Vyāsa
3-min readUpdated May 02, 2026
Markdown feeds Python
Instant sites, no code juggling
CSS reigns supreme
Vyasa turns a folder of Markdown into a navigable site served by Python. It is for people who want notes, docs, books, or a blog to feel like a real site without adding a JavaScript build stack. This README is the shortest path from pip install vyasa to a working local site. By the end, you should know how to run it, what it is good at, and which manual page to open next when the simple path stops being enough.
Vyasa URL copied
Vyasa is a lightweight Markdown site engine built on FastHTML. It gives you a live local server, folder-aware navigation, rich Markdown features, CSS-first theming, and a static build path from the same content tree.
Start Here URL copied
pip install vyasa
mkdir my-notes
cd my-notes
printf '# Hello\n\nThis is my first Vyasa page.\n' > index.md
vyasa .
Open http://127.0.0.1:5001.
If you want Google login later, install pip install "vyasa[auth]". If you want a static export instead of a live server, run vyasa build . -o ./dist.
The First Configuration Most People Add URL copied
title = "My Notes"
theme_preset = "serene-manuscript"
sidebars_open = true
Put that in a .vyasa file at the root of your content folder. Configuration precedence is CLI args > .vyasa > environment variables > defaults, so you can start simple and still override behavior when you need to.
What It Buys You URL copied
- Write plain Markdown, then opt into Vyasa features like callouts, tabs, Mermaid, D2, math, task lists, footnotes as sidenotes, and code snippet includes only when the page needs them.
- Keep content organized as folders;
index.mdorREADME.mdbecomes the landing page for that branch. - Style the site with normal CSS and bundled theme presets instead of introducing a component system.
- Use the same content tree for a live local server and a static export.
- Add auth and RBAC when the content stops being public or personal.
What A Content Tree Looks Like URL copied
my-notes/
├── .vyasa
├── index.md
├── posts/
│ ├── first-post.md
│ └── second-post.md
└── manual/
├── README.md
└── architecture.md
Folders become navigation groups. index.md or README.md gives a folder its own landing page, so a blog, a manual, and a notebook can live in the same tree without special routing setup.
When You Need The Next Layer URL copied
If your next question is about shaping the site, open the configuration guide. If the question is about what the authoring surface can do, go to Markdown writing features. Diagram-specific behavior lives in the Mermaid guide and the D2 guide, while shell styling and theme presets are covered in theming.
Use security when the site needs login or path rules, architecture when you want the request and rendering model, and advanced behavior when you are past the happy path and want the edges.
The manual itself starts at vyasa manual/README.md, but you should not need it before the quick start above works.