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| -rw-r--r-- | README.md | 48 | 
1 files changed, 35 insertions, 13 deletions
| @@ -10,18 +10,24 @@ what else do you need?  ## WTF? +`binnit` is a single executable with **no dependencies**. You **don't +need** a web server. You **don't need** a SQL server. You **don't +need** any external library.  +  `binnit` serves pastes in the format: -    mypasteserver.org/abcdef1234567890 +    http://<server_name>/abcdef1234567890 -and stores them in a folder, one file per paste, whose filename is -identical to the paste ID. The unique ID of a paste is obtained from -the SHA256 of the concatenation of title, time, and content. Rendering -is minimal, on purpose, but based on a customisable template. +and stores them in a folder on the server, one file per paste, whose +filename is identical to the paste ID. The unique ID of a paste is +obtained from the SHA256 of the concatenation of title, time, and +content. Rendering is minimal, on purpose, but based on a customisable +template.  `binnit` is currently configured through a simple key=value  configuration file, whose name can be specified on the command line -through the option `-c <config_file>`. The configurable options are: +through the option `-c <config_file>`. If no config file is specified, +`binnit` looks for `./binnit.cfg`. The configurable options are:  * server\_name  (the FQDN where the service is reachable from outside)  * bind\_addr (the address to listen on) @@ -29,8 +35,8 @@ through the option `-c <config_file>`. The configurable options are:  * paste\_dir (the folder where pastes are kept)  * templ\_dir (the folder where HTML files and templates are kept)  * max\_size (the maximum allowed length of a paste, in bytes. Larger -    pastes will be trimmed to that length) -* log_fname (path to the logfile) +    pastes will be trimmed to that length.) +* log_file (path to the logfile)  ## Why another pastebin? @@ -45,17 +51,33 @@ ID. `binnit` does just and only these two things, in the simplest  possible way, without any external dependency. If you need more, then  `binnit` is not for you. +## About minimalism + +> It seems that perfection is attained not when there is nothing more +> to add, but when there is nothing more to remove (Antoine de Saint +> Exupéry) + +`binnit` is intended to be truly minimal. It consists of about 500 +lines of golang source code in total, including: + +* ~110 lines for License statements (comments) +* ~110 lines of core logic +* ~90 blank lines +* ~75 lines for template management +* ~75 lines for config management +* ~30 lines of pure comments +  If you want to strip `binnit` down even further, you could consider  removing: -* sanity checks and error management -* logging +* blank lines  * the external configuration file +* the template system  +* sanity checks and error management +* logging   * code comments -> It seems that perfection is attained not when there is nothing more -> to add, but when there is nothing more to remove (Antoine de Saint -> Exupéry) +You **CANNOT** remove the licence statements on each source file.  ## LICENSE | 
