Clone of Disqus, but faster, Opensource and sexy.
- Opensource.
- Very fast, responses between 5ms and 15ms on average.
- Easy to integrate with static pages.
- PWA Admin for desktop and mobile or terminal to manage comments: Delete, update, find...
- Easy to import from Disqus.
- No database, everything is stored in a JSON.
- Configuration in a simple YAML.
- Captcha system included.
- Receive an email for each new comment.
- Users are notified by email if they are answered.
- Multisite: Single server for multiple websites.
- How does it work?
- Origin
- Run
- Notification template for email
- API
- Terminal cli
- Deployment
- Create your own JAR
On the one hand we have Glosa who would be our comment server. It feeds in GET and POST requests, and obediently returns JSON. It can only return comments from a url (it sorts comments by url, not ids) or create a new comment (parent or child of another comment). Nothing else. If you want to create a comment previously you will need to ask for the token to confirm that you are not a robot.
Optionally you can receive an email automatically when a new comment is written.
The website, CMS or mobile application, must integrate a logic with Javascript to make the necessary requests and render the comments properly. To make this task easier we have created an example template that you can modify to your needs. You can find the link on this page.
A Glosa is a Spanish word. It is defined as a note, usually brief, that is written in the margin of a text or even between its lines with the intention of clarifying some idea of it.
The software was born with the intention that the author's static blog would no longer depend on an external company (Disqus), and could have control of its content. To make it as easy as possible to deploy, develop and maintain; he programmed in Clojure. And from the beginning it was clear to him that he didn't need a conventional database, plain text was enough.
- Make sure you have Java installed.
Debian/Ubuntu
sudo apt install default-jre
Mac OS
brew install java
- Create a file
config.yaml
with the following content. You can also useconfig.yaml.example
as a base config and change it to fit your needs.
##### General #####
# If it is active it will be accessible to any client
debug: false
# It can be a domain in case of using a proxy: example.com
domain: localhost
port: 4000
# Access for APP
token: mysecret
# It indicates which domain can use it. Debug true so there are no limitations.
domain-cli: "http://example-cli.com/"
##### Notify #####
# Type of notification, currently valid: email
notify: email
subject: New comment
from: [email protected]
admin: [email protected]
# SMTP, only notify: email
smtp-host: smtp.example.com
smtp-user: smtpuser
smtp-password: smtppassword
smtp-port: 25
smtp-tls: true
##### Captcha #####
# Currently valid: time
captcha: time
##### Database #####
# Currently valid: plain
database: plain
- Download the latest version of Glosa (
glosa-{version}-standalone.jar
).
https://github.com/glosa/glosa-server/releases
- Now you can execute glosa.
java -jar target/glosa-{version}-standalone.jar
Great 🎉. You already have your 🔥 own comment server 🔥.
That's it, now you just have to test that it works properly.
curl localhost:4000/api/v1/captcha/?url=https://glosa.example/best-SO/'
It will return a random token
{"token":"OABWNONEOOKXRMMWADPF"}
The first time Glosa is run it will create an HTML template with the name template-email.html
. Edit freely.
- Get Comments (Public)
- Last comments (Private)
- Add Comments (Public)
- Update Comment (Private)
- Delete Comment (Private)
- Search Threads (Private)
- Get captcha token (Public)
- Check if he is alive (Public)
- Check if token is valid (Public)
Only privates.
You need a token
to be able to interact (You will find it in your config.yaml
). Use a header with Bearer authorization on each request.
Example with mysecret
token.
curl -XDELETE -H "Authorization: Bearer mysecret" -H "Content-type: application/json" ...
No token
is required to interact.
Gets all the comments on one page.
Method: GET
/api/v1/comments/?url={url}
Param | Value | Description |
---|---|---|
url | string | Page where you want to get the comments. |
Get from http://glosa.example/best-SO/
.
curl 'http://localhost:4000/api/v1/comments/?url=https://glosa.example/best-SO/'
[
{
"id": 4812781236,
"parent": "",
"deep": 0,
"createdAt": 1584266634,
"thread": "https://glosa.example/best-SO/",
"author": "Lexar",
"email": "",
"message": "Do you use Glosa too? It's an amazing technology."
},
{
"id": 4812781237,
"parent": "4812781236",
"deep": 1,
"createdAt": 1584266746,
"thread": "https://glosa.example/best-SO/",
"author": "Lucia",
"email": "[email protected]",
"message": "I love the article."
}
]
[]
Get the last 10 comments sorted by date. A pager is available.
Method: POST
/api/v1/comments/latest/{page}
Param | Value | Description |
---|---|---|
page | number | Paginator. |
I get the last 10 comments.
curl 'http://localhost:4000/api/v1/comments/latest/1'
Last comments between 30 and 40.
curl 'http://localhost:4000/api/v1/comments/latest/3'
[
{
"id": 4812781236,
"parent": "",
"deep": 0,
"createdAt": 1584266634,
"thread": "https://glosa.example/best-SO/",
"author": "Lexar",
"email": "",
"message": "Do you use Glosa too? It's an amazing technology."
},
{
"id": 4812781237,
"parent": "4812781236",
"deep": 1,
"createdAt": 1584266746,
"thread": "https://glosa.example/best-SO/",
"author": "Lucia",
"email": "[email protected]",
"message": "I love the article."
}
...
]
[]
Add new comment on one page. Require token generated by the captcha endpoint. After saving the comment the captcha token will no longer be valid. At the same time a notification (email) will be sent to the administrator (in the configuration it is called admin
), in case it is a sub-comment it will also be sent another notification to the parent of the comment if the address is present.
