README and the packing guide gain a double-click app section covering the macOS
.app, the Linux .AppDir/.AppImage, favicon icons, and the windows-gui base. The
changelog and docs release notes record the new format under Unreleased.
Rewrite the README around a real example, mirroring paulgraham.com for
offline reading, and split packing into two clean sections: a single ZIM
file (with what ZIM is and how to read it back through Kiwix) and a
self-contained binary. Re-record the demo gif against paulgraham.com and
add a screenshot of the native window serving the essays offline. Carry the
same framing into the docs intro pages and the packing guide, and cut the
v0.1.1 release notes.
Rework the README into the house style: badges, a one-line pitch, an
anchor nav, a commands table, and dedicated sections for clone, pack, and
the native viewer. Every flag and default is checked against the current
binary so the docs match what kage actually does.
Add a demo recorded with ascii-gif. The tape clones example.com, packs it
to a ZIM and to a self-contained binary, and serves it back offline, so
the whole loop reads in one frame. It sits at the top of the README and on
the docs home.
While reviewing the docs, fix the output path everywhere: the default is
$HOME/data/kage, not the kage-out the pages claimed, including a few
fabricated 'done kage-out/...' lines. Document pack, open, and the native
viewer in the release notes.
kage renders every page in headless Chrome, snapshots the final
DOM, strips all JavaScript, and localises CSS, images, and fonts
so a site can be browsed offline as a plain folder of files.
The engine is split into small packages:
urlx deterministic URL to local-path mapping and scope rules
sanitize remove scripts, on* handlers, and javascript: URLs
asset rewrite HTML and CSS references, download assets
browser headless Chrome pool over the DevTools protocol
robots robots.txt matcher
clone the orchestrator: a polite resumable breadth-first crawl
The cli package wires a cobra and fang command surface with two
commands, clone and serve. Every pure package has table tests; the
browser and clone packages add Chrome-driven end-to-end tests that
skip when no browser is present or under -short.
CI runs gofmt, vet, build, race tests, golangci-lint, govulncheck,
and a tidy check on Linux and macOS. A goreleaser config fans one
tag out to archives, deb/rpm/apk, a Chromium-bundled GHCR image,
and the package managers. A tago docs site builds to Pages and
Cloudflare.