16753a78d remove kaiju from comments.md 25906f6ad Hugo 0.64.0 aacc7a130 releaser: Add release notes to /docs for release of 0.64.0 2243afe90 Explain Ace/Amber support has been removed 293c9496a Document the hugo function 479890f9b Update comments.md ceab41097 Update theme 9a95876c7 Remove note 696543e13 Update usage.md a04bab2b9 Release 0.63.2 ccaed74b5 Merge branch 'temp632' 623b363c5 releaser: Add release notes to /docs for release of 0.63.2 39ce6f50e releaser: Add release notes to /docs for release of 0.63.2 9175ac2ca Another theme fix 88c264251 Rebuild _vendor e739dc3a8 Release 0.63.1 129ecac84 Merge branch 'temp631' bcd7c1154 releaser: Add release notes to /docs for release of 0.63.1 e4f0d9285 releaser: Add release notes to /docs for release of 0.63.1 6a40124d6 Update theme c486747de Params cleanup c408c4334 netlify: Bump to 0.63.0 7e8a48be8 Adjust base template docs a5920e9aa Adjust release notes d4d25c524 Merge branch 'temp63' 16d981721 releaser: Add release notes to /docs for release of 0.63.0 08ab681d1 releaser: Add release notes to /docs for release of 0.63.0 90feaac39 docs, output: Add base template lookup variant to docs.json afe2b4399 docs, output: Add base template lookup variant to docs.json 1f7466a76 docs: Regen docs helper 7ceefb94a docs: Regen docs helper ee14087cd Remove typo from RenderString.md 6daf333d3 Remove the calibreapp action 682f710d7 docs: Updating 'submodule add' command in "Host on GitHub" to use https instead of ssh. ef57b2dae Improve documentation on slug behavior 835ddd9c2 Fix broken link 137a32f90 Fixed typo in content-management/page-resources 936633e25 Fixed spelling error, "wich" -> "which" a559d41e3 Using a Different Version of Hugo in AWS Amplify 2ee83402d Update rss.md f900a2ce0 Add render-image code example and edit wording bd0a0207c Change wording on Page Resources documentation d213b4599 linuxbrew was renamed to homebrew (#1004) dcb0925f8 Update index.md 789416a08 Release 0.62.2 2dc66f13c releaser: Add release notes to /docs for release of 0.62.2 813fbc865 releaser: Add release notes to /docs for release of 0.62.2 ed5b07df3 docs: Document the new autoHeadingIDType setting 02d4747e5 docs: Document the new autoHeadingIDType setting 406a8a9a6 docs: Regenerate docshelper 065319786 docs: Regenerate docshelper 61d540021 Merge commit '26f1458a2df6b55eee3a5de46f5fec23a43a7c7d' 7cac5909b releaser: Add release notes to /docs for release of 0.62.1 6e30e01a2 releaser: Add release notes to /docs for release of 0.62.0 2694dcdd8 Merge commit '8a4005cf2b0ef34265ff8051a6b76226685fc226' 115dd6782 docs: More on hooks f4460fd54 tpl: Do not return any value in errorf 3587d2998 tpl: Add a warnf template func 7c9b02e30 docs: Regen docshelper a7bfdeb24 Fix incorrect MIME type from image/jpg to image/jpeg 1a6089cfe Preserve HTML Text for link render hooks 4544a998c docs: Footnote c42733258 Add render template hooks for links and images 0d8bec78a Merge commit '2e711a28c71e8667258e5ab824f9b9a71c261b0a' 3974c326c markup/tableofcontents: Add config option for ordered list 8c2bd1a62 releaser: Add release notes to /docs for release of 0.61.0 f00b2d507 releaser: Add release notes to /docs for release of 0.60.1 9a5109838 releaser: Add release notes to /docs for release of 0.60.0 d2c222f71 Add Goldmark as the new default markdown handler df96f9efa Update homepage.md f17e67b4b tpl/collections: Allow dict to create nested structures 5f923768a Merge commit 'efc0b1bb6c6564f54d596467dbc6a18cb206954e' 8a861bf16 Support Go time format strings in permalinks bbb8c4fea releaser: Add release notes to /docs for release of 0.59.1 9d9070dda releaser: Add release notes to /docs for release of 0.59.0 98716176b Merge commit '5ac0f751aa47e52625662215f66efa99a6abfc2e' 2057ba4c5 Merge commit '5070ba6c9e6c492deade3c30cfe769b9dbf7151d' c98bcff07 Merge commit 'b9bd35d72e14932fb6588ff62b90cddef0a060fc' as 'docs' git-subtree-dir: docs git-subtree-split: 16753a78d85e05c4a2cea94e263dda2e0047d155
11 KiB
title | linktitle | description | date | publishdate | lastmod | categories | keywords | authors | menu | weight | sections_weight | draft | toc | aliases | ||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Host on GitHub | Host on GitHub | Deploy Hugo as a GitHub Pages project or personal/organizational site and automate the whole process with a simple shell script. | 2014-03-21 | 2014-03-21 | 2018-09-22 |
|
|
|
|
30 | 30 | false | true |
|
GitHub provides free and fast static hosting over SSL for personal, organization, or project pages directly from a GitHub repository via its GitHub Pages service.
