joeyespo / grip

Preview GitHub README.md files locally before committing them.
MIT License
6.5k stars 424 forks source link
commandline-interface flask github html python readme

Grip -- GitHub Readme Instant Preview

Current version on PyPI Say Thanks!

Render local readme files before sending off to GitHub.

Grip is a command-line server application written in Python that uses the GitHub markdown API to render a local readme file. The styles and rendering come directly from GitHub, so you'll know exactly how it will appear. Changes you make to the Readme will be instantly reflected in the browser without requiring a page refresh.

Motivation

Sometimes you just want to see the exact readme result before committing and pushing to GitHub.

Especially when doing Readme-driven development.

Installation

To install grip, simply:

$ pip install grip

On OS X, you can also install with Homebrew:

$ brew install grip

Usage

To render the readme of a repository:

$ cd myrepo
$ grip
 * Running on http://localhost:6419/

Now open a browser and visit http://localhost:6419. Or run with -b and Grip will open a new browser tab for you.

You can also specify a port:

$ grip 80
 * Running on http://localhost:80/

Or an explicit file:

$ grip AUTHORS.md
 * Running on http://localhost:6419/

Alternatively, you could just run grip and visit localhost:6419/AUTHORS.md since grip supports relative URLs.

You can combine the previous examples. Or specify a hostname instead of a port. Or provide both.

$ grip AUTHORS.md 80
 * Running on http://localhost:80/
$ grip CHANGES.md 0.0.0.0
 * Running on http://0.0.0.0:6419/
$ grip . 0.0.0.0:80
 * Running on http://0.0.0.0:80/

You can even bypass the server and export to a single HTML file, with all the styles and assets inlined:

$ grip --export
Exporting to README.html

Control the output name with the second argument:

$ grip README.md --export index.html
Exporting to index.html

If you're exporting a bunch of files, you can prevent styles from being inlining to save space with --no-inline:

$ grip README.md --export --no-inline introduction.html
Exporting to introduction.html

Reading and writing from stdin and stdout is also supported, allowing you to use Grip with other programs:

$ cat README.md | grip -
 * Running on http://localhost:6419/
$ grip AUTHORS.md --export - | bcat
$ cat README.md | grip --export - | less

This allows you to quickly test how things look by entering Markdown directly in your terminal:

$ grip -
Hello **world**!
^D
 * Running on http://localhost:6419/

Note: ^D means Ctrl+D, which works on Linux and OS X. On Windows you'll have to use Ctrl+Z.

Rendering as user-content like comments and issues is also supported, with an optional repository context for linking to issues:

$ grip --user-content --context=joeyespo/grip
 * Running on http://localhost:6419/

For more details and additional options, see the help:

$ grip -h

Access

Grip strives to be as close to GitHub as possible. To accomplish this, grip uses GitHub's Markdown API so that changes to their rendering engine are reflected immediately without requiring you to upgrade grip. However, because of this you may hit the API's hourly rate limit. If this happens, grip offers a way to access the API using your credentials to unlock a much higher rate limit.

$ grip --user <your-username> --pass <your-password>

Or use a personal access token with an empty scope (note that a token is required if your GitHub account is set up with two-factor authentication):

$ grip --pass <token>

You can persist these options in your local configuration. For security purposes, it's highly recommended that you use an access token over a password. (You could also keep your password safe by configuring Grip to grab your password from a password manager.)

There's also a work-in-progress branch to provide offline rendering. Once this resembles GitHub more precisely, it'll be exposed in the CLI, and will ultimately be used as a seamless fallback engine for when the API can't be accessed.

Grip always accesses GitHub over HTTPS, so your README and credentials are protected.

Tips

Here's how others from the community are using Grip.

Want to share your own? Say hello @joeyespo or submit a pull request.

Create a local mirror of a Github Wiki

$ git clone https://github.com/YOUR_USERNAME/YOUR_REPOSITORY.wiki.git
$ cd YOUR_REPOSITORY.wiki
$ grip

By Joshua Gourneau.

