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4 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Ashwin Maroli
33faf349c1 Debug Jekyll issue - 7328 2018-10-30 15:17:04 +05:30
Frank Taillandier
cc52cac81a Release 💎 3.8.4 2018-09-18 23:50:26 +02:00
Frank Taillandier
91abe9f741 Release 💎 3.8.4 2018-09-18 23:49:03 +02:00
Parker Moore
d9a2758ff6 3.8.x: security: fix include bypass of EntryFilter#filter symlink check (#7228)
Merge pull request 7228
2018-09-18 12:24:15 -04:00
421 changed files with 8180 additions and 12831 deletions

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@@ -1,53 +1,36 @@
version: "2"
checks:
argument-count:
enabled: true
config:
threshold: 5
file-lines:
enabled: true
config:
threshold: 300
method-complexity:
enabled: true
config:
threshold: 15
method-count:
enabled: true
config:
threshold: 50
method-lines:
enabled: true
config:
threshold: 30
plugins:
engines:
fixme:
enabled: false
rubocop:
enabled: true
channel: rubocop-0-60
channel: rubocop-0-54
exclude_patterns:
- "*.*"
- ".*"
exclude_paths:
- .codeclimate.yml
- .gitignore
- .rspec
- .rubocop.yml
- .travis.yml
- Gemfile
- Gemfile.lock
- CHANGELOG.{md,markdown,txt,textile}
- CONTRIBUTING.{md,markdown,txt,textile}
- readme.{md,markdown,txt,textile}
- README.{md,markdown,txt,textile}
- Readme.{md,markdown,txt,textile}
- ReadMe.{md,markdown,txt,textile}
- COPYING
- LICENSE
- Rakefile
- benchmark/
- docs/
- exe/
- features/
- rake/
- rubocop/
- script/
- spec/
- test/
- vendor/
- features/**/*
- script/**/*
- docs/**/*
- spec/**/*
- test/**/*
- vendor/**/*
- lib/blank_template/
- lib/site_template/
- lib/theme_template/
- lib/jekyll/mime.types
- lib/jekyll/commands/serve/livereload_assets/livereload.js
ratings:
paths:
- lib/**/*.rb

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@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ Hi there! Interested in contributing to Jekyll? We'd love your help. Jekyll is a
## Where to get help or report a problem
See the [support guidelines](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/support/)
See [the support guidelines](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/support/)
## Ways to contribute
@@ -12,9 +12,9 @@ Whether you're a developer, a designer, or just a Jekyll devotee, there are lots
* [Install Jekyll on your computer](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/installation/) and kick the tires. Does it work? Does it do what you'd expect? If not, [open an issue](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll/issues/new) and let us know.
* Comment on some of the project's [open issues](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll/issues). Have you experienced the same problem? Know a work around? Do you have a suggestion for how the feature could be better?
* Read through the [documentation](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/home/), and click the "improve this page" button, any time you see something confusing, or have a suggestion for something that could be improved.
* Browse through the [Jekyll discussion forum](https://talk.jekyllrb.com/), and lend a hand answering questions. There's a good chance you've already experienced what another user is experiencing.
* Find an [open issue](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll/issues) (especially [those labeled `help-wanted`](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+label%3Ahelp-wanted)), and submit a proposed fix. If it's your first pull request, we promise we won't bite, and are glad to answer any questions.
* Read through [the documentation](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/home/), and click the "improve this page" button, any time you see something confusing, or have a suggestion for something that could be improved.
* Browse through [the Jekyll discussion forum](https://talk.jekyllrb.com/), and lend a hand answering questions. There's a good chance you've already experienced what another user is experiencing.
* Find [an open issue](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll/issues) (especially [those labeled `help-wanted`](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+label%3Ahelp-wanted)), and submit a proposed fix. If it's your first pull request, we promise we won't bite, and are glad to answer any questions.
* Help evaluate [open pull requests](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll/pulls), by testing the changes locally and reviewing what's proposed.
## Submitting a pull request
@@ -25,7 +25,7 @@ Whether you're a developer, a designer, or just a Jekyll devotee, there are lots
* The more information, the better. Make judicious use of the pull request body. Describe what changes were made, why you made them, and what impact they will have for users.
* If this is your first pull request, it may help to [understand GitHub Flow](https://guides.github.com/introduction/flow/).
* Pull requests are easy and fun. If this is your first pull request, it may help to [understand GitHub Flow](https://guides.github.com/introduction/flow/).
* If you're submitting a code contribution, be sure to read the [code contributions](#code-contributions) section below.
@@ -49,7 +49,7 @@ That's it! You'll be automatically subscribed to receive updates as others revie
2. Clone the repository locally `git clone https://github.com/<you-username>/jekyll`.
3. Create a new, descriptively named branch to contain your change ( `git checkout -b my-awesome-feature` ).
4. Hack away, add tests. Not necessarily in that order.
5. Make sure everything still passes by running `script/cibuild` (see the [tests section](#running-tests-locally) below)
5. Make sure everything still passes by running `script/cibuild` (see [the tests section](#running-tests-locally) below)
6. Push the branch up ( `git push origin my-awesome-feature` ).
7. Create a pull request by visiting `https://github.com/<your-username>/jekyll` and following the instructions at the top of the screen.
@@ -89,7 +89,7 @@ If you want to add your plugin to the [list of plugins](https://jekyllrb.com/doc
## Code Contributions
Interested in submitting a pull request? Awesome. Read on. There's a few common gotchas that we'd love to help you avoid.
Interesting in submitting a pull request? Awesome. Read on. There's a few common gotchas that we'd love to help you avoid.
### Tests and documentation
@@ -115,8 +115,6 @@ If your contribution changes any Jekyll behavior, make sure to update the docume
Jekyll's methods. It also provides you with helpful methods to quickly create a
site or configuration. [Feel free to check it out!](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll/blob/master/script/console)
* Previously, we've used the WIP Probot app to help contributors determine whether their pull request is ready for review. Please use a [draft pull request](https://help.github.com/en/articles/about-pull-requests#draft-pull-requests) instead. When you're ready, [mark the pull request as ready for review](https://help.github.com/en/articles/changing-the-stage-of-a-pull-request)
## Running tests locally
### Test Dependencies

