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We still need usable Git-backed site distribution

A couple of recent posts by Ploum and Dominique discuss the necessity (or at least the convenience) of strengthening the publication of Gemini or Web sites by using Git repositories. I believe that, for it to be actually usable, this way distributing content would need well-defined specifications, mechanisms and practices. Since that is precisely the goal of the gwit project, both posts strengthen my conviction that gwit is still relevant and worth the effort.

De la brièveté de la vie et de la pérennité d’un blog (by Ploum)

Read this from git (by Dominique at Laniakea)

Ploum's piece reflects upon the preservation of one's writings against incidents, attacks or the unavoidable passing of time. He mentions some approaches that he has taken to make his site ready for the long term, like ensuring its autonomy and simplicity, and having permanent URLs, easy-to-render sources in a Git repo, and mirrors. He observes that new protocols or usages are needed to turn Internet into a worldwide archive, keeping in mind that we don't know which content will turn out to be relevant in the future. I consider it an insightful text overall with useful technical advice, much worth reading.

Dominique's article follows a different take, starting with the technical experiment to distribute the Laniakea site sources over Git. However, its brief conclusion section does a great job in synthesizing the motivations and potential of the experiment… and they turn to be much in the same line of Ploum's: content resilience, URL permanence, simplicity, mirroring, and the issue of unforeseen utility. If you don't read Ploum's text (because you can't read French or you're short of time), be sure to read at least Dominique's conclusion.

(It's no wonder that both texts refer to Solderpunk's initial essay on content distribution over Git, which also inspired gwit.)

Low budget P2P content distribution with git (by Solderpunk)

gwit and site resilience

Let's see how gwit fares in each of the points raised by the aforementioned posts:

I'd say that the gwit spec seems to cover those points pretty well!

The gwit network grows! 🪩

Last but not least, another recent surprise showing that gwit still stirs some interest was Matograine's post to the gwit-spec mailing list introducing what to my knowledge is the second gwit site ever. 🎉 It's still in its early stages, but it already contains a nice short guide (in French) on how to create a new gwit site, along with PGP keys, required files, etc.

Format for fingerprint and remotes (by Matograine)

Matograine's gwit site

Here's the site introduction with ID/key and Git remote URLs:

[site "0x16c8a566bb88303c2513cf6328996d46e0440e85"]
name = Matograine
remote = https://framagit.org/matograine/gwitsite.git

Merci beaucoup, Matograine !

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