The code in this repo helps you extract content from a Zulip instance and build the basic HTML structure, but it leaves it to you to actually host the data on some server.
In other words, Zulip is not opinionated about how you serve the HTML (and in some ways the entire mission of this project is to empower you to put your data where you want).
No matter where you host your data, you will typically
have a "PROD" install. This will involve more detailed
updates to settings.py
than you probably made for local
testing. Here is a typical diff:
< # site_url = 'example.com'
< raise Exception("You need to configure site_url for prod")
---
> site_url = 'https://showell.github.io/'
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< # Set this according to how you serve your prod assets.
< zulip_icon_url = None
---
> zulip_icon_url = 'http://showell.github.io/assets/img/zulip.svg'
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< raise Exception('''
< You need to set html_directory for prod, and it
< should be a different location than DEBUG mode,
< since files will likely have different urls in
< anchor tags.
< ''')
---
> html_directory = Path('../website/archive')
To build your site with prod settings, do this:
PROD_ARCHIVE=1 python archive.py -b
You will also want to copy assets to your production directory. These include:
You can use any web server of your choice to host the HTML files.
One simple example is to use Python 3's http.server
:
python3 -m http.server 4000
With the default configuration you should be able to see your archive at http://127.0.0.1:4000/.
You can use GitHub Pages to serve your HTML. We recommend
configuring your md_root
to point into your local copy of
your username.github.io
repo (e.g. alice.github.io
) and
then push from there.
Some customers will want to just use the same repo for both
this tooling and the content from their Zulip instance. We
don't recommend this approach long term, since it can complicate
staying up to date with patches from this repo. If you are
still interested in this approach, despite the warnings, you
may find the github.py
script to be useful.