This plugin is no longer in active use and development has been abandoned. The github repo is archived, and will eventually be deleted.
This is a plugin for pelican to provide static comments.
It was inspired by a similar plugin for Jekyll.
When enabled, the plugin searches a comments directory in your pelican
tree. In that directory, there is one file per comment. Each comment
file has a post_id
attribute with the slug of the post to which the
comment belongs. The article template will receive a comments
attribute
which contains the list of comments on the post.
Pelican-comments is not part of the default pelican distribution.
Install from github using pip:
pip install git+git://github.com/bstpierre/pelican-comments#egg=pelican_comments
In your settings.py, add:
PLUGINS = ['pelican_comments']
COMMENTS_DIR = ['comments'] # Optional: 'comments' is the default
ARTICLE_EXCLUDES = ['comments', 'pages'] # Optional: Stops pelican trying to validate comments as articles
In your template, add:
{% if article.comments %}
<h2>Comments</h2>
<ul>
{% for comment in article.comments %}
<li>
<p>{{ comment.author }} said, on {{ comment.date }}:</p>
{{ comment.content }}
</li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
{% endif %}
In your pelican tree, create a comments directory. Add one file per
comment on your blog. Make sure that each comment file has a post_id
attribute to tie it to a post. You can also include the comments'
authors and date/time. For example:
post_id: one-of-my-post-slugs
Author: some random guy
Date: 2012-09-27 18:44
This is a test.
It doesn't matter what the files are named.
Script for processing a comment submission form coming soon.
Script to import comments from a wordpress export file coming soon.
See also this php script, which should be relatively easy to hack into submission. More discussion in this blog post.
You'll need some kind of workflow to allow you to move comments from email or other holding area (I plan to use the filesystem on the webhost) to your pelican tree.