2019-09-24 14:35:06 +00:00
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title: How to sneak in a static CMS
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pub_date: 2019-09-24
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author: Nico Schottelius
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2019-09-24 15:36:58 +00:00
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twitter_handle: NicoSchottelius
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---
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abstract:
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Let's see how easy it is [to sneak in a static
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CMS](https://ungleich.ch/en-us/cms/blog/2019/09/24/sneaking-in-a-static-cms/)
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into an existing
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dynamic CMS.
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---
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2019-09-24 14:35:06 +00:00
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body:
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## Introduction
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To put you in the right mood for reading this article, I ask you
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take some assumptions for reading this article:
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Assume you are the CEO of a small IPv6, Linux and FOSS company. Assume
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that some years ago you made the decision to use
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[Django CMS Blog](https://github.com/nephila/djangocms-blog) for the
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blog to support non-technical staff to post blog articles.
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Also, for the sake of completeness, assume that you are still running
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your own [private blog](https://www.nico.schottelius.org) with
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[ikiwiki](http://ikiwiki.info).
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## Motivation
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I believe that before changing anything
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([especially in IT](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Not_invented_here)),
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you should have a good reason for changing. So what could be
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the reason for sneaking in a static CMS? The answer is relatively
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easy:
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* Reducing latency
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* Reducing latency
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* Reducing the inhibition threshold for writing blog articles
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Let's have a look at each of the points in detail,
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[before letting us convince
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ourselves...](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Not_invented_here).
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### Reducing latency
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One of the biggest problems for me is to wait for an web application
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to *save* something. With Django CMS Blog, you have the standard
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**write - save - publish flow**. So when I want to see the result, I
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have to wait seconds. Depending on my distance to our blog this might
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take 1 second (Europe) or about 5 seconds (South Korea). While this
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does not sound like much, it **feels** very long.
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2019-09-24 15:30:33 +00:00
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While google apps (which we don't use for our blog)
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like google drive (which has other issues as well)
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take a different approach in *autosaving*, this also blocks if you
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have a weak network link.
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While it is just a few seconds, it is a huge difference between just
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being able to write in [emacs](https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/)
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(yes I was converted from vim) versus writing in a browser, waiting
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for the website to return.
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### Reducing latency
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While editing with "high" latency is a problem of the writer, latency
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while loading the result is a metric that directly affects the readers
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*feeling* about a website. If it takes too long to a website, you,
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dear reader, are about to leave this website very fast. Even if I
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write the greatest and best content, you won't like it.
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So by switching to a static CMS, the dynamic processing time is
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removed and pages can load as fast as the round trip time (RTT)
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between the web server and you.
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### Reducing the inhibition threshold for writing blog articles
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Let's come to the third and maybe most important point: reducing the
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inhibition threshold for writing blog articles. Let's put some
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background into this: we are a small, Swiss based hosting company
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loving open source. However, the emphasises is on **small**.
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So we cannot (nor do we want to ) afford huge marketing / adwork / paid
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advertisements. But our strategy is to **do good and talk about it**.
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However if the barrier for writing and publishing is high, we won't
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write much about the things we do. And I think with a static CMS,
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geeks (like me) are having a much easier time to actually write a blog
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entry.
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## How to do it
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Now let's have a look on how to sneak in a static CMS into an existing
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company website. [ungleich.ch](https://ungleich.ch) is powered
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by our [Django CMS](https://www.django-cms.org)
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based CMS (full [source code is
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online](https://code.ungleich.ch/ungleich-public/dynamicweb/)).
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The Django instance is running behind nginx, which allows us to proxy
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different parts of the website to different backends and to serve
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static assets directly from the filesystem.
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On the other hand we have a static web server named
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*staticweb.ungleich.ch* that hosts various static pages.
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The existing URLs of ungleich.ch should all stay as they are without
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any conflict. For this reason the new static cms is placed at
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**/u/**. The static pages are generated on a client machine and are
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uploaded using the following Makefile snippet:
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```
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BUILDDIR=../ungleich-staticcms-build
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DESTINATION=ungleichstatic@staticweb.ungleich.ch:/home/services/www/ungleichstatic/staticcms.ungleich.ch/www/
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all: publish
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publish: build permissions
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rsync -av $(BUILDDIR)/ $(DESTINATION)
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permissions: build
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find $(BUILDDIR) -type f -exec chmod 0644 {} \;
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find $(BUILDDIR) -type d -exec chmod 0755 {} \;
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build:
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lektor build -O $(BUILDDIR)
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```
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The last step to sneak in the CMS was to modify the nginx
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configuration of ungleich.ch with the following snippet:
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```
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location /u/ {
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proxy_pass https://staticcms.ungleich.ch;
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}
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```
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## What's next?
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As you can see in this post, the design does not fully (*cough*) fit
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the regular design of ungleich.ch. However Lektor uses jinja2, which
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is very similar to what we already use in the
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[existing dynamicweb
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project](https://code.ungleich.ch/ungleich-public/dynamicweb/).
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If you want to join the discussion about this, I invite you to our
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open chat on [chat.ungleich.ch](https://chat.ungleich.ch).
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2019-09-24 15:39:20 +00:00
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And next in this blog: how to use it ;-)
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