Marmite [Markdown makes sites] is a very! simple static site generator.
I'm a big user of other SSGs but it is frequently frustrating that it takes so much setup to get started.
Just having a directory of markdown files and running a single command sounds really useful.
— Michael, marmite user.
It does "one" simple thing only:
- Reads all
.mdfiles on theinputdirectory. - Using
CommonMarkparse it toHTMLcontent. - Extract optional metadata from
frontmatterorfilename. - Generated
htmlfile for each page. - Outputs the rendered static site to the
outputfolder.
It also handles generating or copying static/ and media/ to the output dir.
- Marmite is meant to be simple, don't expect complex features
- Marmite is for bloggers, so writing and publishing articles in chronological order is the main use case.
- The generated static site is flat HTML by default (
./{name}.html|rss|json). Workspaces can produce subdirectory-based multi-site layouts. - Taxonomies:
tags:,stream:,series:,authors:, andlanguages:(i18n) - Marmite uses the
date:attribute to differentiatepostsfrompages
- Everything embedded in a single binary.
- Zero-Config to get started.
- Optionally fully configurable via
marmite.yaml - Configurable markdown parser (CommonMark extensions, rendering options)
- Optionally fully configurable via
- Common-mark + Github Flavoured Markdown + Extensions.
- Raw HTML allowed.
- Emojis
:smile:, spoiler||secret||. - Wikilinks
[[name|url]]and Obsidian links[[page]]. - Markdown alerts (GitHub-style callouts).
- Backlinks and related content.
- Tags.
- Multi authors with profile pages.
- Multi streams (separate content in different listings).
- Series support (ordered, chronological content groups with navigation).
- Language streams / i18n (multilingual content with auto-discovery, translation links, hreflang SEO tags).
- Draft content management (filtered from feeds and search).
- Pagination.
- Static search index with inline match previews.
- RSS Feeds (index, tags, authors, streams, languages).
- Next/previous post navigation (stream-aware).
- Built-in HTTP server with WebSocket live reload.
- Auto rebuild when content changes.
- Shortcodes (YouTube, Spotify, cards, galleries, table of contents, custom templates).
- Image gallery with automatic thumbnail generation.
- Automatic image resizing (parallel processing, incremental builds, configurable quality).
- Media organization (slug-based subfolders,
@/shorthand, content subfolder media). - Automatic sitemap generation.
--show-urlsdry run to preview all site URLs without building.- File mappings (copy arbitrary files during site generation).
- Redirect aliases (frontmatter
aliasesfield generates redirect pages for old URLs). - Internal link validation (build-time checking, optional strict failure mode).
- IndieWeb compliance (microformats, semantic HTML).
- Markdown source publishing alongside HTML.
- Built-in theme
- Light and Dark modes.
- Multiple colorschemes.
- Fully responsive.
- Spotlight search.
- Easy to replace the index page and add custom CSS/JS.
- Easy to customize Tera templates.
- Math and Mermaid diagrams (native build-time SVG or client-side JS).
- Build-time syntax highlighting via arborium.
- Commenting system integration.
- Banner images and
og:tags.
- Theme system with remote theme installation.
- CLI to start a new theme from scratch.
- Workspace multi-site support (single command builds, config inheritance, cross-site references).
- AT Protocol / standard.site integration (publish posts to the decentralized social web).
- Embedded AI agent skills for AI-assisted site management.
- Available via cargo, pip/uvx, Homebrew, AUR, FreeBSD, Docker, and install script.
curl -sS https://marmite.blog/install.sh | shAlso available via cargo, pip/uvx, Homebrew, Arch Linux, FreeBSD, and Docker. See the full installation guide for all methods.
It's simple, really!
$ marmite folder_with_markdown_files path_to_generated_site
Site generated at path_to_generated_site/CLI
$ marmite --help
Marmite is the easiest static site generator.
Usage: marmite [OPTIONS] [INPUT_FOLDER] [OUTPUT_FOLDER] [COMMAND]
Commands:
atproto Manage atproto / standard.site integration
help Print this message or the help of the given subcommand(s)
Arguments:
[INPUT_FOLDER] Input folder containing markdown files
[OUTPUT_FOLDER] Output folder to generate the site [default: `input_folder/site`]
Options:
-v, --verbose... Verbosity level (0-4) [default: 0 warn]
-w, --watch Detect changes and rebuild the site automatically
--serve Serve the site with a built-in HTTP server
--bind <BIND> Address to bind the server [default: 0.0.0.0:8000]
-c, --config <CONFIG> Path to custom configuration file [default: marmite.yaml]
--init-templates Initialize templates in the project
--start-theme <NAME> Initialize a theme with templates and static assets
--set-theme <THEME> Download and set a theme from a remote URL or local folder
--generate-config Generate the configuration file
--init-site Init a new site with sample content and default configuration
--force Force the rebuild of the site even if no changes detected
--shortcodes List all available shortcodes
--show-urls Show all site URLs organized by content type
--skill Print the embedded agent skill document (SKILL.md) to stdout
--skill-install Install the skill into .agents/skills/
--skill-install-claude Install the skill into .claude/skills/ for Claude Code
--new <TITLE> Create a new post with the given title
-e Edit the file in the default editor
-p Set the new content as a page
-t <TAGS> Set the tags for the new content (comma separated)
--site <SITE> Target site within a workspace
--skip-image-resize Skip image resizing during build
--check-internal-links Check internal links during build
--strict-internal-links Fail the build on broken internal links
-h, --help Print help
-V, --version Print versionRun
marmite --helpfor the full list of options including site metadata overrides, search, pagination, and other configuration flags.
When running with --serve --watch (or --serve -w), Marmite automatically rebuilds
on file changes and refreshes the browser via WebSocket. The default theme includes
live reload out of the box. For custom themes, add this snippet to your base template:
<script src="/__marmite__/livereload.js"></script>Read a tutorial on how to get started https://marmite.blog/getting-started.html and create your blog in minutes.
Read more on how to customize templates, add comments etc on https://marmite.blog/
Marmite is very simple.
If this simplicity does not suit your needs, there are other awesome static site generators.
Here are some that I recommend:
