# Moku Pona Moku Pona is a Gemini based feed reader. It can monitor URLs to feeds or regular pages for changes and keeps and updated list of these in a Gemini list. Moku Pona knows how to fetch Gopher URLs, Gemini URLs, and regular web URLs. You manage your subscriptions using the command-line, with Moku Pona. You serve the resulting file using a Gemini server. You read it all using your Gemini client. **Table of Contents** - [Limitations](#limitations) - [License](#license) - [Installation](#installation) - [Dependencies](#dependencies) - [The Data Directory](#the-data-directory) - [Migration from 1.1](#migration-from-1-1) - [List your subscriptions](#list-your-subscriptions) - [Add a subscription](#add-a-subscription) - [Remove a subscription](#remove-a-subscription) - [Clean up the data directory](#clean-up-the-data-directory) - [Update](#update) - [Subscribing to feeds](#subscribing-to-feeds) - [Publishing your subscription](#publishing-your-subscription) - [Serving your subscriptions via Gemini](#serving-your-subscriptions-via-gemini) ## Limitations Moku Pona only detects changes. Thus, if there is an item that points to a phlog or blog, that's great. Sometimes people put their phlog in a folder per year. If the Gopher menu lists each folder and a date with the latest change, then that's great, you can use it. Without it, you're in trouble: you need to subscribe to the item for the current year in order to see changes, but when the next year comes around, you're subscribed to the wrong item. Sometimes you're lucky and there will be a menu somewhere with a timestamp for the last change. Use that instead. Good luck! ## License GNU Affero General Public License ## Installation Using `cpan`: cpan App::mokupona Manual install: perl Makefile.PL make make install ## Dependencies There are some Perl dependencies you need to satisfy in order to run this program: - [Modern::Perl](https://metacpan.org/pod/Modern%3A%3APerl), or `libmodern-perl-perl` - [Mojo::IOLoop](https://metacpan.org/pod/Mojo%3A%3AIOLoop), or `libmojolicious-perl` - [XML::LibXML](https://metacpan.org/pod/XML%3A%3ALibXML), or `libxml-libxml-perl` - [URI::Escape](https://metacpan.org/pod/URI%3A%3AEscape), or `liburi-escape-xs-perl` - [Encode::Locale](https://metacpan.org/pod/Encode%3A%3ALocale), or c<libencode-locale-perl> ## The Data Directory Moku Pona keeps the list of URLs you are subscribed to in directory. It's probably `~/.moku-pona` on your system. - If you have the `MOKU_PONA` environment variable set, then that's your data directory. - If you have the `XDG_DATA_HOME` environment variable set, then your data directory is `$XDG_DATA_HOME/moku-pona`. - If you you have the `HOME` environment variable set, and you have a `$HOME/.local` directory, then your data directory is `$HOME/.local/moku-pona`. - If you have the `HOME` environment variable set, then your data directory is `$HOME/.moku-pona`. - If you have the `APPDATA` environment variable set (Windows), then your data directory is `$APPDATA/moku-pona`. - The last option is to have the `LOGDIR` environment variable set. The data directory contains a copy of the latest resources. The names of these cache files are simply the URL with all the slashes replaced by a hyphen. The `sites.txt` file is a file containing a gemtext list of links, i.e. entries such as these: => gemini://alexschroeder.ch Alex Schroeder The `updates.txt` file is a file containing a gemtext list of links based on `sites.txt`, but with a timestamp of their last change, and with new updates moved to the top. The ISO date is simply inserted after the URL: => gemini://alexschroeder.ch 2020-11-07 Alex Schroeder In order to be at least somewhat backwards compatible with Moku Pona versions 1.1 and earlier, `sites.txt` may contain Gopher menu items. These are converted to Gemini URLs during processing and thus the `updates.txt` file still contains regular gemtext. 