5
.github/FUNDING.yml vendored
View File

@@ -1,5 +0,0 @@
# These are supported funding model platforms
github: [ashmaroli, DirtyF, mattr-]
open_collective: jekyll
tidelift: rubygems/jekyll

78
.github/ISSUE_TEMPLATE.md vendored Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,78 @@
<!--
Hi! Thanks for considering to file a bug with Jekyll. Please take the time to
answer the basic questions. You can convert `[ ]` into `[x]` to check boxes (or submit
and check.) If there is no need for certain fields like output and redirection, please delete
those headers before submitting. We know not all tickets require those steps.
Otherwise, please try to be as detailed as possible.
If you are unsure this is a bug in Jekyll, or this is a bug caused
by a plugin that isn't directly related to Jekyll, or if this is just
a generic usage question, please consider asking your question at
https://talk.jekyllrb.com where non-bug questions go.
Thanks!
-->
- [ ] I believe this to be a bug, not a question about using Jekyll.
- [ ] I updated to the latest Jekyll (or) if on GitHub Pages to the latest `github-pages`
- [ ] I ran `jekyll doctor` to check my configuration
- [ ] I read the CONTRIBUTION file at https://jekyllrb.com/docs/contributing/
- [ ] This is a feature request.
---
- [ ] I am on (or have tested on) ***macOS*** 10+
- [ ] I am on (or have tested on) ***Debian/Ubuntu*** GNU/Linux
- [ ] I am on (or have tested on) ***Fedora*** GNU/Linux
- [ ] I am on (or have tested on) ***Arch*** GNU/Linux
- [ ] I am on (or have tested on) ***Other*** GNU/Linux
- [ ] I am on (or have tested on) ***Windows*** 10+
<!--
Other GNU/Linux includes Scientific GNU/Linux, CentOS GNU/Linux, and others.
If you are on a minor sub-distro (such as ElementaryOS which does not diverge from
Ubuntu much, please check the parent distro. Kubuntu, Edubuntu, Lubuntu should
also be flagged as Ubuntu as their packages come from upstream Ubuntu.
-->
---
- [ ] I was trying to install.
- [ ] There is a broken Plugin API.
- [ ] I had an error on GitHub Pages, and I have reproduced it locally.
- [ ] I had an error on GitHub Pages, and GitHub Support said it was a Jekyll Bug.
- [ ] I had an error on GitHub Pages and I did not test it locally.
- [ ] I was trying to build.
- [ ] It was another bug.
## My Reproduction Steps
<!--
If this error occurred on GitHub Pages, please try to provide us with logs,
and look at them yourself, to determine if this is an actual Jekyll bug. In
the event you are unsure, file a ticket, however, when you do please provide
the logs (strip them of personal information.)
If you have trouble finding your logs, please email support@github.com and
they will happily help you. If you cannot find logs, please try your best to
replicate it locally because we cannot fix a problem if we do not know
exactly what caused it, or within a relatively close distance.
-->
<!--
Insert the steps you took to for this problem to exist. Such as the
directories you created and, the full command you ran, and include any
plugins you have installed, this is very important.
If your steps are complicated, you can also submit a GitHub
repository (please no zips, they will be removed and rejected by maintainers,)
and just supply a command for us to reproduce it ourselves.
-->
## The Output I Wanted
<!--
Insert the output from the command. Alter it as little as you can.
The minimum should be personal information. Though we normally don't log
anything like that so there should be no need to alter it.
-->

View File

@@ -1,71 +0,0 @@
---
name: Bug Report
about: Is something not working as expected?
title: ''
labels: ''
assignees: ''
---
<!--
Hi! Thanks for considering to file a bug with Jekyll. Please take the time to
answer the basic questions. Please try to be as detailed as possible.
If you are unsure this is a bug in Jekyll, or this is a bug caused
by a plugin that isn't directly related to Jekyll, or if this is just
a generic usage question, please consider asking your question at
https://talk.jekyllrb.com where non-bug questions go.
Thanks!
-->
<!--
Make sure that you've done all of these. If you're sure that the bug you're
reporting is only apparent in a previous version of Jekyll, please say so explicitly
in your description.
- I updated to the latest Jekyll (or) if on GitHub Pages to the latest `github-pages`
- I ran `jekyll doctor` to check my configuration
- I read the contributing document at https://jekyllrb.com/docs/contributing/
-->
## My Environment
<!--
Replace the values in the Version(s) column with the ones in your build. If you're not
using `github-pages`, just replace it with "No".
-->
| Software | Version(s) |
| ---------------- | ---------- |
| Operating System | |
| `jekyll` | Latest |
| `github-pages` | Latest |
---
## Expected Behaviour
<!--
What is it you expected to happen? This should be a description of how the
functionality you tried to use is supposed to work.
-->
## Current Behavior
<!--
Describe the details of the bug. Be sure to include any steps you took for the
problem to exist, such as the directories you created and the full command
you ran. Include any plugins you have installed (this is very important!).
You can include any logs you think relevant here. If you're using GitHub pages
and you're not sure where your logs are, please email support@github.com and
they will happily help you.
-->
## Code Sample
<!--
Please provide a code repository, gist, code snippet or sample files to
reproduce the issue.
-->

