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1
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2
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3 Chronicle, since version 2.0, supports the submission of post
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4 comments.
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5
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6 The way this works is rather non-standard so please read this
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7 document to understand it.
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8
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9
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10 Basic Usage
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11 -----------
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12
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13 The basic use of chronicle is to convert a collection of text files
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14 into a HTML & RSS blog.
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15
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16 Generally it appears that people will do this upon a local machine,
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17 then scp, rsync, or otherwise move the output into place upon their
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18 remote webserver.
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19
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20 This process looks something like this:
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21
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22 chronicle --input=./blog --output=./html
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23 rsync html user@host:/path/to/blog
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24
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25
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26 Advanced Usage
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27 --------------
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28
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29 Since the blog, once produced, is typically stored upon a remote
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30 system there is no easy way for comments which are stored upon that
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31 system to be integrated into the main blog.
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32
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33 The solution to this problem is to merely record comments upon
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34 the webserver in simple text files.
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35
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36 Later these can be fetched to the machine which is building the
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37 blog, and integrated for the next rebuild:
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38
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39
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40 scp uesr@host://path/to/comments/* ./comments/
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41 chronicle --input=./blog --output=./html --comments=./comments
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42 rsync html user@host:/path/to/blog
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43
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44
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45 Steve
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46 -- |