ipfs-cluster hasn't had a release since may 2020, however go-ipfs needs
to be updated for support with go1.15 and go1.16 (1.14 goes out of
support in february).
I've requested they tag a new revision, but until then we'll have to use
an unstable version.
I've re enabled the tests since they pass and are critical to catch
errors within ipfs-cluster (and in general make maintenance easier). One
test failed, so I manually disabled it via a patch and .Skip()
- Enable HTML minification
- Support `output_dir` in `config.toml`
- Allow sections to be drafted
- Allow specifying default language in filenames
- Render emoji in Markdown content if the `render_emoji` option is enabled
- Enable YouTube privacy mode for the YouTube shortcode
- Add language as class to the `<code>` block and as `data-lang`
- Add bibtex to `load_data`
- Add a `[markdown]` section to `config.toml` to configure rendering
- Add `highlight_code` and `highlight_theme` to a `[markdown]` section in `config.toml`
- Add `external_links_target_blank`, `external_links_no_follow` and `external_links_no_referrer`
- Add a `smart_punctuation` option in the `[markdown]` section in `config.toml` to turn elements like dots and dashes
into their typographic forms
- Add iteration count variable `nth` for shortcodes to know how many times a shortcode has been invoked in a given
content
- Update some highlighting syntaxes and the TS syntax will now be used instead of JS due to issues with it
- Remove `zola serve --watch-only`: since we build the HTML in memory and not on disk, it doesn't make sense anymore
- Update clojure syntax
- Prefer extra syntaxes to the default ones if we have a match for language
- Fix `zola serve` having issues with non-ascii paths
- 404 page now gets the site default language as `lang`
Sparkleshare requires 'sh' to be in its PATH, or push-operations fail. Its PATH consists of a single entry, which is configured in the postInstall phase. The bash-derivative includes 'sh', and adding it to the dependencies resolves the issue.
This is a program that just displays a static cat picture in a Wayland
window. I packaged it a while ago thinking it wouldn't be useful for
anybody else, but a conversation on IRC today made me realise it would
be!
hello-wayland is very useful as a minimal example when hacking on
Wayland ecosystem stuff -- even if Firefox doesn't work yet,
hello-wayland probably will and that can be useful to guide you in the
right direction!