The steps must be.
- Get captcha token.
- Add comment.
Method: POST
/api/v1/comments/
Param | Value | Description |
---|---|---|
parent | number | If it's a sub-comment, the number of the parent comment. Otherwise leave empty. |
author | string | Author's name. |
string | Email that the user will be notified of the responses to his comment. Leave blank if not desired. | |
message | string | Message. It can be HTML or plain. |
token | number | Number of the token generated by the captcha endpoint. |
thread | string | Page where you want to save the comment. |
Save comment from https://glosa.example/best-SO/
.
curl -XPOST -H "Content-type: application/json" -d '{
"parent": "",
"token": "VRJUOBBMTKFQUAFZOKJG",
"author": "Juana",
"email": "[email protected]",
"message": "I like it very much.",
"thread":"https://glosa.example/best-SO/"
}' 'http://localhost:4000/api/v1/comments/'
{
"added": true
}
{
"added": false
}
Get a token to validate that a new comment can be created. It has only one use. It must also be obtained 20 seconds before use or it will not work.
Method: GET
/api/v1/captcha/?url={url}
Param | Value | Description |
---|---|---|
url | string | Page where you want to save the comment. |
Get token for page https://glosa.example/best-SO/
.
curl 'http://localhost:4000/api/v1/captcha/?url=https://glosa.example/best-SO/'
{
"token": "ZRFOKXLALKNPOJPYJLVY"
}
{
"error": "Need URL"
}
Simple answer to check that the service is working.
Method: GET
/api/v1/ping/
curl 'http://localhost:4000/api/v1/ping/'
{
"ping": "pong"
}
Method: POST
/api/v1/token/check/
Param | Value | Description |
---|---|---|
url | string | Page where you want to save the comment. |
curl -XPOST -H "Authorization: Bearer mysecret" 'http://localhost:4000/api/v1/token/check/'
{
"valid": true
}
{
"valid": false
}
Update a comment for ID. Authorization required.
Method: PUT
/api/v1/comments/
Param | Value | Description |
---|---|---|
id | number | Comment ID. |
author | string | Author's name. |
string | Email that the user will be notified of the responses to his comment. Leave blank if not desired. | |
message | string | Message. It can be HTML or plain. |
Update comment with id 1234
.
curl -XPUT -H "Authorization: Bearer mysecret" -H "Content-type: application/json" -d '{
"id": 1234
"author": "Alex",
"email": "[email protected]",
"message": "I love the article."
}' 'http://localhost:4000/api/v1/comments/
{
"updated": true,
"id": 1234
}
{
"updated": false,
"id": 1234
}
Delete a comment for ID. Authorization required.
Method: DELETE
/api/v1/comments/{id}
Param | Value | Description |
---|---|---|
id | number | Comment ID. |
Delete comment with id 1234
.
curl -XDELETE -H "Authorization: Bearer mysecret" -H "Content-type: application/json" http://localhost:4000/api/v1/comments/1234
{
"deleted": true,
"id": 1234
}
{
"deleted": false,
"id": 1234
}
Search for all urls containing a certain string ignoring uppercase. Authorization required.
Method: POST
/api/v1/threads/search/{query}
Param | Value | Description |
---|---|---|
query | string | String to search. |
Search all threads with tadam
.
curl -XPOST -H "Authorization: Bearer mysecret" 'http://localhost:4000/api/v1/threads/search/tadam'
[
{
"thread": "https://my.blog/tadam-vs-pedestal/"
},
{
"thread": "https://my.blog/best-web-framework-clojure-tadam"
}
]
[]
To manage some minor features you can use the manager
script which will filter, modify or delete the database. Previously remember to stop Glosa to avoid problems.
You will need to have Node installed on your computer and give it permission to run.
./manager last [number of elements]
Example
./manager last 3
./manager get [thread]
Example
./manager get https://glosa.example/best-SO/
./manager update [id] [new message]
Example
./manager update 1234 'I love your article.'
./manager delete [id]
Example
./manager delete 1234
With Nginx it's pretty quick and easy. You can use it as a reverse proxy, since Glosa contains its own web server (Jetty). You can see an example of configuration that can be useful.
server {
server_name glosa.domain.com;
access_log /var/log/glosa_access.log;
error_log /var/log/glosa_error.log;
location / {
proxy_pass http://localhost:4000/;
proxy_set_header Host $http_host;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Proto $scheme;
proxy_redirect off;
}
}
To create a service in Linux is done like any application in Java. Below you can see an example.
Create a file in the following path: /etc/systemd/system/glosa.service
Add the content.
[Unit]
Description=Glosa
After=network.target
[Service]
Type=simple
Restart=always
WorkingDirectory=/folder/jar/
ExecStart=java -jar glosa.jar
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
Finally enable and start the service.
sudo systemctl enable glosa
sudo systemctl start glosa
- Make sure you have openjdk or oracle-jdk installed, clojure and leiningen.
brew install openjdk clojure leiningen
sudo apt install default-jdk clojure leiningen
- Clone the repository and enter the generated folder.
git clone https://github.com/glosa/glosa-server.git
cd glosa-server
- Run the following command to build a
jar
file.
lein uberjar
After this two files should be created in target/
. We will use the standalone version: glosa-{version}-standalone.jar
.
It needs to be executed at the root of the project and have Leiningen
installed.
It checks linguistically and syntaxically if the code is correct.
make lint
Build a JAR ready to distribute.
make build
Distributed in Clojars.
make deploy
Thanks to the power of Tadam Framework