Assumptions
- You have Git 2.8 or greater installed on your machine.
- You have a GitHub account. Signing up for GitHub is free.
- You have a ready-to-publish Hugo website or have at least completed the Quick Start.
Types of GitHub Pages
There are 2 types of GitHub Pages:
- User/Organization Pages (
https://<USERNAME|ORGANIZATION>.github.io/
) - Project Pages (
https://<USERNAME|ORGANIZATION>.github.io/<PROJECT>/
)
Please refer to the GitHub Pages documentation to decide which type of site you would like to create as it will determine which of the below methods to use.
To create a User/Organization Pages site, follow the single method in the GitHub User and Organization Pages section below.
To create a Project Pages site, choose a method from the Project Pages section below.
GitHub User or Organization Pages
As mentioned the GitHub Pages documentation, you can host a user/organization page in addition to project pages. Here are the key differences in GitHub Pages websites for Users and Organizations:
- You must use a
<USERNAME>.github.io
to host your generated content - Content from the
master
branch will be used to publish your GitHub Pages site
This is a much simpler setup as your Hugo files and generated content are published into two different repositories.
Step-by-step Instructions
- Create a
<YOUR-PROJECT>
(e.g.blog
) repository on GitHub. This repository will contain Hugo's content and other source files. - Create a
<USERNAME>.github.io
GitHub repository. This is the repository that will contain the fully rendered version of your Hugo website. git clone <YOUR-PROJECT-URL> && cd <YOUR-PROJECT>
- Paste your existing Hugo project into a new local
<YOUR-PROJECT>
repository. Make sure your website works locally (hugo server
orhugo server -t <YOURTHEME>
) and open your browser to http://localhost:1313. - Once you are happy with the results:
- Press Ctrl+C to kill the server
- Before proceeding run
rm -rf public
to completely remove thepublic
directory
git submodule add -b master https://github.com/<USERNAME>/<USERNAME>.github.io.git public
. This creates a git submodule. Now when you run thehugo
command to build your site topublic
, the createdpublic
directory will have a different remote origin (i.e. hosted GitHub repository).
Put it Into a Script
You're almost done. In order to automate next steps create a deploy.sh
script. You can also make it executable with chmod +x deploy.sh
.
The following are the contents of the deploy.sh
script:
#!/bin/sh
# If a command fails then the deploy stops
set -e
printf "\033[0;32mDeploying updates to GitHub...\033[0m\n"
# Build the project.
hugo # if using a theme, replace with `hugo -t <YOURTHEME>`
# Go To Public folder
cd public
# Add changes to git.
git add .
# Commit changes.
msg="rebuilding site $(date)"
if [ -n "$*" ]; then
msg="$*"
fi
git commit -m "$msg"
# Push source and build repos.
git push origin master
You can then run ./deploy.sh "Your optional commit message"
to send changes to <USERNAME>.github.io
. Note that you likely will want to commit changes to your <YOUR-PROJECT>
repository as well.
That's it! Your personal page should be up and running at https://<USERNAME>.github.io
within a couple minutes.
GitHub Project Pages
{{% note %}}
Make sure your baseURL
key-value in your site configuration reflects the full URL of your GitHub pages repository if you're using the default GH Pages URL (e.g., <USERNAME>.github.io/<PROJECT>/
) and not a custom domain.
