You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.

2.5KB

+++ title = “GitHub Pages” weight = 30 +++

By default, GitHub Pages uses Jekyll (A ruby based static site generator), but you can use whatever you want provided you have an index.html file in the root of a branch called gh-pages. That branch name can also be manually changed in the settings of a repository.

We are going to use TravisCI to automatically publish the site. If you are not using Travis already, you will need to login with the GitHub OAuth and activate Travis for the repository. Don't forget to also check if your repository allows GitHub Pages in its settings.

Allowing Travis to push to GitHub

Before pushing anything, Travis needs a Github private access key in order to make changes to your repository. If you're already logged in to your account, just click here to go to your tokens page. Otherwise, navigate to Settings > Developer Settings > Personal Access Tokens. Generate a new token, and give it any description you'd like. Under the “Select Scopes” section, give it repo permissions. Click “Generate token” to finish up.

Your token will now be visible! Copy it into your clipboard and head back to Travis. Once on Travis, click on your project, and navigate to “Settings”. Scroll down to “Environment Variables” and input a name of GH_TOKEN with a value of your access token. Make sure “Display value in build log” is off, and then click add. Now Travis has access to your repository.

Setting up Travis

We're almost done. We just need some scripts in a .travis.yml file to tell Travis what to do.

before_script:
  # Download and unzip the gutenberg executable
  # Replace the version numbers in the URL by the version you want to use
  - curl -s -L https://github.com/Keats/gutenberg/releases/download/v0.3.1/gutenberg-v0.3.1-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu.tar.gz | sudo tar xvzf - -C /usr/local/bin

script:
  - gutenberg build

# If you are using a different folder than `public` for the output directory, you will
# need to change the `gutenberg` command and the `ghp-import` path
after_success: |
  [ $TRAVIS_BRANCH = master ] &&
  [ $TRAVIS_PULL_REQUEST = false ] &&
  gutenberg build &&
  sudo pip install ghp-import &&
  ghp-import -n public && 
  git push -fq https://${GH_TOKEN}@github.com/${TRAVIS_REPO_SLUG}.git gh-pages

If your site is using a custom domain, you will need to mention it in the ghp-import command: ghp-import -c vaporsoft.net -n public for example.

Credits: this page is based on the article https://vaporsoft.net/publishing-gutenberg-to-github/