1Alex Schroeder ⭾ ⭾ alexschroeder.ch ⭾ 70 As was said above, however, the recommended format is the use of URLs. Moku Pona supports Gemini, Gopher, and the web (gemini, gopher, gophers, http, and https schemes). ## Migration from 1.1 The best way to migrate your setup is probably to use the `list` subcommand explained later, and to recreate your list of subscriptions. Then your `sites.txt` file will use gemtext format. moku-pona list | grep "moku-pona add" > commands mv ~/.moku-pona/sites.txt ~/.moku-pona/sites.txt~ sh commands ## List your subscriptions moku-pona list This lists all your current subscriptions in a format that is suitable for a shell script! Example: moku-pona list | grep "alexschroeder" In this particular case, since I'm testing my own server, the result would be: moku-pona add https://alexschroeder.ch/wiki?action=rss "rss" moku-pona add gemini://alexschroeder.ch/ "gemini" moku-pona add gopher://alexschroeder.ch/ "gopher" moku-pona add gophers://alexschroeder.ch:7443/ "gophers" ## Add a subscription moku-pona add url [description] This adds a URL to the list of subscribed items. If the target is an Atom or RSS feed, then that's also supported. You can provide an optional description for this URL. If you don't provide a description, the URL will be used as the item's description. Example: moku-pona add gemini://alexschroeder.ch kensanata ## Remove a subscription moku-pona remove description This removes one or more URLs from the list of subscribed items. Example: moku-pona remove kensanata ## Clean up the data directory moku-pona cleanup [--confirm] When Moku Pona updates, copies of the URL targets are saved in the data directory. If you remove a subscription (see above), that leaves a cache file in the data directory that is no longer used – and it leaves an entry in `updates.txt` that is no longer wanted. The cleanup command fixes this. It deletes all the cached pages that you are no longer subscribed to, and it removes those entries from `updates.txt` as well. Actually, just to be sure, if you run it without the `--confirm` argument, it simply prints which files it would trash. Rerun it with the `--confirm` argument to actually do it. Example: moku-pona cleanup ## Update moku-pona update [--quiet] [names...] This updates all the subscribed items and generates a new local page for you to visit: `updates.txt`. Example: moku-pona update If you call it from a cron job, you might want to use the `--quiet` argument to prevent it from printing all the sites it's contacting (since cron will then mail this to you and you might not care for it unless there's a problem). If there's a problem, you'll still get a message. This is how I call it from my `crontab`, for example #m h dom mon dow command 11 7,14 * * * /home/alex/bin/moku-pona update --quiet If you're testing things, you can also fetch just a limited number of items by listing them. Example: moku-pona update "RPG Planet" The `updates.txt` files may contain lines that are not links at the top. These will remain untouched. The rest is links. New items are added at the beginning of the links and older copies of such items are removed from the links. ## Subscribing to feeds When the result of an update is an XML document, then it is parsed and the links of its items (if RSS) or entries (if Atom) are extracted and saved in the cache file in the data directory. The effect is this: - If you subscribe to a regular page, then the link to it in `updates.txt` moves to the top when it changes. - If you subscribe to a feed, then the link in `updates.txt` moves to the top when it changes and it links to a file in the data directory that links to the individual items in the feed. Example: moku-pona add https://campaignwiki.org/rpg/feed.xml "RPG" moku-pona update This adds the RPG entry to `updates.txt` as follows: => https%3A--campaignwiki.org-rpg-feed.xml 2020-11-07 RPG And if you check the file `https:--campaignwiki.org-rpg-feed.xml`, you'll see that it's a regular Gemini list. You'll find 100 links like the following: => https://alexschroeder.ch/wiki/2020-11-05_Episode_34 Episode 34 Now use `moku-pona publish` (see below) to move the files to the correct directory where your Gemini server expects them. ## Publishing your subscription moku-pona publish This takes the important files from your data directory and copies them to a target directory. You could just use symbolic links for `sites.txt` and `updates.txt`, of course. But if you've subscribed to actual feeds as described above, then the cache files need to get copied as well! Example: mkdir ~/subs moku-pona publish ~/subs ## Serving your subscriptions via Gemini This depends entirely on your Gemini server. If you like it really simple, you can use [Lupa Pona](https://metacpan.org/pod/App%3A%3Alupapona). Here's how to create the certificate and key files, copy them to the `~/subs` directory created above, and run `lupa-pona` for a quick test. make cert cp *.pem ~/subs cd ~/subs lupa-pona