ficd.sh/content/blog/building-my-own-ssg.md

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---
title: Building My Own Static Site Generator
date: July 6, 2025
draft: true
---
*[SSG]: Static Site Generator
*[homebrewed]: Self-made, intended for personal use.
[zona]: https://sr.ht/~ficd/zona
[Hugo]: https://gohugo.io/
[Zola]: https://www.getzola.org/
[Jekyll]: https://jekyllrb.com/
[^jd]: [jdugan6240.dev](https://jdugan6240.dev/posts/custom_site_generator.html#why)
Those of us in the open-source world tend to be very _passionate_ about what we
do — and passion often manifests itself in _blogging_. Rolling your own blogging
setup seems to be a rite of passage. It's a project of moderate complexity, fun,
and not particularly time-consuming.
Personal websites and blogs are very... personal. Why not maximize the control
we have over them? Many of the programmers I respect publish blogs using a
homebrewed SSG. I figured it was time to join them!
This article is about how (and why) I built [zona], the SSG that built and
rendered the very sentence you're reading. Without any further ado, let's get
into it.
[TOC]
## Reinventing The Wheel
There's no shortage of excellent SSG tools out there. [Hugo] is fast,
configurable, and very popular. [Jekyll] is the default on GitHub pages, which
makes it _(I'm guessing)_ the most commonly-used SSG by a long shot. [Zola] is
tiny, dependency free, and _very_ flexible.
You can certainly build some awesome blogs with these tools, and customize them
as much as you want. For example, my friend Alisa uses [Zola] to publish
[her blog](https://axlefublr.github.io/), which is a great example of how a
minimal website can truly shine with the right styling and customization.
So: if there's such an abundance of great static site generators, why did I
write my own? JD[^jd], a fellow Kakoune enjoyer, puts it well:
> 1. It's a good learning experience \[...\]
> 2. Many static site generators are complex and take time to learn to configure
> \[...\]
> 3. A custom solution grants complete control over how exactly the site is
> generated \[...\]
My main motivation for starting work on [zona] was the third point: **complete
control**. I don't think being a control freak makes me an outlier among Linux
users — why else would we be breaking our operating system near-daily, if not
for some obsessive customization?
It's happened very often that I find some tool I like, and during the process of
tweaking it, I find _something_ that can't be changed --- which ends up
bothering me immensely. I figured that I'd rather avoid this experience while
writing my own blog. This way, if something is missing, it's my fault, and no
one else's.
## Requirements
The features I implemented in [zona] are informed by what I want from my own
blog. The primary user is myself, after all! I knew I wanted:
- Writing in Markdown with as little embedded HTML as possible.
- A convenient live preview.
- An easy way to write image captions.
- Control over the Markdown parsing.
- Declarative configuration.
- An easy way to add new posts.
## Gophers And Snakes
I started work on [zona] in October, 2024. At this point, I had written a few
(smaller) projects in Go, and I wanted to work on something more complicated.