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layout | title | date | sidebar | footer |
---|---|---|---|---|
page | Configuring Octopress | July 19 2011 | false | false |
I've tried to keep configuring Octopress fairly simple and you'll probably only ever change the Rakefile
and the _config.yml
.
Here's a list of files for configuring Octopress.
{% codeblock %} _config.yml # Main config (Jekyll's settings) Rakefile # Configs for deployment config.rb # Compass config config.ru # Rack config {% endcodeblock %}
Configurations in the Rakefile
are mostly related to deployment and you probably won't have to touch them unless you're using rsync.
Blog Configuration
In the _config.yml
there are three sections for configuring your Octopress Blog.
Spoiler: You must change url
, and you'll probably change title
, subtitle
and author
and enable some 3rd party services.
Main Configs
{% codeblock %} url: # For rewriting urls for RSS, etc title: # Used in the header and title tags
subtitle: # A description used in the header author: # Your name, for RSS, Copyright, Metadata simple_search: # Search engine for simple site search subscribe_rss: # Url for your blog's feed, defauts to /atom.xml subscribe_email: # Url to subscribe by email (service required) email: # Email address for the RSS feed if you want it. {% endcodeblock %}
Note: If your site is a multi-author blog, you may want to set this config's author
to the name of your
company or project, and add author metadata to posts and pages to give proper attribution for those works.
Jekyll & Plugins
These configurations are used by Jekyll and Plugins. If you're not familiar with Jekyll, you should probably have a look at the configuration docs which lists more options that aren't covered here.
{% codeblock %} root: # Mapping for relative urls (default: /) port: # Port to mount Jekyll's WEBrick server permalink: # Permalink structure for blog posts source: # Directory for site source files destination: # Directory for generated site files plugins: # Directory for Jekyll plugins code_dir: # Directory for code snippets (for include_code plugin) category_dir: # Directory for generated blog category pages pygments: # Toggle pygments syntax highlighting paginate: # Posts per page on the blog index recent_posts: # Number of recent posts to appear in the sidebar {% endcodeblock %}
If you want to change the way permalinks are written for your blog posts, see Jekyll's permalink docs.
Note: Jekyll has a baseurl
config which adds a redirect for Jekyll's WEBrick server for subdirectory support. This works fine if you want
to use the WEBrick server, but for any other web service you have to add support for the redirect. Instead, Octopress uses the root
config and offers a rake task
set_root_dir[/some/directory]
which moves the output directory into a subdirectory and updates configurations. (see Deploying Octopress).
3rd Party Settings
These third party integrations are already set up for you. Simply fill in the configurations and they'll be added to your site.
- Twitter - Setup a sidebar twitter feed, follow button, and tweet button (for sharing posts and pages).
- Google Plus One - Setup sharing for posts and pages on Google's plus one network.
- Pinboard - Share your recent Pinboard bookmarks in the sidebar.
- Delicious - Share your recent Delicious bookmarks in the sidebar.
- Disqus Comments - Add your disqus short name to enable disqus comments on your site.
- Google Analytics - Add your tracking id to enable Google Analytics tracking for your site.
The Octopress layouts read these configurations and only include the javascript and html necessary for the enabled services.