View File

@@ -1,24 +0,0 @@
---
name: Documentation
about: Found a typo or something that isn't crystal clear in our docs?
title: 'docs: '
labels: documentation
assignees: DirtyF
---
<!-- Thanks for taking the time to open an issue and help us make Jekyll better! -->
## Motivation
<!-- Why should we update our docs? -->
## Suggestion
<!-- What should we do instead? -->
<!-- Thanks for taking the time to open an issue and help us make Jekyll better! -->

View File

@@ -1,73 +0,0 @@
---
name: Feature Request
about: Want us to add any features to Jekyll?
title: 'feat: '
labels: feature
assignees: ''
---
<!--
Hi! Thanks for considering to file a feature request with Jekyll. Please take the time to
answer the basic questions. Please try to be as detailed as possible.
Thanks!
-->
## Summary
<!--
A one-paragraph explanation of the feature.
-->
## Motivation
<!--
Why do you want to see this feature in Jekyll? What makes you sure that it should not be
implemented at the plugin level, but in Jekyll core? What use cases does it support?
NOTE: Please be mindful of the Jekyll philosophy (https://jekyllrb.com/philosophy/),
particularily Section 5. Think about if 90% of the users would benefit from your
feature request, and whether your feature would be better off in a plugin.
-->
## Guide-level explanation
<!--
Explain the proposal as if it was already included in the project and you
were teaching it to another programmer. That generally means:
- Introducing new named concepts.
- Explaining the feature largely in terms of examples.
- If applicable, provide sample error messages, deprecation warnings, or
migration guidance.
If this is a small feature, you may omit this section.
-->
## Reference-level explanation
<!--
This is the technical portion of the feature request. Explain the design in
sufficient detail that:
- Its interaction with other features is clear.
- It is reasonably clear how the feature would be implemented.
- Corner cases are dissected by example.
If you do not know how to answer this, you can omit it. No worries!
-->
## Drawbacks
<!--
Why should we *not* do this?
-->
## Unresolved Questions
<!--
What related issues do you consider out of scope for this feature that could be
addressed in the future independently of the solution that comes out of this
feature?
-->

View File

@@ -1,15 +0,0 @@
---
name: Question
about: Have any questions about how Jekyll works?
title: ''
labels: ''
assignees: ''
---
<!--
The Jekyll issue tracker IS NOT for usage questions! Please post your
question on our dedicated forum at https://talk.jekyllrb.com.
Thank you!
-->

View File

@@ -1,45 +0,0 @@
<!--
Thanks for creating a Pull Request! Before you submit, please make sure
you've done the following:
- I read the contributing document at https://jekyllrb.com/docs/contributing/
-->
<!--
Make our lives easier! Choose one of the following by uncommenting it:
-->
<!-- This is a 🐛 bug fix. -->
<!-- This is a 🙋 feature or enhancement. -->
<!-- This is a 🔦 documentation change. -->
<!--
Before you submit this pull request, make sure to have a look at the following
checklist. If you don't know how to do some of these, that's fine! Submit
your pull request and we will help you out on the way.
- I've added tests (if it's a bug, feature or enhancement)
- I've adjusted the documentation (if it's a feature or enhancement)
- The test suite passes locally (run `script/cibuild` to verify this)
-->
## Summary
<!--
Provide a description of what your pull request changes.
-->
## Context
<!--
Is this related to any GitHub issue(s)?
You can use keywords to automatically close the related issue.
For example, (all of) the following will close issue #4567 when your PR is merged.
Closes #4567
Fixes #4567
Resolves #4567
Use any one of the above as applicable.
-->

15
.github/config.yml vendored
View File

@@ -1,15 +0,0 @@
updateDocsComment: >
Thanks for opening this pull request! The maintainers of this repository would appreciate it if you would update some of our documentation based on your changes.
updateDocsWhiteList:
- bug
- fix
- Backport
- dev
- Update
- WIP
- chore
updateDocsTargetFiles:
- README
- docs/

32
.gitignore vendored
View File

@@ -1,29 +1,23 @@
# Jekyll
_site/
.jekyll-cache
.jekyll-metadata
.sass-cache
# Ruby
.bundle/
.byebug_history
.ruby-gemset
.ruby-version
*.gem
Gemfile.lock
# Files
.analysis
.DS_Store
*.swp
*~
# Folders
.DS_Store
.analysis
.bundle/
.byebug_history
.jekyll-metadata
.ruby-gemset
.ruby-version
.sass-cache
/test/source/file_name.txt
/vendor
bbin/
Gemfile.lock
_site/
bin/
bbin/
coverage
gh-pages/
pkg/
site/_site/
test/dest
tmp/*