{{% /note %}}
Deployment of Project Pages from /docs
folder on master
branch
As described in the GitHub Pages documentation, you can deploy from a folder called docs/
on your master branch. To effectively use this feature with Hugo, you need to change the Hugo publish directory in your site's config.toml
and config.yaml
, respectively:
publishDir = "docs"
publishDir: docs
After running hugo
, push your master branch to the remote repository and choose the docs/
folder as the website source of your repo. Do the following from within your GitHub project:
- Go to Settings → GitHub Pages
- From Source, select "master branch /docs folder". If the option isn't enabled, you likely do not have a
docs/
folder in the root of your project.
{{% note %}}
The docs/
option is the simplest approach but requires you set a publish directory in your site configuration. You cannot currently configure GitHub pages to publish from another directory on master, and not everyone prefers the output site live concomitantly with source files in version control.
{{% /note %}}
Deployment of Project Pages From Your gh-pages
branch
You can also tell GitHub pages to treat your master
branch as the published site or point to a separate gh-pages
branch. The latter approach is a bit more complex but has some advantages:
- It keeps your source and generated website in different branches and therefore maintains version control history for both.
- Unlike the preceding
docs/
option, it uses the defaultpublic
folder.
Preparations for gh-pages
Branch
These steps only need to be done once. Replace upstream
with the name of your remote; e.g., origin
:
Add the public
Folder
First, add the public
folder to your .gitignore
file at the project root so that the directory is ignored on the master branch:
echo "public" >> .gitignore
Initialize Your gh-pages
Branch
You can now initialize your gh-pages
branch as an empty orphan branch:
git checkout --orphan gh-pages
git reset --hard
git commit --allow-empty -m "Initializing gh-pages branch"
git push upstream gh-pages
git checkout master
Build and Deployment
Now check out the gh-pages
branch into your public
folder using git's worktree feature. Essentially, the worktree allows you to have multiple branches of the same local repository to be checked out in different directories:
rm -rf public
git worktree add -B gh-pages public upstream/gh-pages
Regenerate the site using the hugo
command and commit the generated files on the gh-pages
branch:
{{< code file="commit-gh-pages-files.sh">}} hugo cd public && git add --all && git commit -m "Publishing to gh-pages" && cd .. {{< /code >}}
If the changes in your local gh-pages
branch look alright, push them to the remote repo:
git push upstream gh-pages
Set gh-pages
as Your Publish Branch
In order to use your gh-pages
branch as your publishing branch, you'll need to configure the repository within the GitHub UI. This will likely happen automatically once GitHub realizes you've created this branch. You can also set the branch manually from within your GitHub project:
- Go to Settings → GitHub Pages
- From Source, select "gh-pages branch" and then Save. If the option isn't enabled, you likely have not created the branch yet OR you have not pushed the branch from your local machine to the hosted repository on GitHub.
After a short while, you'll see the updated contents on your GitHub Pages site.
Put it Into a Script
To automate these steps, you can create a script with the following contents:
{{< code file="publish_to_ghpages.sh" >}} #!/bin/sh
if [ "git status -s
" ]
then
echo "The working directory is dirty. Please commit any pending changes."
exit 1;
fi
echo "Deleting old publication" rm -rf public mkdir public git worktree prune rm -rf .git/worktrees/public/
echo "Checking out gh-pages branch into public" git worktree add -B gh-pages public upstream/gh-pages
echo "Removing existing files" rm -rf public/*
echo "Generating site" hugo
echo "Updating gh-pages branch" cd public && git add --all && git commit -m "Publishing to gh-pages (publish.sh)"
#echo "Pushing to github" #git push --all {{< /code >}}
This will abort if there are pending changes in the working directory and also makes sure that all previously existing output files are removed. Adjust the script to taste, e.g. to include the final push to the remote repository if you don't need to take a look at the gh-pages branch before pushing.
Deployment of Project Pages from Your master
Branch
To use master
as your publishing branch, you'll need your rendered website to live at the root of the GitHub repository. Steps should be similar to that of the gh-pages
branch, with the exception that you will create your GitHub repository with the public
directory as the root. Note that this does not provide the same benefits of the gh-pages
branch in keeping your source and output in separate, but version controlled, branches within the same repo.
You will also need to set master
as your publishable branch from within the GitHub UI:
- Go to Settings → GitHub Pages
- From Source, select "master branch" and then Save.
Use a Custom Domain
If you'd like to use a custom domain for your GitHub Pages site, create a file static/CNAME
. Your custom domain name should be the only contents inside CNAME
. Since it's inside static
, the published site will contain the CNAME file at the root of the published site, which is a requirements of GitHub Pages.
Refer to the official documentation for custom domains for further information.