veille/rawdog/config

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# Sample rawdog config file. Copy this into your ~/.rawdog/ directory, and edit
# it to suit your preferences.
# All paths in this file should be either absolute, or relative to your .rawdog
# directory.
# If you want to include another config file, then use "include FILENAME".
# Times in this file are specified as a value and a unit (for instance,
# "4h"). Units available are "s" (seconds), "m" (minutes), "h" (hours),
# "d" (days) and "w" (weeks). If no unit is specified, rawdog will
# assume minutes.
# Boolean (yes/no) values in this file are specified as "true" or "false".
# rawdog can be extended using plugin modules written in Python. This
# option specifies the directories to search for plugins to load. If a
# directory does not exist or cannot be read, it will be ignored. This
# option must appear before any options that are implemented by plugins.
plugindirs plugins
# Whether to split rawdog's state amongst multiple files.
# If this is turned on, rawdog will use significantly less memory, but
# will do more disk IO -- probably a good idea if you read a lot of
# feeds.
splitstate false
# The maximum number of articles to show on the generated page.
# Set this to 0 for no limit.
maxarticles 20
# The maximum age of articles to show on the generated page.
# Set this to 0 for no limit.
maxage 0
# The age after which articles will be discarded if they do not appear
# in a feed. Set this to a larger value if you want your rawdog output
# to cover more than a day's worth of articles.
expireage 1d
# The minimum number of articles from each feed to keep around in the history.
# Set this to 0 to only keep articles that were returned the last time the feed
# was fetched. (If this is set to 0, or "currentonly" below is set to true,
# then rawdog will not send the RFC3229+feed "A-IM: feed" header when making
# HTTP requests, since it can't tell from the response to such a request
# whether any articles have been removed from the feed; this makes rawdog
# slightly less bandwidth-efficient.)
keepmin 20
# Whether to only display articles that are currently included in a feed
# (useful for "planet" pages where you only want to display the current
# articles from several feeds). If this is false, rawdog will keep a
# history of older articles.
currentonly false
# Whether to divide the articles up by day, writing a "dayformat" heading
# before each set.
daysections true
# The format to write day headings in. See "man strftime" for more
# information; for example:
# %A, %d %B Wednesday, 21 January
# %Y-%m-%d 2004-01-21 (ISO 8601 format)
dayformat %A, %d %B
# Whether to divide the articles up by time, writing a "timeformat" heading
# before each set.
timesections true
# The format to write time headings in. For example:
# %H:%M 18:07 (ISO 8601 format)
# %I:%M %p 06:07 PM
timeformat %H:%M
# The format to display feed update and article times in. For example:
# %H:%M, %A, %d %B 18:07, Wednesday, 21 January
# %Y-%m-%d %H:%M 2004-01-21 18:07 (ISO 8601 format)
datetimeformat %H:%M, %A, %d %B
# The page template file to use, or "default" to use the built-in template
# (which is probably sufficient for most users). Use "rawdog -s page" to show
# the template currently in use as a starting-point for customisation.
# The following strings will be replaced in the output:
# __version__ The rawdog version in use
# __refresh__ The HTML 4 <meta http-equiv="refresh" ...> header
# __items__ The aggregated items
# __num_items__ The number of items on the page
# __feeds__ The feed list
# __num_feeds__ The number of feeds listed
# You can define additional strings using "define" in this config file; for
# example, if you say "define myname Adam Sampson", then "__myname__" will be
# replaced by "Adam Sampson" in the output.
pagetemplate template.bl4n
# Similarly, the template used for each item shown. Use "rawdog -s item" to
# show the template currently in use as a starting-point for customisation.
# The following strings will be replaced in the output:
# __title__ The item title (as an HTML link, if possible)
# __title_no_link__ The item title (as text)
# __url__ The item's URL, or the empty string if it doesn't
# have one
# __guid__ The item's GUID, or the empty string if it doesn't
# have one
# __description__ The item's descriptive text, or the empty string
# if it doesn't have a description
# __date__ The item's date as provided by the feed
# __added__ The date the article was received by rawdog
# __hash__ A hash of the article (useful for summary pages)
#
# All of the __feed_X__ strings from feeditemtemplate below will also be
# expanded here, for the feed that the article came from.
#
# You can define additional strings on a per-feed basis by using the
# "define_X" feed option; see the description of "feed" below for more
# details.
#
# Simple conditional expansion is possible by saying something like
# "__if_items__ hello __endif__"; the text between the if and endif will
# only be included if __items__ would expand to something other than
# the empty string. Ifs can be nested, and __else__ is supported.
# (This also works for the other templates, but it's most useful here.)
itemtemplate item.bl4n
# The template used to generate the feed list (__feeds__ above). Use "rawdog
# -s feedlist" to show the current template.
# The following strings will be replaced in the output:
# __feeditems__ The feed items
feedlisttemplate default
# The template used to generate each item in the feed list. Use "rawdog
# -s feeditem" to show the current template.
# The following strings will be replaced in the output:
# __feed_id__ The feed's title with non-alphanumeric characters
# (and HTML markup) removed (useful for per-feed
# styles); you can use the "id" feed option below to
# set a custom ID if you prefer
# __feed_hash__ A hash of the feed URL (useful for per-feed styles)
# __feed_title__ The feed title (as an HTML link, if possible)
# __feed_title_no_link__
# The feed title (as text)
# __feed_url__ The feed URL
# __feed_icon__ An "XML button" linking to the feed URL
# __feed_last_update__
# The time when the feed was last updated
# __feed_next_update__
# The time when the feed will next need updating
feeditemtemplate default
# Where to write the output HTML to. You should place style.css in the same
# directory. Specify this as "-" to write the HTML to stdout.
# (You will probably want to make this an absolute path, else rawdog will write
# to a file in your ~/.rawdog directory.)
outputfile /srv/http/veille/index.html
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#outputfile /home/you/public_html/rawdog.html
