A daily mirror of Neko's treebird repository https://code.nekobit.net/fossil/treebird/home
Go to file
me@ow.nekobit.net 0779ca5060 Fix read(0) bug
FCGI_stdio does not map stdin's socket, it only wraps the stdio FILE*

FossilOrigin-Name: 0e068eda84d8938d2c47eca010cf828c661f76de29547bb6ce46855f09247bb4
2022-03-23 19:08:52 +00:00
dist Content not found 2022-03-23 14:52:25 +00:00
docs Use SVG icons for statuses, doc fixes 2022-03-22 15:34:05 +00:00
meta Treebird rename + Contributors 2022-03-13 00:35:46 +00:00
scripts better startup script 2022-03-23 04:01:09 +00:00
src Fix read(0) bug 2022-03-23 19:08:52 +00:00
static Fix read(0) bug 2022-03-23 19:08:52 +00:00
.gitignore Update README, config template, restructure documentation 2022-03-21 19:35:29 +00:00
config.def.h Update README, config template, restructure documentation 2022-03-21 19:35:29 +00:00
CREDITS Use SVG icons for statuses, doc fixes 2022-03-22 15:34:05 +00:00
LICENSE File to C converter 2022-01-16 22:43:16 +00:00
Makefile Content not found 2022-03-23 14:52:25 +00:00
README.md Update README, config template, restructure documentation 2022-03-21 19:35:29 +00:00

Treebird

Treebird logo

A very lightweight Pleroma frontend.

The goal is to create a frontend that's lightweight enough to be viewed without JS, but usable enough to improve the experience with JS.

Treebird uses C with FCGI, mastodont-c (library designed for Treebird, but can be used for other applications as well), and plain JavaScript for the frontend (100% optional).

Why?

PleromaFE, pleroma's default frontend, uses way too much Javascript to be usable (and doesn't even support all of it's own API features...). BloatFE is great, but designed only around Mastodon's api, and isn't as modern or as lightweight as it could be. Soapbox is soapbox and does soapbox things.

This led me to one choice, to develop my own frontend.

Compatibility

Treebird respects compatibility with old browsers, and thus uses HTML table layouts, which are supported even by most modern terminal web browsers. The core browser we aim to at least maintain compatibility with is Netsurf, but most other browsers like GNU Emacs EWW, elinks, render Treebird wonderfully.

Credits

Please view the CREDITS file.

Installing

See INSTALL.md for instructions on Apache/Nginx.