Generate HTML documentation from a collection of linked README files

  1. Enter the directory:

    $ cd YOUR_DIR
    $ export GRIPURL=$(pwd)
  2. Include all assets by setting the CACHE_DIRECTORY config variable:

    $ echo "CACHE_DIRECTORY = '$(pwd)/assets'" >> ~/.grip/settings.py
  3. Export all your Markdown files with Grip and replace absolute asset paths with relative paths:

    $ for f in *.md; do grip --export $f --no-inline; done
    $ for f in *.html; do sed -i '' "s?$GRIPURL/??g" $f; done

You can optionally compress the set of HTML files to docs.tgz with:

   $ tar -czvf docs.tgz `ls | grep [\.]html$` assets

Looking for a cross platform solution? Here's an equivalent Python script.

By Matthew R. Tanudjaja.

Configuration

To customize Grip, create ~/.grip/settings.py, then add one or more of the following variables:

Note that this is a Python file. If you see 'X' is not defined errors, you may have overlooked some quotes. For example:

USERNAME = 'your-username'
PASSWORD = 'your-personal-access-token'

Environment variables

Advanced

This file is a normal Python script, so you can add more advanced configuration.

For example, to read a setting from the environment and provide a default value when it's not set:

PORT = os.environ.get('GRIP_PORT', 8080)

API

You can access the API directly with Python, using it in your own projects:

from grip import serve

serve(port=8080)
 * Running on http://localhost:8080/

Run main directly:

from grip import main

main(argv=['-b', '8080'])
 * Running on http://localhost:8080/

Or access the underlying Flask application for even more flexibility:

from grip import create_app

grip_app = create_app(user_content=True)
# Use in your own app

Documentation

serve

Runs a local server and renders the Readme file located at path when visited in the browser.

serve(path=None, host=None, port=None, user_content=False, context=None, username=None, password=None, render_offline=False, render_wide=False, render_inline=False, api_url=None, title=None, autorefresh=True, browser=False, grip_class=None)

export

Writes the specified Readme file to an HTML file with styles and assets inlined.

export(path=None, user_content=False, context=None, username=None, password=None, render_offline=False, render_wide=False, render_inline=True, out_filename=None, api_url=None, title=None, quiet=None, theme='light', grip_class=None)

create_app

Creates a Flask application you can use to render and serve the Readme files. This is the same app used by serve and export and initializes the cache, using the cached styles when available.

create_app(path=None, user_content=False, context=None, username=None, password=None, render_offline=False, render_wide=False, render_inline=False, api_url=None, title=None, text=None, grip_class=None)

render_app

Renders the application created by create_app and returns the HTML that would normally appear when visiting that route.

render_app(app, route='/')

render_content

Renders the specified markdown text without caching.

render_content(text, user_content=False, context=None, username=None, password=None, render_offline=False, api_url=None, title=None)

render_page

Renders the markdown from the specified path or text, without caching, and returns an HTML page that resembles the GitHub Readme view.

render_page(path=None, user_content=False, context=None, username=None, password=None, render_offline=False, render_wide=False, render_inline=False, api_url=None, title=None, text=None, quiet=None, theme='light', grip_class=None)

clear_cache

Clears the cached styles and assets.

clear_cache(grip_class=None)

main

Runs Grip with the specified arguments.

main(argv=None, force_utf8=True)

Classes

class Grip(Flask)

A Flask application that can serve a file or directory containing a README.

Grip(source=None, auth=None, renderer=None, assets=None, render_wide=None, render_inline=None, title=None, autorefresh=None, quiet=None, theme='light', grip_url=None, static_url_path=None, instance_path=None, **kwargs)
default_renderer

Returns the default renderer using the current config. This is only used if renderer is set to None in the constructor.

Grip.default_renderer()
default_asset_manager

Returns the default asset manager using the current config. This is only used if asset_manager is set to None in the constructor.

Grip.default_asset_manager()
add_content_types

Adds the application/x-font-woff and application/octet-stream content types if they are missing. Override to add additional content types on initialization.

