1. Improved Deployment and setup tasks in Rakefile

2. Improved README setup instructions
This commit is contained in:
Brandon Mathis 2011-06-22 23:44:02 -04:00
parent da514a6559
commit a128d4990b
2 changed files with 101 additions and 60 deletions

View File

@ -4,18 +4,32 @@
4. **It's easy to use.** A collection of rake tasks simplifies development and makes deploying a cinch. 4. **It's easy to use.** A collection of rake tasks simplifies development and makes deploying a cinch.
5. **Get curated plugins.** Plugins are hand selected from the Jekyll community then tested and improved. 5. **Get curated plugins.** Plugins are hand selected from the Jekyll community then tested and improved.
## Get Setup ## Getting Started
[Fork Octopress](https://github.com/imathis/octopress), then open the console and follow along. [Create a new repository](https://github.com/repositories/new) for your website then
open up a terminal and follow along. If you plan to host your site on [Github Pages](http://pages.github.com) for a user or organization, make sure the
repository is named `your_username.github.com` or `your_organization.github.com`.
git clone (your repo url) ### Setting up Git
# Optionally add a branch for pulling in Octopress updates mkdir my_octopress_site
cd my_octopress_site
git init
git remote add octopress git://github.com/imathis/octopress.git git remote add octopress git://github.com/imathis/octopress.git
git pull octopress master
git remote add origin (your repository url)
git push origin master
Setup an [RVM](http://beginrescueend.com/) and install dependencies. # If you're using Github user or organization pages,
# rename the master branch to source and then push
git branch -m master source
git push origin source
source .rvmrc
### Setting up Octopress
<span>Next</span>, setup an [RVM](http://beginrescueend.com/) and install dependencies.
rvm rvmrc trust
bundle install bundle install
# Install pygments (for syntax highlighing) # Install pygments (for syntax highlighing)
@ -25,7 +39,23 @@ Setup an [RVM](http://beginrescueend.com/) and install dependencies.
# Install the default Octopress theme # Install the default Octopress theme
rake install rake install
### Write A Post ### Generating Your Blog
rake generate # Generates your blog into the public directory
rake watch # Watches files for changes and regenerates your blog
rake preview # Watches, regenerates, and mounts a webserver at http://localhost:4000
Jekyll's built in webbrick server is handy, but if you're a [POW](http://pow.cx) user, you can set it up to work with Octopress like this.
cd ~/.pow
ln -s /path/to/octopress
cd -
Now you'll just run `rake watch` and load up `http://octopress.dev` instead.
## Writing A Post
While running `rake preview` or `rake watch`, open a new terminal session and start a Hello World post.
rake post['hello world'] rake post['hello world']
@ -39,49 +69,58 @@ which tells Jekyll how to processes posts and pages.
layout: post layout: post
--- ---
Octopress adds some custom paramaters to give you more publishing flexibility and you can [read about those here](#include_link), Now, go ahead and type up a sample post, or use some [inspired filler](http://baconipsum.com/). Save and refresh your browser, and you
but for now. Go ahead and type up a sample post or use some [inspired filler](http://baconipsum.com/). should see the new post show up in your blog index.
{% pullquote %} Octopress does more than this though. Check out [Blogging with Octopress](#include_link) to learn about cool features which
When writing longform posts, I find it helpful to include pullquotes, which help those scanning a post discern whether or not a post is helpful. help make blogging easier and more beautiful.
It is important to note, {" pullquotes are merely visual in presentation and should not appear twice in the text. "} That is why it is prefered
to use a CSS only technique for styling pullquotes.
{% endpullquote %}
## Generate Your Blog ## Configuring Octopress
rake preview I've tried to keep configuring Octopress fairly simple. Here's a list of files for configuring Octopress.
This will generate your blog, watch your `sass` and `source` directories for changes regenerating automatically, and mount Jekyll's built in webbrick server. Open your browser to `http://localhost:4000` and check it out. _config.yml # Main config (Jekyll blog settings)
Rakefile # Config for Rsync deployment
config.rb # Compass config
If you'd rather use [POW](http://pow.cx) to serve up your site, you can do this instead. sass/custom/_colors.scss # change your blog's color scheme
sass/custom/_layout.scss # change your blog's layout
sass/custom/_styles.scss # override your blog's styles
cd ~/.pow Octopress keeps it's main configurations in two places, the `Rakefile` and the `_config.yml`. You probably won't have to change anything in the rakefile except the
ln -s /path/to/octopress deployment configurations (if you're going to [deploy with Rsync over SSH](#deploy_with_rsync)).
#Then generate your site ## Deploying
rake watch
`rake watch` does the same thing as `rake preview` except it doesn't mount Jekyll's webbrick server. ### Deploying with Rsync via SSH
### Configure Octopress Add your server configurations to the `Rakefile` under Rsync deploy config. To deploy with Rsync, be sure your public key is listed in your server's `~/.ssh/authorized_keys` file.
Octopress keeps configurations in two places, the `Rakefile` and the `_config.yml`. ssh_user = "user@domain.com"
document_root = "~/website.com/"
In the `rakefile` you'll want to set up your deployment configurations. Now if you run `rake deploy` in your terminal, your `public` directory will be synced to your server's document root.
## -- Rsync Deploy config -- ## ### Deploying to Github Pages
# Be sure your public key is listed in your server's ~/.ssh/authorized_keys file
ssh_user = "mathisweb@imathis.com"
document_root = "~/dev.octopress.org/"
## -- Git deploy config -- ## To setup deployment, you'll want to clone your target repository into the `_deploy` directory in your Octopress project.
source_branch = "source" # this compiles to your deploy branch If you're using Github project pages, clone the repository for that project, eg `git@github.com:username/project.git`.
deploy_branch = "master" # For user/organization pages, use "master" for project pages use "gh-pages" If you're using Github user or organization pages, clone the repository `git@github.com:usernem/username.github.com.git`.
If you want to deploy with github pages, read [http://pages.github.com](http://pages.github.com) for guidance. # For Github project pages:
git clone git@github.com:username/project.git _deploy
rake init_deploy[gh-pages]
TODO : Write _configt.yml instructions… # For Github user/organization pages:
git clone git@github.com:username/username.github.com _deploy
rake init_deploy[master]
# Now to deploy, you'll run
rake push
The `init_deploy` rake task takes a branch name as an argument and creates a [new empty branch](http://book.git-scm.com/5_creating_new_empty_branches.html), adds an initial commit, and pushes it to the origin remote.
This prepares your branch for easy deployment. The `rake push` task copies the generated blog from the `public` directory to the `_deploy` directory, adds new files, removes old files, sets a commit message, and pushes to Github.
Then Github will queue your site for publishing (which usually occurs within minutes).
## License ## License
(The MIT License) (The MIT License)

