The levelup.gitconnected.com site is a Medium site that can also be
replaced with scribe.rip whenever privacy respecting site alternatives
are enabled in the config.
Also modified how link descriptions are updated when that config is
enabled (before it was missing replacements on quite a few
descriptions).
This introduces a new UI element for displaying the client IP
address when a search for "my ip" is used.
Note that this does not show the IP address seen by Google
if Whoogle is deployed remotely. It uses `request.remote_addr`
to display the client IP address in the UI, not the actual address
of the server (which is what Google sees in requests sent from
remote Whoogle instances).
With 843632a, whoogle.env is now gitignored and should only be created
by users from the whoogle.template.env file. Since the file no longer
exists, the docker build cannot copy it in by default. This just
conditionally copies the file in if it exists.
Renamed to avoid collision issues for users who update the env file when
running their instance.
Non-template env file is gitignored to avoid accidental tracking.
Fixes#467
scribe.rip is a privacy respecting front end for medium.com. This
feature allows medium.com results to be replaced with scribe.rip links,
and works for both regular medium.com domains as well as user specific
subdomains (i.e. user.medium.com).
[scribe.rip website](https://scribe.rip)
[scribe.rip source code](https://git.sr.ht/~edwardloveall/scribe)
Co-authored-by: Ben Busby <noreply+git@benbusby.com>
Used in header templates for navigating back to the home page when
behind a reverse proxy config where the app is running from a subpath of
a domain (i.e. "https://something/whoogle/")
Fixes#403
Buildx workflow now waits for tests to pass before building/uploading
new images.
There's also a separate step for building a properly formatted tag image
if triggered by a new tag.
There doesn't really need to be a 'develop' branch anymore, since all
work is committed directly to 'main', with tags to indicate
production-ready builds.
As a result, the buildx-dev workflow is pretty pointless.
There are a few conventional choices but this one should be friendly
and generally accepted by local reader.
Previous version is still comprehensible but lesser users (perhaps
used in Japanese documents) and may give local users a pause.
Regular commits are all built and publish to TestPyPI, tagged commits
are published to PyPI.
This should finish the process of moving away from Travis CI, now that
both testing and PyPI deployments are handled in github actions.
Restricting form-action to 'self' in the content security policy
prevented Chrome (and likely other browsers) from using !bangs on the
home page.
Fixes#408