The problem with mine is it's optimised for one particular use case - mine :). Things like the permalink style are set the way I like them (/year/month/post-title) and I haven't made things like this a setting or anything.
I think FunnelWeb might still be worth looking at. I don't think there'd be any major issues with running it in Mono, just little things that would need to be worked out. For a general-purpose blog, it might be worth spending time in testing FunnelWeb on Mono instead of starting a brand new one. I only wrote my own because it helped me learn ASP.NET MVC better, and of course I like running my own code and knowing how it all works. :) On Mon, Jan 7, 2013 at 10:52 PM, Alberto León <[email protected]> wrote: > Ok, I will take a look of your personal blog system, Daniel. > > I abandoned the idea of funnelWeb after read the threat you give me. But I > love the simplicity of funnelweb and the programmer oriented philosophy > > > 2013/1/7 Daniel Lo Nigro <[email protected]> > >> Not sure how useful it'd be to you, but I wrote one for personal use >> (although the code is integrated with the code for the rest of my site, >> it's not a separate blogging system). I used: >> >> - ASP.NET <http://asp.net/> MVC 4 with Razor 2 and its built-in CSS >> and JS minification (WebGrease) >> - ServiceStack >> OrmLite<https://github.com/ServiceStack/ServiceStack.OrmLite> with >> MySql.Data for the data access layer >> - SimpleInjector <http://simpleinjector.codeplex.com/> for IoC / >> Dependency injection >> - DotLESS <http://www.dotlesscss.org/> for CSS preprocessing >> - ELMAH <http://code.google.com/p/elmah/> for error logging >> - MiniProfiler <http://miniprofiler.com/> for performance profiling >> - T4MVC <http://t4mvc.codeplex.com/> >> >> The live version is at http://dan.cx/blog. It's running on Mono 3.0.2 on >> Debian Linux. The code is available at >> https://github.com/Daniel15/Website :) >> >> As I only created it for personal use, I don't have enough free time to >> do things like proper documentation, installation wizards and a >> nice-looking administration section. But feel free to take any of the code >> if you find it useful. There's really not that much code in it but I think >> the code that is there is pretty clean. >> >> I also know of FunnelWeb <http://www.funnelweblog.com/> which is a >> blogging engine built on ASP.NET MVC 3. I haven't tested compatibility >> on Mono and its database scripts are only built with SQL Server in mind (so >> they won't work properly on MySQL or PostgreSQL). See >> https://groups.google.com/forum/?hl=en&fromgroups=#!topic/funnelweblog/0PLPL2czWeE >> >> >> On Mon, Jan 7, 2013 at 9:28 PM, Alberto León <[email protected]>wrote: >> >>> Hello, >>> I have studied a variety .Net blog engines and frameworks. For a MVC >>> aproach, I can't find anything that can be deployed easy in MonoDevelop or >>> running without a big effort in configuration for apache and mod_mono >>> >>> The more matured framework OpenSource Orchard, has a lot of headaches >>> and in my point of view, is very heavy to the simple taks of a blog. >>> >>> I'm planning a new one, very simple, and easy to develop and run in >>> Linux with apache and Mono. >>> >>> I will be pleased if you could give me some opinion and thoughts and >>> tell me your experiencie integrating or doing similar things. >>> >>> Thanks, >>> Alberto León >>> >>> -- >>> >>> http://stackoverflow.com/users/690958/alberto-leon >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> Mono-list maillist - [email protected] >>> http://lists.ximian.com/mailman/listinfo/mono-list >>> >>> >> > > > -- > > http://stackoverflow.com/users/690958/alberto-leon >
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