View File

@@ -1,7 +1,6 @@
---
require:
- rubocop-performance
- ./rubocop/jekyll
Jekyll/NoPutsAllowed:
@@ -9,10 +8,9 @@ Jekyll/NoPutsAllowed:
- rake/*.rake
AllCops:
TargetRubyVersion: 2.4
TargetRubyVersion: 2.1
Include:
- lib/**/*.rb
- test/**/*.rb
Exclude:
- bin/**/*
- exe/**/*
@@ -20,14 +18,30 @@ AllCops:
- script/**/*
- vendor/**/*
- tmp/**/*
Layout/AlignArray:
Enabled: false
Layout/AlignHash:
EnforcedHashRocketStyle: table
Layout/AlignParameters:
Enabled: false
Layout/EmptyLinesAroundAccessModifier:
Enabled: false
Layout/EmptyLinesAroundModuleBody:
Enabled: false
Layout/EndOfLine:
EnforcedStyle: native
Layout/ExtraSpacing:
AllowForAlignment: true
Layout/FirstParameterIndentation:
EnforcedStyle: consistent
Layout/IndentationWidth:
Severity: error
Layout/IndentFirstArrayElement:
Layout/IndentArray:
EnforcedStyle: consistent
Layout/IndentFirstHashElement:
Layout/IndentHash:
EnforcedStyle: consistent
Layout/IndentHeredoc:
Enabled: false
Layout/MultilineMethodCallIndentation:
EnforcedStyle: indented
Layout/MultilineOperationIndentation:
@@ -41,9 +55,10 @@ Layout/EndAlignment:
Severity: error
Lint/UnreachableCode:
Severity: error
Lint/UselessAccessModifier:
Enabled: false
Lint/Void:
Exclude:
- lib/jekyll/site.rb
Enabled: false
Metrics/AbcSize:
Max: 21
Metrics/BlockLength:
@@ -51,26 +66,22 @@ Metrics/BlockLength:
- test/**/*.rb
- lib/jekyll/configuration.rb
- rake/*.rake
- jekyll.gemspec
Metrics/ClassLength:
Exclude:
- !ruby/regexp /features\/.*.rb$/
- !ruby/regexp /test\/.*.rb$/
- lib/jekyll/document.rb
- lib/jekyll/site.rb
- lib/jekyll/commands/serve.rb
- lib/jekyll/configuration.rb
Max: 240
Max: 300
Metrics/CyclomaticComplexity:
Exclude:
- lib/jekyll/utils.rb
- lib/jekyll/commands/serve.rb
Max: 9
Metrics/LineLength:
Exclude:
- !ruby/regexp /features\/.*.rb/
- Rakefile
- rake/*.rake
- Gemfile
Max: 100
- jekyll.gemspec
Max: 90
Severity: warning
Metrics/MethodLength:
CountComments: false
@@ -85,14 +96,15 @@ Metrics/PerceivedComplexity:
Naming/FileName:
Enabled: false
Naming/HeredocDelimiterNaming:
Exclude:
- test/**/*.rb
Enabled: false
Naming/MemoizedInstanceVariableName:
Exclude:
- lib/jekyll/convertible.rb
- lib/jekyll/drops/site_drop.rb
- lib/jekyll/drops/unified_payload_drop.rb
- lib/jekyll/page_without_a_file.rb
- lib/jekyll/drops/unified_payload_drop.rb
- lib/jekyll/drops/site_drop.rb
Naming/UncommunicativeMethodParamName:
AllowedNames:
- _
Security/MarshalLoad:
Exclude:
- !ruby/regexp /test\/.*.rb$/
@@ -101,19 +113,20 @@ Security/YAMLLoad:
Exclude:
- !ruby/regexp /features\/.*.rb/
- !ruby/regexp /test\/.*.rb$/
Style/AccessModifierDeclarations:
Enabled: false
Style/Alias:
EnforcedStyle: prefer_alias_method
Enabled: false
Style/AndOr:
Severity: error
Style/BracesAroundHashParameters:
Enabled: false
Style/ClassAndModuleChildren:
Exclude:
- test/**/*.rb
Enabled: false
Style/FrozenStringLiteralComment:
EnforcedStyle: always
Style/Documentation:
Enabled: false
Exclude:
- !ruby/regexp /features\/.*.rb$/
Style/DoubleNegation:
Enabled: false
Style/FormatStringToken:
@@ -124,6 +137,10 @@ Style/GuardClause:
Style/HashSyntax:
EnforcedStyle: hash_rockets
Severity: error
Style/IfUnlessModifier:
Enabled: false
Style/InverseMethods:
Enabled: false
Style/MixinUsage:
Exclude:
- test/helper.rb
@@ -140,21 +157,24 @@ Style/PercentLiteralDelimiters:
"%w": "()"
"%W": "()"
"%x": "()"
Style/RedundantReturn:
Enabled: false
Style/RedundantSelf:
Enabled: false
Style/RegexpLiteral:
EnforcedStyle: percent_r
Style/RescueModifier:
Enabled: false
Style/SafeNavigation:
Exclude:
- lib/jekyll/document.rb
Style/SignalException:
EnforcedStyle: only_raise
Style/SingleLineMethods:
Enabled: false
Style/StringLiterals:
EnforcedStyle: double_quotes
Style/StringLiteralsInInterpolation:
EnforcedStyle: double_quotes
Style/SymbolArray:
EnforcedStyle: brackets
Enabled: false
Style/TrailingCommaInArrayLiteral:
EnforcedStyleForMultiline: consistent_comma
Style/TrailingCommaInHashLiteral:

View File

@@ -1,27 +1,24 @@
bundler_args: --without benchmark:development
bundler_args: --without benchmark:site:development
script: script/cibuild
cache: bundler
language: ruby
sudo: false
rvm:
- &ruby1 2.6.0
- &ruby2 2.4.5
- &jruby jruby-9.2.7.0
- &ruby1 2.5.1
- &ruby2 2.4.4
- &ruby3 2.3.7
- &ruby4 2.2.10
- &jruby jruby-9.1.16.0
matrix:
include:
- rvm: *ruby1
env: TEST_SUITE=fmt
name: "🤖️ Code Format"
- rvm: *ruby1
env: TEST_SUITE=default-site
name: "🏠️ Default Site"
- rvm: *ruby1
env: TEST_SUITE=profile-docs
name: "Profile Docs"
- rvm: *ruby1
env: TEST_SUITE=memprof
name: "Profile Memory Allocation"
env: ROUGE_VERSION=1.11.1 # runs everything with this version
exclude:
- rvm: *jruby
env: TEST_SUITE=cucumber
@@ -34,18 +31,9 @@ branches:
only:
- master
- themes
- /.*-stable/
before_script:
- curl -L https://codeclimate.com/downloads/test-reporter/test-reporter-latest-linux-amd64 > ./cc-test-reporter
- chmod +x ./cc-test-reporter
- ./cc-test-reporter before-build
after_script:
- ./cc-test-reporter after-build --exit-code $TRAVIS_TEST_RESULT
- /*-stable/
notifications:
email: false
slack:
secure: "\
dNdKk6nahNURIUbO3ULhA09/vTEQjK0fNbgjVjeYPEvROHgQBP1cIP3AJy8aWs8rl5Yyow4Y\
@@ -53,6 +41,18 @@ notifications:
O1AanCUbJSEyJTju347xCBGzESU=\
"
addons:
code_climate:
repo_token:
secure: "\
mAuvDu+nrzB8dOaLqsublDGt423mGRyZYM3vsrXh4Tf1sT+L1PxsRzU4gLmcV27HtX2Oq9\
DA4vsRURfABU0fIhwYkQuZqEcA3d8TL36BZcGEshG6MQ2AmnYsmFiTcxqV5bmlElHEqQuT\
5SUFXLafgZPBnL0qDwujQcHukID41sE=\
"
# regular test configuration
after_success:
- bundle exec codeclimate-test-reporter
before_install:
- gem update --system --no-document
- gem install bundler --no-document
- gem update --system
- gem install bundler

