If you use some plugins with your Jekyll blog, chances are you can not have your blog generated by GitHub Pages. First of all, because they do not allow custom plugins. This is where jekyll-github-deploy (a.k.a. jgd) comes in: it will automatically build your Jekyll blog and push it to your gh-pages branch. You may want to read this blog post before you start using this tool: Deploy Jekyll to GitHub Pages.
It is assumed that your blog is in the home directory of your repo.
Install it first:
$ gem install jgd
Run it locally:
$ jgd
Now your site is deployed to gh-pages
branch of your repo. Done.
Below is a list of all command line options.
Option | Description |
---|---|
-u or --url |
The GitHub URL. Defaults to th URL of your current project. |
-b or --branch |
The branch to push your site to. Defaults to gh-pages . If the branch does not exist, it will be created. |
-r or --branch-from |
The source branch. Defaults to master . |
-c or --config |
Name of the optional deploy config file. See Production variables below for more information. |
-d or --drafts |
Adds the --drafts option to Jekyll so that it will build draft posts. |
-h or --help |
Displays a list of all options. |
If you need to have different values for your deployed blog, just add a
_config-deploy.yml
file in your project's root and you're set. Values
re-defined in _config-deploy.yml
will override those defined in
_config.yml
.
Typical usage includes changing site url
, disable disqus or ga in
development...., you name it.
While _config-deploy.yml
is the default, you may specify any config
file by using the --config
command line option.
For example:
$ jgd -c _config-deploy-develop.yml -r develop -b gh-pages-develop
This is how I configure my Jekyll blog to be deployed automatically by travis-ci:
branches:
only:
- master
env:
global:
- secure: ...
install:
- bundle
script: jgd -u http://yegor256:$PASSWORD@github.com/yegor256/blog.git
The environment variable $PASSWORD
is set through
env/global/secure
, as explained
here.
Don't forget to add gem require 'jgd'
to your Gemfile
.
You can use SSH key instead. First, you should encrypt it:
$ travis encrypt-file id_rsa --add
Then, use the URI that starts with git@
:
script:
- jgd -u git@github.com:yegor256/blog.git
In order to build a package locally run below commands.
gem build jgd.gemspec
gem install jgd-<version>.gem
First, install Ruby 2.3+, Rubygems, and Bundler. Then:
$ bundle update
$ bundle exec rake --quiet
$ ./tesh.sh
The build has to be clean. If it's not, submit an issue.
Then, make your changes, make sure the build is still clean, and submit a pull request.