.github | ||
Wave | ||
.dockerignore | ||
.gitattributes | ||
.gitignore | ||
docker-compose.dcproj | ||
docker-compose.override.yml | ||
docker-compose.yml | ||
launchSettings.json | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md | ||
Wave.sln |
Wave
The Open Source Blogging Engine
Under Construction
Quickstart
TODO
Configuring Wave
Wave allows you to configure it in many different formats and in multiple places, and you can even use multiple of the following methods to supply configuration information. Please keep in mind that first, asp.net configuration keys are case-insensitive, and second, that there is a precedence in the different formats, so a value for the same key in two formats will be overwritten by one.
Configuration Locations
There are two main locations where Wave (and asp.net) takes it's configuration from:
The Environment, and the /configuration
volume. Environment variables allow you to quickly
set up a docker container, but the more you need to configure the more unmaintainable an
.env
file (or an environment:
section in docker compose) becomes, so if you find yourself
customizing a lot of Waves behavior, consider using one of the many supported configuration
file formats.
Configuration Keys
I will provide you the different configuration keys with a dot notation, like Email.Smtp.Host
.
In environment variables, these dots need to be replaced with two underscore characters: __
and prefixed with WAVE_
.
In config files, those dots are hierarchy level, and you need to implement that dialects'
syntax for it. Here some examples for Email.Smtp.Host
:
Environment
WAVE_Email__Smtp__Host=smtp.example.com
JSON
{
"Email": {
"Smtp:": {
"Host": "smtp.example.com"
}
}
}
YAML
Email:
Smtp:
Host: smtp.example.com
Supported Configuration Formats
Wave will take configuration from the following files in the /configuration
volume, files
later in this chain will have precedence over files earlier in that chain:
- config.json
- config.yml
- config.toml
- config.ini
- config.xml
After this, values from the Environment will take the highest precedence.
Installation
TODO
Configuring Email
Wave may send user related mails every now and then, to confirm an account, reset a password, etc. In order to support that, Wave needs to have a way to send Emails, currently SMTP is supported
SMTP
The following configuration is required for Wave to connect to an smtp server (formatted in YAML for brevity).
Email:
Smtp:
Host: smtp.example.com
Port: 25
SenderEmail: noreply@example.com
SenderName: Wave
Username: user
Password: password
Ssl: true
Username
and Password
are optional if your server does not require it, and Ssl
is
true
by default, only set it to false if you really need to, keeping security in mind.
License and Attribution
Wave by Mia Winter is licensed under the MIT License.
Copyright (c) 2024 Mia Rose Winter