View File

@@ -1,41 +1,24 @@
# Code of Conduct
## Our Pledge
As contributors and maintainers of this project, and in the interest of
fostering an open and welcoming community, we pledge to respect all people who
contribute through reporting issues, posting feature requests, updating
documentation, submitting pull requests or patches, and other activities.
In the interest of fostering an open and welcoming environment, we as
contributors and maintainers pledge to making participation in our project and
our community a harassment-free experience for everyone, regardless of age, body
size, disability, ethnicity, sex characteristics, gender identity and expression,
level of experience, education, socio-economic status, nationality, personal
appearance, race, religion, or sexual identity and orientation.
## Our Standards
Examples of behavior that contributes to creating a positive environment
include:
* Using welcoming and inclusive language
* Being respectful of differing viewpoints and experiences
* Gracefully accepting constructive criticism
* Focusing on what is best for the community
* Showing empathy towards other community members
We are committed to making participation in this project a harassment-free
experience for everyone, regardless of level of experience, gender, gender
identity and expression, sexual orientation, disability, personal appearance,
body size, race, ethnicity, age, religion, or nationality.
Examples of unacceptable behavior by participants include:
* The use of sexualized language or imagery and unwelcome sexual attention or
advances
* Trolling, insulting/derogatory comments, and personal or political attacks
* The use of sexualized language or imagery
* Personal attacks
* Trolling or insulting/derogatory comments
* Public or private harassment
* Publishing others' private information, such as a physical or electronic
address, without explicit permission
* Other conduct which could reasonably be considered inappropriate in a
professional setting
## Our Responsibilities
Project maintainers are responsible for clarifying the standards of acceptable
behavior and are expected to take appropriate and fair corrective action in
response to any instances of unacceptable behavior.
* Publishing other's private information, such as physical or electronic
addresses, without explicit permission
* Other unethical or unprofessional conduct
Project maintainers have the right and responsibility to remove, edit, or
reject comments, commits, code, wiki edits, issues, and other contributions
@@ -43,34 +26,24 @@ that are not aligned to this Code of Conduct, or to ban temporarily or
permanently any contributor for other behaviors that they deem inappropriate,
threatening, offensive, or harmful.
## Scope
By adopting this Code of Conduct, project maintainers commit themselves to
fairly and consistently applying these principles to every aspect of managing
this project. Project maintainers who do not follow or enforce the Code of
Conduct may be permanently removed from the project team.
This Code of Conduct applies both within project spaces and in public spaces
when an individual is representing the project or its community. Examples of
representing a project or community include using an official project e-mail
address, posting via an official social media account, or acting as an appointed
representative at an online or offline event. Representation of a project may be
further defined and clarified by project maintainers.
## Enforcement
when an individual is representing the project or its community.
Instances of abusive, harassing, or otherwise unacceptable behavior may be
reported by contacting the project team at [olivia@jekyllrb.com](mailto:olivia@jekyllrb.com). All
complaints will be reviewed and investigated and will result in a response that
is deemed necessary and appropriate to the circumstances. The project team is
obligated to maintain confidentiality with regard to the reporter of an incident.
Further details of specific enforcement policies may be posted separately.
reported by opening an issue or contacting a project maintainer. All complaints
will be reviewed and investigated and will result in a response that is deemed
necessary and appropriate to the circumstances. Maintainers are obligated to
maintain confidentiality with regard to the reporter of an incident.
Project maintainers who do not follow or enforce the Code of Conduct in good
faith may face temporary or permanent repercussions as determined by other
members of the project's leadership.
## Attribution
This Code of Conduct is adapted from the [Contributor Covenant][homepage],
version 1.3.0, available at
[http://contributor-covenant.org/version/1/3/0/][version]
This Code of Conduct is adapted from the [Contributor Covenant][homepage], version 1.4,
available at [https://www.contributor-covenant.org/version/1/4/code-of-conduct.html](https://www.contributor-covenant.org/version/1/4/code-of-conduct.html)
[homepage]: https://www.contributor-covenant.org
For answers to common questions about this code of conduct, see
[https://www.contributor-covenant.org/faq](https://www.contributor-covenant.org/faq)
[homepage]: http://contributor-covenant.org
[version]: http://contributor-covenant.org/version/1/3/0/

