# dubdiff A diff viewer for markdown-formatted and plaintext documents. These diffs are intended for use in copy-editing. The diffs are performed word-by-word, similarly to how the [GNU `wdiff`](http://www.gnu.org/software/wdiff/) tool works. This produces a more meaningful diff for English-language editing. The diff may be further processed in a way that is aware of markdown formatting. The resulting output attempts to show differences of copy within the final document format (rather than differences of format). The markdown-sensitive processing of the wdiff comparison is at `...`, for the curious. ## Version 2 This is a complete rewrite of Dubdiff with: - simpler project architecture - client-side diffing engine and simplified server - server-side rendering - switch to React from Angular - clean up of diffing engine - goal of implementing a HTML diff viewer Basically I'm rewriting it for fun. ## Live Server The tool is live at http://dubdiff.com, feel free to use it there. ## Provisioning You'll need node & npm. Then install dependencies with npm install To build and launch a dev server: npm start npm run serve To build and launch the production server: npm run build:prod npm run serve:prod Data is saved to a simple flat file db in the `data` folder. If this folder doesn't exist, create it. mkdir data ### Low-memory environments On a low-memory machine, eg. a DigitalOcean 512MB instance, you will need to enable virtual memory. Use this guide: [How To Configure Virtual Memory (Swap File) on a VPS](https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-configure-virtual-memory-swap-file-on-a-vps#2) ### Start on boot To make the application start on boot, run the following: # initialize pm2 to start on boot with the systemd boot manager pm2 startup systemd # start the app with pm2 pm2 start npm --name dubdiff -- run serve:prod # save the current pm2 config so that it can be reloaded on boot pm2 save [Digital Ocean: How To Set Up a Node.js Application for Production on Ubuntu 16.04](https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-set-up-a-node-js-application-for-production-on-ubuntu-16-04)