Diazo, previously named xdv, is a general-purpose, open source website theming tool. It is written in Python and generates XSLT. Diazo creates a separation between theme pages and transformation rules, allowing web designers to work on templates in plain HTML, without knowledge of XSLT or special template-related codes. Diazo creates a themed site by using user-defined rules to combine vanilla content from a dynamic website together with a static HTML theme. The rulesfile has directives which, for example, may replace the contents of an HTML node in the theme with the contents of one in the content.
The Diazo compiler generates XSLT, which can be deployed on any proxying web server with an XSLT processor such as Apache, Varnish, or WSGI. WSGI also has more direct Diazo support: the DiazoMiddleware filter will compile and cache Diazo themes on the fly. Nginx has an XSLT processor, but, as of March 2012, it requires the unthemed website to use strict XHTML. The strict requirement can be relaxed, however, if a patched version of Nginx is used.
Diazo was originally a reimplementation of an earlier software called Deliverance. Where Deliverance would handle the HTML transformation in Python, Diazo generates XSLT which can then be used to defer the actual transformation to faster XSLT engines. The name change to Diazo was announced at the Ploneconference 2010. A major motivation for the name change was to reduce ambiguity, as the XDV name was used by both collective.xdv and by the stand-alone XDV tools. Also dv.xdvserver was renamed to DiazoMiddleware. Diazo is based on DVNG, a prototype version of xdv. Diazo originally implemented only a subset of the features in Deliverance, but now has similar features, although their configuration language is not completely compatible. Diazo has become the de facto standard for theming in Plone 4 and is included in Plone 4.2 and later.
Directives
The basic directives of Diazo include: replace, before and after, drop, strip, merge, and copy. A node, node's children or attribute, can be selected with either XPath selectors or CSS3 selectors. CSS selectors are replaced by the equivalent XPath selector during the pre-processing step of the compiler. Advanced features include: conditions based on content nodes or paths, with grouping and nesting; multiple, conditional themes; modifying the theme or content on the fly; inline XSL directives; Doctype changes; XInclude protocol.