Stringer has no external dependencies, no social recommendations/sharing, and no fancy machine learning algorithms.
But it does have keyboard shortcuts and was made with love!
When BIG_FREE_READER
shuts down, your instance of Stringer will still be kicking.
The app is currently under active development, please try it out and report any issues you have.
Stringer is a Ruby app based on Sinatra, ActiveRecord, PostgreSQL, and DelayedJob.
Instructions are provided for deploying to Heroku (runs fine on the free plan) but Stringer can be deployed anywhere that supports Ruby.
git clone git://github.com/swanson/stringer.git
cd stringer
heroku create
git push heroku master
heroku config:set SECRET_TOKEN=`openssl rand -hex 20`
heroku run rake db:migrate
heroku restart
heroku addons:add scheduler
heroku addons:open scheduler
Add an hourly task that runs `rake fetch_feeds`
Load the app and follow the instructions to import your feeds and start using the app.
From the app's directory,
git pull
git push heroku master
heroku run rake db:migrate
heroku restart
You can run Stringer at http://reader.yourdomain.com
using a CNAME.
If you are on Heroku:
heroku domains:add reader.yourdomain.com
Go to your registrar and add a CNAME:
Record: CNAME
Name: reader
Target: your-heroku-instance.herokuapp.com
Wait a few minutes for changes to propagate.
Stringer has been translated to several other languages. Your language can be set with the LOCALE
environment variable.
To set your locale on Heroku, run heroku config:set LOCALE=en
.
If you would like to translate Stringer to your preferred language, please open a pull request.
Run the tests with rspec
.
In development, stringer uses sqlite
- there are issues with locking if you run background jobs at the same time as queries are being made via the web app. If you run into these, consider using pg
locally.
To get started using Stringer locally simply run the following:
rake db:migrate
foreman start
The application will be running on port 5000
You can launch an interactive console (ala rails c
) using racksh
Most of the heavy-lifting is done by feedzirra
and feedbag
.
General sexiness courtesy of Twitter Bootstrap
and Flat UI
.
Matt Swanson, mdswanson.com @_swanson