55
Gemfile
View File

@@ -3,36 +3,37 @@
source "https://rubygems.org"
gemspec :name => "jekyll"
# Temporarily lock JRuby builds on Travis CI to i18n-1.2.x until JRuby is able to handle
# refinements introduced in i18n-1.3.0
gem "i18n", "~> 1.2.0" if RUBY_ENGINE == "jruby"
gem "rake", "~> 12.0"
gem "rouge", ENV["ROUGE"] if ENV["ROUGE"]
# Dependency of jekyll-mentions. RubyGems in Ruby 2.1 doesn't shield us from this.
gem "activesupport", "~> 4.2", :groups => [:test_legacy, :site] if RUBY_VERSION < "2.2.2"
group :development do
gem "launchy", "~> 2.3"
gem "pry"
gem "pry-byebug" unless RUBY_ENGINE == "jruby"
unless RUBY_ENGINE == "jruby"
gem "pry-byebug"
end
end
#
group :test do
gem "cucumber", "~> 3.0"
gem "codeclimate-test-reporter", "~> 1.0.5"
gem "cucumber", RUBY_VERSION >= "2.2" ? "~> 3.0" : "3.0.1"
gem "httpclient"
gem "jekyll_test_plugin"
gem "jekyll_test_plugin_malicious"
gem "memory_profiler"
gem "nokogiri", "~> 1.7"
# nokogiri v1.8 does not work with ruby 2.1 and below
gem "nokogiri", RUBY_VERSION >= "2.2" ? "~> 1.7" : "~> 1.7.0"
gem "rspec"
gem "rspec-mocks"
gem "rubocop", "~> 0.72.0"
gem "rubocop-performance"
gem "rubocop", "~> 0.56.0"
gem "test-dependency-theme", :path => File.expand_path("test/fixtures/test-dependency-theme", __dir__)
gem "test-theme", :path => File.expand_path("test/fixtures/test-theme", __dir__)
gem "test-theme-skinny", :path => File.expand_path("test/fixtures/test-theme-skinny", __dir__)
gem "test-theme-symlink", :path => File.expand_path("test/fixtures/test-theme-symlink", __dir__)
gem "jruby-openssl" if RUBY_ENGINE == "jruby"
end
@@ -40,7 +41,9 @@ end
#
group :test_legacy do
gem "test-unit" if RUBY_PLATFORM =~ %r!cygwin!
if RUBY_PLATFORM =~ %r!cygwin! || RUBY_VERSION.start_with?("2.2")
gem "test-unit"
end
gem "minitest"
gem "minitest-profile"
@@ -63,35 +66,37 @@ end
#
group :jekyll_optional_dependencies do
gem "coderay", "~> 1.1.0"
gem "jekyll-coffeescript"
gem "jekyll-docs", :path => "../docs" if Dir.exist?("../docs") && ENV["JEKYLL_VERSION"]
gem "jekyll-feed", "~> 0.9"
gem "jekyll-gist"
gem "jekyll-paginate"
gem "jekyll-redirect-from"
gem "kramdown-syntax-coderay"
gem "kramdown", "~> 1.14"
gem "mime-types", "~> 3.0"
gem "rdoc", "~> 6.0"
gem "rdoc", RUBY_VERSION >= "2.2.2" ? "~> 6.0" : "~> 5.1"
gem "tomlrb", "~> 1.2"
platform :ruby, :mswin, :mingw, :x64_mingw do
gem "classifier-reborn", "~> 2.2"
gem "liquid-c", "~> 4.0"
gem "yajl-ruby", "~> 1.4"
gem "classifier-reborn", "~> 2.2.0"
gem "liquid-c", "~> 3.0"
gem "pygments.rb", "~> 1.0"
gem "rdiscount", "~> 2.0"
gem "redcarpet", "~> 3.2", ">= 3.2.3"
gem "yajl-ruby", "~> 1.3.1"
end
# Windows and JRuby does not include zoneinfo files, so bundle the tzinfo-data gem
# and associated library
install_if -> { RUBY_PLATFORM =~ %r!mingw|mswin|java! } do
gem "tzinfo", "~> 1.2"
gem "tzinfo-data"
end
# Windows does not include zoneinfo files, so bundle the tzinfo-data gem
gem "tzinfo-data", :platforms => [:mingw, :mswin, :x64_mingw, :jruby]
end
#
group :site do
gem "html-proofer", "~> 3.4" if ENV["PROOF"]
if ENV["PROOF"]
gem "html-proofer", "~> 3.4"
end
gem "jekyll-avatar"
gem "jekyll-mentions"