View File

@ -34,6 +34,12 @@ end
# Working with Jekyll # # Working with Jekyll #
####################### #######################
desc "Generate jekyll site"
task :generate do
puts "## Generating Site with Jekyll"
system "jekyll"
end
desc "Watch the site and regenerate when it changes" desc "Watch the site and regenerate when it changes"
task :watch do task :watch do
system "trap 'kill $jekyllPid $compassPid' Exit; jekyll --auto & jekyllPid=$!; compass watch & compassPid=$!; wait" system "trap 'kill $jekyllPid $compassPid' Exit; jekyll --auto & jekyllPid=$!; compass watch & compassPid=$!; wait"
@ -83,37 +89,14 @@ end
# Deploying # # Deploying #
############## ##############
## if you're deploying with github, change the default deploy to push_github
desc "default push task"
task :push => [:push_rsync] do
end
desc "Generate and deploy task"
multitask :deploy => [:integrate, :generate, :push] do
end
desc "Generate jekyll site"
task :generate do
puts "## Generating Site with Jekyll"
system "jekyll"
end
def ok_failed(condition)
if (condition)
puts "OK"
else
puts "FAILED"
end
end
desc "Deploy website via rsync" desc "Deploy website via rsync"
task :push_rsync do task :sync do
puts "## Deploying website via Rsync" puts "## Deploying website via Rsync"
ok_failed system("rsync -avz --delete #{public_dir}/ #{ssh_user}:#{document_root}") ok_failed system("rsync -avz --delete #{public_dir}/ #{ssh_user}:#{document_root}")
end end
desc "deploy public directory to github pages" desc "deploy public directory to github pages"
multitask :push_github do task :push do
puts "## Deploying branch to Github Pages " puts "## Deploying branch to Github Pages "
(Dir["#{deploy_dir}/*"]).each { |f| rm_rf(f) } (Dir["#{deploy_dir}/*"]).each { |f| rm_rf(f) }
system "cp -R #{public_dir}/ #{deploy_dir}" system "cp -R #{public_dir}/ #{deploy_dir}"
@ -130,7 +113,26 @@ multitask :push_github do
end end
end end
desc "setup _deploy folder and deploy branch"
task :init_deploy, :branch do |t, args|
puts "Please provide a deploy branch, eg. rake init_deploy[gh-pages]" unless args.branch
cd "#{_deploy}" do
system "git symbolic-ref HEAD refs/heads/#{args.branch}"
system "rm .git/index"
system "git clean -fdx"
system "touch README && echo 'initial commit' >> README"
system "git add ."
system "git push origin #{args.branch}"
end
end
def ok_failed(condition)
if (condition)
puts "OK"
else
puts "FAILED"
end
end
desc "list tasks" desc "list tasks"
task :list do task :list do