diff --git a/src/applications/phame/query/PhamePostSearchEngine.php b/src/applications/phame/query/PhamePostSearchEngine.php index 8f81c9362e..d1d9a791ec 100644 --- a/src/applications/phame/query/PhamePostSearchEngine.php +++ b/src/applications/phame/query/PhamePostSearchEngine.php @@ -108,6 +108,7 @@ final class PhamePostSearchEngine $item = id(new PHUIObjectItemView()) ->setUser($viewer) ->setObject($post) + ->setObjectName($post->getMonogram()) ->setHeader($post->getTitle()) ->setStatusIcon('fa-star') ->setHref($post->getViewURI()) diff --git a/src/docs/user/userguide/phame.diviner b/src/docs/user/userguide/phame.diviner index f0f1732c6b..d42ddc7d23 100644 --- a/src/docs/user/userguide/phame.diviner +++ b/src/docs/user/userguide/phame.diviner @@ -1,65 +1,121 @@ @title Phame User Guide @group userguide -Phame is an internal and external blogging tool. Use it to communicate both -internally to your users or externally to others. +Phame is a blogging platform. -= Overview = +Overview +======== -Phame is a simple blogging platform. You can create and own multiple blogs -for various purposes internal to your organization. We include tools like -Phame in Phabricator because we believe having a single stack for all -internal tools is the best way to see they get adopted. +Phame is a simple platform for writing blogs and blog posts. Content published +through Phame is integrated with other Phabricator applications (like Feed, +Herald and Dashboards). -Overall, Phame is intended to help an individual spread their message. As -such, pertinent design decisions skew towards favoring the individual -rather than the collective. Phame fully integrates with Phabricator on -key levels such as Feed, Comments, Subscriptions, Policies, and more. +You can use Phame to write and publish posts on any topic. You might use it to +make announcements, hold discussions, or provide progress updates about a +project. -= Drafts = +In the upstream, we use several Phame blogs to discuss changes to Phabricator, +make company announcements, photograph food, and provide visionary thought +leadership. -By default all new posts are visible unless you set the visibility to -draft when initially composing. This restricts the post to only members -with Phame Blog edit privileges. Those members may also see and edit -the post before it goes live. -= Posts = +Blogs +===== -Posts are accessible to the individual Phame Blog's view policy. This allows -you to separate your content according to audience. So you can restrict a -Engineering Blog to just engineers, or keep contractors out of the Security -Blog. If you've configured an external blog, all those posts will be publicly -viewable on publish. +To get started with Phame, create a blog. Blogs can be personal or edited +by a group: the **Editable By** policy controls who is allowed to write new +posts. -= Blogs = +You can provide a title, subtitle, and description to help users understand +the role and purpose of the blog. -Blogs are collections of posts. Each blog has associated metadata like -a name, description, and set of bloggers who can add posts to the blog as -dictated by the blog's edit policy. Each blogger can also edit metadata -about the blog, the header images, or archive it. +After creating a blog, you can optionally provide a header image (a large +image shown on the main blog page, like a beautiful photograph of food) and +a picture (a small logo or profile image shown in various places in the UI to +help identify the blog). -NOTE: Removing a blogger from a given blog does not remove their posts that -are already associated with the blog. Rather, it removes their ability to edit -metadata about and add posts to the blog. +Blogs can also be hosted externally. See "External Blogs", below, for +more information. -Blogs can be useful for powering external websites, like - blog.yourcompany.com +Posts +===== -by making pertinent configuration changes with your DNS authority and -Phabricator instance. For the Phabricator instance, you must +After creating a blog, you're ready to write your first post. You can navigate +to the blog and choose {nav Write Post} to get started. - - Enable `policy.allow-public` in Phabricator configuration. - - Configure the blog to have the view policy `public`. +Posts have a **Visibility** field which controls who can see them. The options +are: -For your DNS authority, simply point the pertinent domain name at your -Phabricator instance. e.g. by IP address. + - **Published**: Anyone who can see the blog will be able to read the post. + - **Draft**: Allows you to work on posts before publishing them. Only users + who can edit the blog will be able to see the post. + - **Archived**: Allows you to remove old posts. Only users who can edit + the blog will be able to see the post, and it won't appear in the pending + drafts list. -There are three fields to know about when setting up a blog for external use. +After publishing a post, it will appear on the blog and on the Phame home page +for all users who can see it. - - **Full Domain URI:** Set this to the full URI you intend to serve the Phame - blog from. - - **Parent Site Name/URI:** Phame serves Blogs with a very minimal UI. - To help provide some context and navigation, these field may be set to give - users a way back to the parent site the blog was originally linked from. +Using Phame With Other Applications +=================================== + +Phame integrates with other Phabricator applications, so you can do a few +interesting things: + +**Dashboards**: You can create a dashboard panel which shows posts on a +particular blog, then put the panel on the homepage or a custom dashboard. + +This is an easy way to create a list of recent announcements. + +**Herald**: You can use Herald rules to make sure you get notified whenever +your favorite author publishes a new post. + +**Remarkup**: You can reference a blog post in any other application using the +`J123` monogram for the post, or embed a more detailed link with `{J123}`. + +(We ran out of letters a while ago, but thinking about **j**ournal may be +helpful in remembering this.) + + +External Blogs +============== + +WARNING: This feature is still a prototype and has some known issues. + +You can host a Phame blog on an external domain, like `blog.mycompany.com`. The +Phacility corporate blog is an example of an external Phame blog: + +> https://blog.phacility.com/ + +External blogs are public (they do not require login) and are only supported if +your Phabricator install is also public. You can make an install public by +adjusting `policy.allow-public` in Config, but make sure you understand the +effects of adjusting this setting before touching it. + +Once you've made your install public, configure the blog that you want to host +like this: + + - **View Policy**: Set the "View Policy" for the blog to "Public". Blogs must + have a public view policy to be served from an external domain. + - **Full Domain URI**: Set this to the full URI of your external domain, + like `https://blog.mycompany.com/`. When users visit this URI, Phabricator + will serve the blog to them. + +To configure the blog's navigation breadcrumbs so that it links back to the +right parent site, set these options: + + - **Parent Site Name**: Put the parent site name here (like "MyCompany"). + - **Parent Site URI**: Put the parent site URI here (like + `https://www.mycompany.com`). + +Configuring these options will add a new breadcrumb to the navigation to let +users return to the blog's parent site. It will look something like this: + + - {nav My Company > Blog Name} + +Finally, configure DNS for `blog.mycompany.com` to point at Phabricator. + +If everything is set up properly, visiting `blog.mycompany.com` should now +serve your blog.