/?admin=ol1p9jn3&id=1&key=ol1p9jn3

Editor URL for admin: http://localhost:8081/?admin=ol1p9jn3&id=1&key=ol1p9jn3
Reviewer URL for reviewer: http://localhost:8081/?page=pending&id=2&key=f8njwbcg
Done. Ready to shake, rattle and roll!

You can now access NewsWriter by pointing your browser at its admin URL. Note that the key values for your installation will differ: use the URL reported to the terminal at startup. In this case, that was:

http://localhost:8081/?admin=ol1p9jn3&id=1&key=ol1p9jn3

The form will look like that shown at the bottom of the GitHub view of this page. There is a logic to the form navigation that should become apparent with a little experimentation. As the note at the top of the form says, you need to use Enter or Tab to save a field: if you click outside of the field during editing, the original content will be restored. If you lose content accidentally, it can be recovered (on Firefox under Linux, at least) with Ctrl-Z.

Items save with only Convenor details, a Title, and Description (plus perhaps an Attachment) are saved as Announcements. Items that also have both Presenter details and one or more Sessions are saved as Events.

When the Publish key is pressed, the most recent ten Announcements and the most recent ten Events are published to the page. You can view the published output by visiting the target website again:

http://localhost:8081/

Explore the pages, calendars and news feeds by clicking around. Everything should just work.

In some environments, it may be desired to allow items to be reviewed before final publication. For this purpose, items that have been saved, but not published, become visible in a special feed keyed to the reviewer role. You can access it with the URL reported by NewsWriter at startup. In our case this was:

http://localhost:8081/?page=pending&id=2&key=f8njwbcg

The reviewer feed links back to a Reviewer view of the NewsWriter page. Reviewer views have permission only to edit content and mark it as approved: a reviewer cannot publish content directly.

For production, you will want to run NewsWriter on a port that is accessible only from the server itself, and channel external calls to it via a rewrite recipe that is protected by login, and masks the admin key from view. If you would like the lighttpd recipe that we use for that purpose in our environment, feel free to write to me on bennett@nagoya-u.jp.

To adapt NewsWriter to an existing website, you will want to break the existing top page into its constituent parts and create templates. To get that going, make a copy of the demo style files to use as a starting point:

$ cp style/demo.js style/production.js
$ cp -r style/demo style/production

To create the production profiel, run NewsWriter against a different port to create a fresh database and profile for production use:

$ node writer.js -S production -p 6338

NewsWriter will complain about numerous missing parameters: to set things up, work through the warnings and supply the necessary details. The demo configuration at newswriter-8081.cfg may be useful as a reference.

The way templates work will probably be obvious if you have JavaScript experience. The callbacks correspond to placeholders in the relevant template, and have access to the content for the target block via the data argument. Callbacks have access to a catalogue of utility functions and configuration variables under the this.sys object. this also provides access to some of the template functions themselves, which are used for some dirty tricks that are best taken at face value, or studied by looking at the source.

If you try NewsWriter and like it, let me know with a shout-out on Twitter (I'm @fgbjr over there). If anyone is motivated to document the signatures of the functions available to the template engine, I'll be glad to add that to this README with attribution; but for the present I'll be happy if NewsWriter serves the purpose for you: the world certainly needs more news, and less email.

Enjoy!

Frank Bennett, Nagoya University, Japan

NewsWriter page view

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npm i newswriter

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0.2.38

License

AGPL-3.0

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  • fbennett