This is a general programming question.
What is the best way to make a light blogging system that can handle images, bbcode-ish styling and text without a database back end? Light means not more than 50 to 100 posts in extreme cases.
What language(s) should be used? Is there any preferred data format for the information? How does security play out?
EDIT: Client has no database, is on a shared server. Can’t change that. Therefore, no DB.
EDIT2:
Someone mentioned SQL Compact – does that require anything more than copying files to the server? The key here is again that things shouldn’t require any more permissions than FTP Acess.
If you’re looking to do it yourself; store each post as a file in a directory. Then to sort and limit the posts you rely partially on the file names to order and limit them, and potentially (in the case of a search) on reading every last file. Don’t go letting users make 10,000 posts though. But yeah, the above is considered a flat file data format. You can get fancy by using a standard format like JSON, Yaml, or XML within each post file, and even fancier by requesting these with Ajax calls in mostly client side code.
Now if the reason you want to work with flat files is that you just don’t want to install a database server, there’s nothing stopping you from reading a local (to the server) file as a berkley DB, a Lucene Index, or an SQLite DB from within your webapp using the appropriate client library. You’ll find any of these approaches a little more sane (a bit faster, a bit more readable in code) than the afore-mentioned with all the same requirements for installing on the server (read-write file permissions). Many web frameworks or languages (like php) come with the option of an API to these client libraries; SQLite, and Lucy (C Lucene) particularly.
If you’re just looking for examples of it being done, I first (I think 1999 or 2000) came across blosxom which is a perl script that either runs as a cgi script per request or as a cron job. It builds a dated index of “posts” based on whatever you throw into the directory it’s meant to scan. It also builds an RSS feed.