Grip.add_content_types()
clear_cache

Clears the downloaded assets.

Grip.clear_cache()
render

Renders the application and returns the HTML unicode that would normally appear when visiting in the browser.

Grip.render(route=None)
run

Starts a server to render the README. This calls Flask.run internally.

Grip.run(host=None, port=None, debug=None, use_reloader=None, open_browser=False)

class AlreadyRunningError(RuntimeError)

Raised when Grip.run is called while the server is already running.

AlreadyRunningError()

class ReadmeNotFoundError(NotFoundError or IOError)

Raised when the specified Readme could not be found.

ReadmeNotFoundError(path=None, message=None)

class ReadmeAssetManager(object)

Manages the style and font assets rendered with Readme pages. This is an abstract base class.

ReadmeAssetManager(cache_path, style_urls=None)

class GitHubAssetManager(ReadmeAssetManager)

Manages the style and font assets rendered with Readme pages. Set cache_path to None to disable caching.

class ReadmeReader(object)

Reads Readme content from a URL subpath. This is an abstract base class.

ReadmeReader()

class DirectoryReader(ReadmeReader)

Reads Readme files from URL subpaths.

DirectoryReader(path=None, silent=False)

class TextReader(ReadmeReader)

Reads Readme content from the provided unicode string.

TextReader(text, display_filename=None)

class StdinReader(TextReader)

Reads Readme text from STDIN.

StdinReader(display_filename=None)

class ReadmeRenderer(object)

Renders the Readme. This is an abstract base class.

ReadmeRenderer(user_content=None, context=None)

class GitHubRenderer(ReadmeRenderer)

Renders the specified Readme using the GitHub Markdown API.

GitHubRenderer(user_content=None, context=None, api_url=None, raw=None)

class OfflineRenderer(ReadmeRenderer)

Renders the specified Readme locally using pure Python. Note: This is currently an incomplete feature.

OfflineRenderer(user_content=None, context=None)

Constants

SUPPORTED_TITLES

The common Markdown file titles on GitHub.

SUPPORTED_TITLES = ['README', 'Home']

SUPPORTED_EXTENSIONS

The supported extensions, as defined by GitHub.

SUPPORTED_EXTENSIONS = ['.md', '.markdown']

DEFAULT_FILENAMES

This constant contains the names Grip looks for when no file is provided.

DEFAULT_FILENAMES = [title + ext
                     for title in SUPPORTED_TITLES
                     for ext in SUPPORTED_EXTENSIONS]

DEFAULT_FILENAME

This constant contains the default Readme filename, namely:

DEFAULT_FILENAME = DEFAULT_FILENAMES[0]  # README.md

DEFAULT_GRIPHOME

This constant points to the default value if the GRIPHOME environment variable is not specified.

DEFAULT_GRIPHOME = '~/.grip'

DEFAULT_GRIPURL

The default URL of the Grip server and all its assets:

DEFAULT_GRIPURL = '/__/grip'

DEFAULT_API_URL

The default app_url value:

DEFAULT_API_URL = 'https://api.github.com'

Testing

Install the package and test requirements:

$ pip install -e .[tests]

Run tests with pytest:

$ pytest

Or to re-run tests as you make changes, use pytest-watch:

$ ptw

External assumption tests

If you're experiencing a problem with Grip, it's likely that an assumption made about the GitHub API has been broken. To verify this, run:

$ pytest -m assumption

Since the external assumptions rely on an internet connection, you may want to skip them when developing locally. Tighten the cycle even further by stopping on the first failure with -x:

$ pytest -xm "not assumption"

Or with pytest-watch:

$ ptw -- -xm "not assumption"

Contributing

  1. Check the open issues or open a new issue to start a discussion around your feature idea or the bug you found
  2. Fork the repository and make your changes
  3. Open a new pull request

If your PR has been waiting a while, feel free to ping me on Twitter.

Use this software often? Say Thanks! :smiley: