- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
Confab Comments is a drop-in commenting solution for small scale sites such as blogs.
Features:
- Passwordless user authentication via Email
- Full markdown support
- Comment edits (with edit history)
- Comment reply notifications
- Admin moderation features, including a manual moderation queue, basic auto moderation, mass deletion and banning
See the website for a demo, and see the quick start docs if you’re interested in quickly setting up an instance yourself (Docker and bare metal install instructions provided).
Source code is available on GitHub, and is licensed under AGPL-3.0.
I created this project to implement comments on my own blog. This is the first project I’ve publicly released, so any feedback/contributions are welcome. If you like what you see, feel free to leave me a star on GitHub :)
Looks good! I’m wondering if you could fit the “Posted 5 days ago” on the same row as username as well in mobile mode. It seems like on desktop it doesn’t show “posted”, for example.
Thanks!
The reason for breaking to the next line on mobile was definitely horizontal space constraints. The anonymous usernames can get a bit long, and there also needs to be space next to the username for badges.
And I’m fairly sure I later added “Posted” for the mobile layout to make use of the extra space that moving to the next line allowed for.
If I use this to make some kind of a «guest book» page on my personal site, is there a way to have an RSS feed of all posted comments? I don’t think I’ll be checking the page every day but I want to be notified when there is a new comment.
Admin(s) will be notified by email every time a new comment is posted, unless this feature is disabled.
As for an RSS feed, I’m not sure how this would work since Confab supports comments at multiple locations within a site… I don’t have much experience with RSS, but I’d be happy to look into it further if you would really like this feature.
Of course, RSS is the way. I mean, emails are good, but they were meant for 2 way communication. When you want to have a 1 way communication channel, RSS is always preferred, IMHO.
Even 1 RSS feed for all comments (in any location) is better than no RSS fees at all.
I will put that on my to-do list, thanks for the suggestion.