Hi,
I am looking for a good and lightweight blogging solution.
I imagine I can just go with a static site generator like jekyll
but I’d like something else… it would be a plus if it can federate :)
Any ideas?
Thanks !
EDIT: I forgot to say that obviously wordpress does not enters in the “lightweight” category ;)
What is your reason to blog, for yourself? If so I run (used to run gitea) forgejo and just spam everything in issue threads on specific repositories
this uses 150mb of ram, basically 0% cpu
forgejo is actively working on federation, it is there not sure how done it is I don’t use it.
Not sure how lightweight it needs to be, but I use Ghost and it’s pretty simple and basic.
oh, Ghost is cool :)
Not sure how much can use it, but indeed it feels like a great platform (maybe too much for some small posts :P)
Would something like this interest you? Gemtext formatted to html is about as light weight as it gets. lots of automatic gemtext blog software on github that also formats and mirrors an html copy. Whenever a news page article gets rendered to gemtext through newswaffle it shrinks about 95-99% of the page size while keeping text intact. Let me know if you want some more information on gemini stuff.
Ghost is open source, non profit and self host able.
It wants a gigabyte of RAM. Maybe that passes for lightweight in 2025, but given the fundamental things a blog has to do, I’d probably put the cutoff at less than a tenth that amount.
It costs like $3/mo to host it. If that’s too resource intensive then I don’t know what your limits are. Compute isn’t free—that literally breaks the laws of thermodynamics, no matter what you’re told by hosting services, and ghost does server side rendering and has a dynamic admin dashboard and can even work headless… and it costs less than $3/mo for your own personal open source cms.
If you need something that costs less then you can just build your own I guess, but how many hours of your time is that worth when you could just be spending $3/mo. If you make minimum wage at $7/hr one hour of work gets you two months of running a website.
I’m thinking like a programmer about what a basic blog has to do and the computing resources necessary to accomplish it. Software that needs more than a few tens of megabytes to accomplish that is not lightweight regardless of its merits.
This comment seems to be arguing that one should not demand blog software be lightweight because there’s inexpensive hosting for something heavyweight. That’s a fine position to take, I guess, but OP did ask for lightweight options.
You may be thinking like a programmer but the guy you responded to is thinking like a software engineer.
I like Zola. You can integrate it with Lemmy comments: https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/post/30018034
I am not sure about how lightweight they are (but I guess more than WordPress for sure) but on the federated sode of things you have plume (https://joinplu.me/) and writefreely (https://writefreely.org/) that you can selfhost. Not super sure about how much you can customize them.
Plume isn’t currently actively maintained, unfortunately. It’s right below the fold of the page you linked 😞
As for customisability, I think writefreely has some different themes to choose from, they’re just hidden away in the docs or on github.
I’m liking them! even if they do not seem very alive (still, blogging itself is not the most “alive” activity around nowadays…)
Writefreely is alive. Plume not.
If Jekyll isn’t your jam, then Hugo probably won’t be, either.
I have a simple workflow based on a script on my desktop called “blog”. I Cask it with “blog Some blog title” and it looks in a directory for a file named
some_blog_entry.md
, and if it finds it, opens it in my editor; if it doesn’t, it creates it using atemplate.md
that has some front matter filled in by the script. When I exit the editor, the script tests the modtime and updates thechanged
front matter and the rsyncs the whole blog directory to my server, where Hugo picks up and regenerates the site if anything changed.My script is 133 lines of bash, mostly involving the file named sanitization and front matter rewriting; it’s just a big convenience function that could be three lines of typing a little thought, and a little more editing of the template.
There’s no federation, though. I’m not sure what a “federated blog” would look like, anyway; probably something like Lemmy, where you create a community called “YourName”. What’s the value of a federated blog?
Edit: Oh, I forgot until I just checked it: the script also does some markdown editing to create gem files for the Gemini mirror; that’s at least a third to a half of the script (yeah, 60 LOC without the Gemini stuff), which you don’t need if you’re not trying to support a network that never caught on and that no-one uses.