A Bridgetown plugin for handling Webfinger requests for the Fediverse and IndieWeb.
Whether you run a single-author, statically rendered site or a multi-author site with a dynamic backend, this is your one-stop shop for Webfinger support.
This plugin allows for hosting Webfinger lookups on your website for acct:
URIs. This is the first step to giving your site the ability to post to Fediverse apps like Mastodon, Pleroma, or PeerTube. While not all Fediverse apps use Webfinger, enough do that adding Webfinger support will be necessary to have your site participate in the Fediverse.
Run this command to add this plugin to your site's Gemfile:
bundle add bridgetown-webfinger
Or you can use an automation script instead for guided setup:
bin/bt apply https://github.com/michaelherold/bridgetown-webfinger
This plugin runs in one of two modes: static mode or dynamic mode.
Static mode is for when you run a single-author, fully static website without using any of Bridgetown's Server-Side Rendering (SSR) capabilities. It is mildly non-compliant with the Webfinger specification, but is an accepted practice for static sites.
Dynamic mode uses a Roda plugin to serve author data for all accounts defined in your src/_data/authors.yml
file.
Within your authors data file, each author requires a webfinger
associative array with data about the account. For example, for the account bilbo
, who has a Twitter account at https://twitter.com/bilbobaggins
and hosts an avatar at https://bagend.com/bilbo.png
, the authors data file entry might look like:
# src/_data/authors.yml
---
bilbo:
webfinger:
aliases:
- https://twitter.com/bilbobaggins
links:
- href: https://bagend.com/bilbo.png
rel: http://webfinger.net/rel/avatar
type: image/png
You may configure any number of authors in this way, however static mode works with only a single author.
To use static mode, configure your authors data file and add the following to your config/initializers.rb
file:
# config/initializers.rb
Bridgetown.configure do
init "bridgetown-webfinger", static: true
end
Bridgetown will now generate a .well-known/webfinger
file using your first author's information when building the site.
To have the correct headers for your static file, add the following to your netlify.toml
.
[[headers]]
for = "/.well-known/webfinger"
[headers.values]
Access-Control-Allow-Origin = "*"
Content-Type = "application/jrd+json"
See the allowed hosts section below for more information about the access control header.
To use dynamic mode, configure your authors data file and add the following to your config/initializers.rb
file:
# config/initializers.rb
Bridgetown.configure do
init "bridgetown-webfinger", static: false, allowed_hosts: "*"
end
Then, add the bridgetown_webfinger
plugin to your RodaApp
and call the bridgetown_webfinger
request method:
# server/roda_app.rb
class RodaApp < Bridgetown::Rack::Roda
plugin :bridgetown_ssr # required
plugin :bridgetown_webfinger
route do |r|
r.bridgetown_webfinger
end
end
This generates a .well-known/webfinger
route that serves acct:
URI requests for authors on your site.
The Webfinger specification states that servers must include the Access-Control-Allow-Origin
header to enable Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) requests and that they should use the least restrictive setting.
Unless you are hosting private Webfinger information — e.g. within a corporate network, to only authenticated followers, or for any other reason — you should set this to "*"
using the configuration above.
If this is private information that you wish to restrict set the header value appropriately.
So you're interested in contributing to Bridgetown Webfinger? Check out our contributing guidelines for more information on how to do that.