@lumincinta
2017-01-27T17:30:30.000000Z
字数 3244
阅读 276
MarkdownEditor
Dillinger is a cloud-enabled, mobile-ready, offline-storage, AngularJS powered HTML5 Markdown editor.
You can also:
- Import and save files from GitHub, Dropbox, Google Drive and One Drive
- Drag and drop files into Dillinger
- Export documents as Markdown, HTML and PDF
Markdown is a lightweight markup language based on the formatting conventions that people naturally use in email. As John Gruber writes on the Markdown site
The overriding design goal for Markdown's
formatting syntax is to make it as readable
as possible. The idea is that a
Markdown-formatted document should be
publishable as-is, as plain text, without
looking like it's been marked up with tags
or formatting instructions.
This text you see here is actually written in Markdown! To get a feel for Markdown's syntax, type some text into the left window and watch the results in the right.
Dillinger uses a number of open source projects to work properly:
And of course Dillinger itself is open source with a public repository
on GitHub.
Dillinger requires Node.js v4+ to run.
Download and extract the latest pre-built release.
Install the dependencies and devDependencies and start the server.
$ cd dillinger
$ npm install -d
$ node app
For production environments...
$ npm install --production
$ npm run predeploy
$ NODE_ENV=production node app
Dillinger is currently extended with the following plugins
Readmes, how to use them in your own application can be found here:
Want to contribute? Great!
Dillinger uses Gulp + Webpack for fast developing.
Make a change in your file and instantanously see your updates!
Open your favorite Terminal and run these commands.
First Tab:
$ node app
Second Tab:
$ gulp watch
(optional) Third:
$ karma start
For production release:
$ gulp build --prod
Generating pre-built zip archives for distribution:
$ gulp build dist --prod
Dillinger is very easy to install and deploy in a Docker container.
By default, the Docker will expose port 80, so change this within the Dockerfile if necessary. When ready, simply use the Dockerfile to build the image.
cd dillinger
npm run-script build-docker
This will create the dillinger image and pull in the necessary dependencies. Moreover, this uses a hack to get a more optimized npm
build by copying the dependencies over and only installing when the package.json
itself has changed. Look inside the package.json
and the Dockerfile
for more details on how this works.
Once done, run the Docker image and map the port to whatever you wish on your host. In this example, we simply map port 8000 of the host to port 80 of the Docker (or whatever port was exposed in the Dockerfile):
docker run -d -p 8000:8080 --restart="always" <youruser>/dillinger:latest
Verify the deployment by navigating to your server address in your preferred browser.
127.0.0.1:8000
See KUBERNETES.md
Change the path for the nginx conf mounting path to your full path, not mine!
More details coming soon.
MIT
Free Software, Hell Yeah!