# Whether to use a <meta http-equiv="Refresh" ...> tag in the generated
# HTML to indicate that the page should be refreshed automatically. If
# this is turned on, then the page will refresh every N minutes, where N
# is the shortest feed period value specified below.
# (This works by controlling whether the default template includes
# __refresh__; if you use a custom template, __refresh__ is always
# available.)
userefresh true
# Whether to show the list of active feeds in the generated HTML.
# (This works by controlling whether the default template includes
# __feeds__; if you use a custom template, __feeds__ is always
# available.)
showfeeds true
# The number of concurrent threads that rawdog will use when fetching
# feeds -- i.e. the number of feeds that rawdog will attempt to fetch at
# the same time. If you have a lot of feeds, setting this to be 20 or
# so will significantly speed up updates. If this is set to 1 (or
# fewer), rawdog will not start any additional threads at all.
numthreads 1
# The time that rawdog will wait before considering a feed unreachable
# when trying to connect. If you're getting lots of timeout errors and
# are on a slow connection, increase this.
# (Unlike other times in this file, this will be assumed to be in
# seconds if no unit is specified.)
timeout 30s
# Whether to ignore timeouts. If this is false, timeouts will be reported as
# errors; if this is true, rawdog will silently ignore them.
ignoretimeouts false
# Whether to show Python traceback messages. If this is true, rawdog will show
# a traceback message if an exception is thrown while fetching a feed; this is
# mostly useful for debugging rawdog or feedparser.
showtracebacks false
# Whether to display verbose status messages saying what rawdog's doing
# while it runs. Specifying -v or --verbose on the command line is
# equivalent to saying "verbose true" here.
verbose false
# Whether to attempt to fix bits of HTML that should start with a
# block-level element (such as article descriptions) by prepending "<p>"
# if they don't already start with a block-level element.
blocklevelhtml true
# Whether to attempt to turn feed-provided HTML into valid HTML.
# The most common problem that this solves is a non-closed element in an
# article causing formatting problems for the rest of the page.
# For this option to have any effect, you need to have PyTidyLib or mx.Tidy
# installed.
tidyhtml true
# Whether the articles displayed should be sorted first by the date
# provided in the feed (useful for "planet" pages, where you're
# displaying several feeds and want new articles to appear in the right
# chronological place). If this is false, then articles will first be
# sorted by the time that rawdog first saw them.
sortbyfeeddate true
# Whether to consider articles' unique IDs or GUIDs when updating rawdog's
# database. If you turn this off, then rawdog will create a new article in its
# database when it sees an updated version of an existing article in a feed.
# You probably want this turned on.
useids true
# The fields to use when detecting duplicate articles: "id" is the article's
# unique ID or GUID; "link" is the article's link. rawdog will find the first
# one of these that's present in the article, and ignore the article if it's
# seen an article before (in any feed) that had the same value. For example,
# specifying "hideduplicates id link" will first look for id/guid, then for
# link.
# Note that some feeds use the same link for all their articles; if you specify
# "link" here, you will probably want to specify the "allowduplicates" feed
# argument (see below) for those feeds.
hideduplicates id
