DOCter is a Jekyll template for quickly building out project pages and documentation.
DOCter needs Jekyll and other dependencies to run locally. These can be installed with Bundler by running the following commands.
gem install bundler
bundle install
Fork and clone the repo:
git clone git@github.com:cfpb/DOCter.git
cd DOCter
Run Jekyll:
bundle exec jekyll serve --watch --baseurl ''
Open it up in your browser: http://localhost:4000/
Options within the _config.yml
file allow you to control the site's title, subtitle, logo, author information, and the left column navigation.
This is an excerpt from the Jekyll docs on configuring your URL for Project Pages.
Sometimes it's nice to preview your Jekyll site before you push your gh-pages
branch to GitHub. However, the subdirectory-like URL structure GitHub uses for Project Pages complicates the proper resolution of URLs. Here is an approach to utilizing the GitHub Project Page URL structure (username.github.io/project-name/
) whilst maintaining the ability to preview your Jekyll site locally.
- In
_config.yml
, set thebaseurl
option to/project-name
-- note the leading slash and the absence of a trailing slash. - When referencing JS or CSS files, do it like this:
{{ site.baseurl }}/path/to/css.css
-- note the slash immediately following the variable (just before "path"). - When doing permalinks or internal links, do it like this:
{{ site.baseurl }}{{ post.url }}
-- note that there is no slash between the two variables. - Finally, if you'd like to preview your site before committing/deploying using
jekyll serve
, be sure to pass an empty string to the--baseurl
option, so that you can view everything atlocalhost:4000
normally (without/project-name
at the beginning):jekyll serve --baseurl ''
This way, you can preview your site locally from the site root on localhost, but when GitHub generates your pages from the gh-pages branch all the URLs will start with /project-name
and resolve properly.
The project is in the public domain, and all contributions to it will be released as such. By submitting a pull request, you are agreeing to waive all rights to your contribution under the terms of the CC0 Public Domain Dedication.
If you contribute the open source work of others, please mark it clearly in your pull request.