View File

@@ -1,343 +1,8 @@
## HEAD
### Major Enhancements
* Drop ruby 2.3 (#7454)
* Drop support for Ruby 2.1 and 2.2 (#6560)
* Drop support for older versions of Rouge (#6978)
* Drop support for pygments as syntax-highlighter (#7118)
* Drop support for Redcarpet (#6987)
* Drop support for rdiscount (#6988)
* Drop support for `jekyll-watch-1.4.0` and older (#7287)
* Incorporate `relative_url` filter in `link` tag (#6727)
* Upgrade kramdown dependency to v2.x (#7492)
* Upgrade i18n to v1.x (#6931)
* Add `Jekyll::Cache` class to handle caching on disk (#7169)
* Cache converted markdown (#7159)
* Cache: Do not dump undumpable objects (#7190)
* Cache matched defaults sets for given parameters (#6888)
* Ignore cache directory (#7184)
* Add `Site#in_cache_dir` helper method (#7160)
* Remove &#39;cache_dir&#39; during `jekyll clean` (#7158)
* Cache parsed Liquid templates in memory (#7136)
* Only read layouts from source_dir or theme_dir (#6788)
* Allow custom sorting of collection documents (#7427)
* Always exclude certain paths from being processed (#7188)
* Remove Jekyll::Utils#strip_heredoc in favor of a Ruby &gt; 2.3 built in (#7584)
* Incorporate `relative_url` within `post_url` tag (#7589)
* Remove patch to modify config for kramdown (#7699)
### Bug Fixes
* Security: fix `include` bypass of `EntryFilter#filter` symlink check (#7226)
* Theme gems: ensure directories aren&#39;t symlinks (#7419)
* Add call to unused method `validate_options` in `commands/serve.rb` (#7122)
* Check if scope applies to type before given path (#7263)
* Document two methods, simplify one of the methods (#7270)
* Check key in collections only if it isn&#39;t &#34;posts&#34; (#7277)
* Interpolate Jekyll::Page subclass on inspection (#7203)
* Measure the no. of times a template gets rendered (#7316)
* Reduce array traversal in Jekyll::Reader (#7157)
* Re-implement handling Liquid blocks in excerpts (#7250)
* Documents should be able to render their date (#7404)
* Fix Interpreter warning from Jekyll::Renderer (#7448)
* Loggers should accept both numbers and symbols (#6967)
* Replace regex arg to :gsub with a string arg (#7189)
* Dont write static files from unrendered collection (#7410)
* Excerpt handling of custom and intermediate tags (#7382)
* Change future post loglevel to warn to help user narrow down issues (#7527)
* Handle files with trailing dots in their basename (#7315)
* Fix unnecessary allocations via StaticFileReader (#7572)
* Don&#39;t check if site URL is absolute if it is nil (#7498)
* Avoid unnecessary duplication of pages array (#7272)
* Memoize Site#post_attr_hash (#7276)
* Memoize Document#excerpt_separator (#7569)
* Optimize Document::DATE_FILENAME_MATCHER to match valid filenames (#7292)
* Escape valid special chars in a site&#39;s path name (#7568)
* Replace `name` in Page#inspect with relative_path (#7434)
* Log a warning when the slug is empty (#7357)
* Push Markdown link refs to excerpt only as required (#7577)
* Fix broken include_relative usage in excerpt (#7633)
* Initialize and reset glob_cache only as necessary (#7658)
* Revert memoizing Site#docs_to_write and #documents (#7684)
* Backport #7684 for v3.8.x: Revert memoizing Site#docs_to_write and refactor #documents (#7689)
* Backport #7213 and #7633 for v3.8.x: Fix broken include_relative usage in excerpt (#7690)
* Don&#39;t read symlinks in site.include in safe mode (#7711)
* Replace `String#=~` with `String#match?` (#7723)
* Update log output for an invalid theme directory (#7679)
### Minor Enhancements
* Enhance `--blank` scaffolding (#7310)
* Fix custom 404 page for GitHub pages (#7132)
* Load config file from within current theme-gem (#7304)
* Use `jekyll-compose` if installed (#6932)
* Suggest re-running command with `--trace` on fail (#6551)
* Support for binary operators in where_exp filter (#6998)
* Automatically load `_config.toml` (#7299)
* Add vendor folder to a newly installed site&#39;s .gitignore (#6968)
* Output Jekyll Version while debugging (#7173)
* Memoize computing excerpt&#39;s relative_path (#6951)
* Skip processing posts that can not be read (#7302)
* Memoize the return value of Site#documents (#7273)
* Cache globbed paths in front matter defaults (#7345)
* Cache computed item property (#7301)
* Cleanup Markdown converter (#7519)
* Disable Liquid via front matter (#6824)
* Do not process Liquid in post excerpt when disabled in front matter (#7146)
* Liquefied link tag (#6269)
* Update item_property to return numbers as numbers instead of strings (#6608)
* Use `.markdown` extension for page templates (#7126)
* Add support for `*.xhtml` files (#6854)
* Allow i18n v0.9.5 and higher (#7044)
* Ignore permission error of /proc/version (#7267)
* Strip extra slashes via `Jekyll.sanitized_path` (#7182)
* Site template: remove default config for markdown (#7285)
* Add a custom inspect string for StaticFile objects (#7422)
* Remind user to include gem in the Gemfile on error (#7476)
* Search Front matter defaults for Page objects with relative_path (#7261)
* Configure cache_dir (#7232)
* Lock use of `tzinfo` gem to v1.x (#7521, #7562)
* Utilize absolute paths of user-provided file paths (#7450)
* ISO week date drops (#5981)
* Detect `nil` and empty values in objects with `where` filter (#7580)
* Initialize mutations for Drops only if necessary (#7657)
* Reduce Array allocations via Jekyll::Cleaner (#7659)
* Encode and unencode urls only as required (#7654)
* Reduce string allocations with better alternatives (#7643)
* Reduce allocations from Jekyll::Document instances (#7625)
* Add `type` attribute to Document instances (#7406)
* Reduce allocations from where-filter (#7653)
* Memoize SiteDrop#documents to reduce allocations (#7697)
* Add PathManager class to cache interim paths (#7732)
### Development Fixes
* Use communicative method parameters (#7566)
* Scan `assert_equal` methods and rectify any offenses with a custom RuboCop cop (#7130)
* Add a script to profile docs with CI (#7540)
* Test with Ruby 2.6 on AppVeyor (#7518)
