yesod-gitrepo

Host content provided by a Git repo

https://github.com/snoyberg/yesod-gitrepo

Version on this page:0.2.1.0
LTS Haskell 23.0:0.3.0
Stackage Nightly 2024-12-13:0.3.0
Latest on Hackage:0.3.0

See all snapshots yesod-gitrepo appears in

MIT licensed by Michael Snoyman
Maintained by [email protected]
This version can be pinned in stack with:yesod-gitrepo-0.2.1.0@sha256:05d4f08bc221c128b176f482cb5e65a7664b6ebafce1a48b08d72bfeef1eca87,940

Module documentation for 0.2.1.0

yesod-gitrepo

yesod-gitrepo provides a means of embedding content from a Git repository inside a Yesod application. The typical workflow is:

  • Use gitRepo to specify a repository and branch you want to work with.
  • Provide a function that will perform some processing on the cloned repository.
  • Use grContent in your Handler functions to access this parsed data.
  • Embed the GitRepo as a subsite that can be used to force a refresh of the data.
  • Set up a commit handler that pings that URL. On Github, this would be a webhook.

This is likely easiest to understand with a concrete example, so let’s go meta: here’s an application that will serve this very README.md file. We’ll start off with language extensions and imports:

{-# LANGUAGE NoImplicitPrelude #-}
{-# LANGUAGE OverloadedStrings #-}
{-# LANGUAGE QuasiQuotes       #-}
{-# LANGUAGE TemplateHaskell   #-}
{-# LANGUAGE TypeFamilies      #-}
import           ClassyPrelude.Yesod
import           Text.Markdown
import           Yesod.GitRepo

Now we’re going to create our foundation datatype. We need to give it one field: the GitRepo value containing our parsed content. Our content will simply be the text inside README.md, wrapped up in a Markdown newtype for easy rendering. This gives us:

data App = App
    { getGitRepo :: GitRepo Markdown
    }

instance Yesod App

And now let’s set up our routes. We need just two: a homepage, and the subsite. Our subsite type is GitRepo Markdown (as given above). We replace the space with a hyphen as an escaping mechanism inside Yesod’s route syntax:

mkYesod "App" [parseRoutes|
/ HomeR GET
/refresh RefreshR GitRepo-Markdown getGitRepo
|]

Next up is our home handler. We start off by getting the current content parsed from the repository:

getHomeR :: Handler Html
getHomeR = do
    master <- getYesod
    content <- liftIO $ grContent $ getGitRepo master

Then it’s just some normal Hamlet code:

    defaultLayout $ do
        setTitle "yesod-gitrepo sample"
        [whamlet|
            <p>
                <a href=@{RefreshR GitRepoRoute}>
                    Force a refresh at
                    @{RefreshR GitRepoRoute}
            <article>#{content}
        |]

And finally, our main function. We pass in the repo URL and branch name, plus a function that, given the filepath containing the cloned repo, processes it and generates a Markdown value. Finally, we provide the generated repo value to our App constructor and run it:

main :: IO ()
main = do
    repo <- gitRepo
        "https://github.com/snoyberg/yesod-gitrepo"
        "master"
        $ \fp -> fmap Markdown $ readFile $ fp </> "README.md"
    warp 3000 $ App repo

Give it a shot. You should have a webapp hosting this very README file!

Changes

0.2.1.0

  • Add back some missing changes from 0.1.1.0

0.2.0.0

  • Drop system-filepath

0.1.1.0

gitRepoDev added.

0.1.0.0

Initial release