# The period to use for new feeds added to the config file via the -a|--add
# option.
newfeedperiod 3h
# Whether rawdog should automatically update this config file (and its
# internal state) if feed URLs change (for instance, if a feed URL
# results in a permanent HTTP redirect). If this is false, then rawdog
# will ask you to make the necessary change by hand.
changeconfig true
# The feeds you want to watch, in the format "feed period url [args]".
# The period is the minimum time between updates; if less than period
# minutes have passed, "rawdog update" will skip that feed. Specifying
# a period less than 30 minutes is considered to be bad manners; it is
# suggested that you make the period as long as possible.
# Arguments are optional, and can be given in two ways: either on the end of
# the "feed" line in the form "key=value", separated by spaces, or as extra
# indented lines after the feed line.
# possible arguments are:
# id Value for the __feed_id__ value in the item
# template for items in this feed (defaults to the
# feed title with non-alphanumeric characters and
# HTML markup removed)
# user User for HTTP basic authentication
# password Password for HTTP basic authentication
# format "text" to indicate that the descriptions in this feed
# are unescaped plain text (rather than the usual HTML),
# and should be escaped and wrapped in a <pre> element
# X_proxy Proxy URL for protocol X (for instance, "http_proxy")
# proxyuser User for proxy basic authentication
# proxypassword Password for proxy basic authentication
# allowduplicates "true" to disable duplicate detection for this feed
# maxage Override the global "maxage" value for this feed
# keepmin Override the global "keepmin" value for this feed
# define_X Equivalent to "define X ..." for item templates
# when displaying items from this feed
# You can provide a default set of arguments for all feeds using
# "feeddefaults". You can specify as many feeds as you like.
# (These examples have been commented out; remove the leading "#" on each line
# to use them.)
feeddefaults
killtags true
truncate 120
# http_proxy http://proxy.example.com:3128/
#feed 1h http://example.com/feed.rss
#feed 30m http://example.com/feed2.rss id=newsfront
#feed 3h http://example.com/feed3.rss keepmin=5
#feed 3h http://example.com/secret.rss user=bob password=secret
#feed 3h http://example.com/broken.rss
# format text
# define_myclass broken
#feed 3h http://proxyfeed.example.com/proxied.rss http_proxy=http://localhost:1234/
#feed 3h http://dupsfeed.example.com/duplicated.rss allowduplicates=true
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## FLUX ABANDONNÉS
# Dokuwiki
#feed 3h https://github.com/splitbrain/dokuwiki/releases.atom
# rawdog
#feed 3h http://offog.org/git/rawdog.atom
## FLUX COURANTS
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# Wallabag
feed 3h https://github.com/wallabag/wallabag/releases.atom
# ArchLinux
feed 3h https://archlinux.org/feeds/news/
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# rawdog-py3
feed 3h https://github.com/echarlie/rawdog-py3/releases.atom
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# SabreDaV
feed 3h https://github.com/sabre-io/dav/releases.atom
# Shaarli
feed 3h https://github.com/shaarli/Shaarli/releases.atom
# Hugo
feed 3h https://github.com/gohugoio/hugo/releases.atom
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# Træfik
feed 3h https://github.com/traefik/traefik/releases.atom
# Caddy
feed 3h https://github.com/caddyserver/caddy/releases.atom
# Alpine
feed 3h https://github.com/alpine-docker/git/tags.atom
# PostgreSQL
feed 3h https://github.com/postgres/postgres/tags.atom