* Update gemspec (#7425)
* Upgrade liquid-c to v4.0 (#7375)
* Bump RuboCop to v0.63.x (#7489)
* Bump RuboCop to v0.62.x (#7449)
* Bump RuboCop to v0.61.x (#7401)
* Bump RuboCop to v0.60.x (#7338)
* Bump RuboCop to v0.59.0 (#7237)
* Bump RuboCop to v0.57.x (#7078)
* Relax version constraint on classifier-reborn gem (#7471)
* Test with Ruby v2.6 (#7438)
* Create symlink only if target is accessible (#7429)
* Test with oldest and latest Ruby only (#7412)
* Switch to `:install_if` for wdm gem (#7372)
* Update excludes for CodeClimate Analyses (#7365)
* CI(Appveyor): shallow clone with 5 last commits (#7312)
* update yajl-ruby (#7278)
* Add cucumber feature to test include_relative tag (#7213)
* Small benchmark refactoring (#7211)
* Lock Travis to Bundler-1.16.2 (#7144)
* Fix incorrectly passed arguments to assert_equal (#7134)
* fix up refute_equal call (#7133)
* Fix RuboCop offences in test files (#7128)
* Use assert_include (#7093)
* Remember to release docs gem (#7066)
* Update RuboCop&#39;s config (#7050)
* Useless privates removed (#6768)
* Load Rouge for TestKramdown (#7007)
* yajl-ruby update to v1.4.0 (#6976)
* Update instructions for releasing docs Gem (#6975)
* We are not using Ruby 2.2 anymore (#6977)
* Remove unnecessary Jekyll::Page constant (#6770)
* Remove unused error class (#6511)
* Add a Cucumber feature for post_url tag (#7586)
* Bump tested version of JRuby to 9.2.7.0 (#7612)
* Generate a &#34;TOTAL&#34; row for build-profile table (#7614)
* Target Ruby 2.4 syntax in RuboCop scans (#7583)
* Bump RuboCop to v0.68.x (#7637)
* Refactor Jekyll::Cache (#7532)
* Store list of expected extnames in a constant (#7638)
* Bump RuboCop to v0.69.x (#7656)
* Profile allocations from a build session (#7646)
* Update small typo in contributing.md (#7671)
* Bump RuboCop to v0.70.x (#7678)
* Remove override to Jekyll::Document#respond_to? (#7695)
* Do not install docs on updating gems on Travis (#7706)
* Update TestTags in sync with Rouge v3.4 (#7709)
* Bump RuboCop to v0.71.0 (#7687)
* Use regexp to filter special entries (#7702)
* Reduce Array objects generated from utility method (#7749)
* Update mime.types (#7756)
* Replace redundant Array#map with Array#each (#7761)
### Documentation
* Add Installation Instructions for Ubuntu (#6925)
* add liquid tag jekyll-flickr (#6946)
* Updated copy - fixed casing of SaaS on resources page. (#6949)
* Do not advise users to install Jekyll outside of Bundler (#6927)
* Don&#39;t prompt for sudo when installing with Ubuntu WSL (#6781)
* Fix typo (#6969)
* Add version number for group_by_exp doc (#6956)
* Update Windows install docs (#6926)
* Remove documentation for using Redcarpet (#6990)
* Updated nginx configuration for custom-404-page documentation (#6994)
* List all static files variables (#7002)
* Document that _drafts need to be contained within the custom collection directory (#6985)
* Change for passive voice. (#7005)
* Added the CAT plugin to the plugin list (#7011)
* Updated to supported version (#7031)
* Clarify definition of &#39;draft&#39; (#7037)
* Listed the jekyll-target-blank plugin in plugins list. (#7046)
* Typo (#7058)
* Add Hints for some Improved Travis Config in Doc (#7049)
* Added plugin json-get. (#7086)
* Update travis-ci.md to point out &#34;this is an example Gemfile&#34; (#7089)
* Adding `jekyll-info` plugin (#7091)
* GitHub enables you to use themes from other repos (#7112)
* Updates to CODE OF CONDUCT (v1.4.0) (#7105)
* Instructions to view themes files under Linux (#7095)
* Add jekyll-xml-source (#7114)
* Add the jekyll-firstimage filter plugin (#7127)
* Use a real theme in the example (#7125)
* Update docs about post creation (#7138)
* Add DEV Community&#39;s Jekyll tag to community page (#7139)
* Initialize upgrading doc for v4.0 (#7140)
* Add version badge for date filters with ordinal (#7162)
* Add closing tags for &lt;a&gt; (#7163)
* Add TSV to list of supported _data files. (#7168)
* Corrected sample usage of postfiles (#7181)
* Add missing html end tag for code example in section &#39;For loops&#39; (#7199)
* Resolve &#34;Unable to locate package ruby2.4&#34; error (#7196)
* Installation instructions for Fedora (#7198)
* New docs (#7205)
* List all standard liquid filters (#7333)
* Correct stylesheet url in tutorial step 7 (#7210)
* Add some minor improvements to image loading in Showcase page (#7214)
* Fix minor grammatical error (#7215)
* Add developer.spotify.com to the Jekyll Showcase (#7217)
* Removes quotes from markdown for assets (#7223)
* Clarified front matter requirement (#7234)
* Minor whitespace fixes (#7238)
* Explicit location of where to create blog.html (#7241)
* Fix a small grammar error/typo in the docs (#7260)
* Reference the build command options that allows multiple config files (#7266)
* Update 10-deployment.md (#7268)
* Add more issue template(s) and pull request template (#7269)
* Suggest sites use OpenSSL instead of GnuTLS for their site&#39;s CI (#7010)
* Fix broken Contributors link in README.markdown (#7200)
* Add title tag to item in RSS template (#7282)
* More inclusive writing (#7283)
* Document converter methods (#7289)
* Add link tag to item in RSS template (#7291)
* Add Isomer to showcase (#7300)
* Added missing semicolon (#7306)
* &#34;This restricts you...&#34; to &#34;This restricts your&#34; (#7307)
* Add a link to Giraffe Academy&#39;s tutorial (#7325)
* Grammar correction (#7327)
* Document Jekyll Filters with YAML data (#7335)
* Remove redundant instruction comment (#7342)
* Minimize rendering count (#7343)
* Update posts.md (#7360)
* Add info how to deploy using pre-push git hook (#7179)
* Textile is only supported through a converter plugin (#7003)
* Add documentation for custom tag blocks (#7359)
* Added 99inbound&#39;s Jekyll post to form resources (#7348)
* Document page.dir and page.name (#7373)
* Remove installation instructions with Homebrew (#7381)
* Fix dead link and misleading prose (#7383)
* Fix content management section (#7385)
* Proposed re-wording of Sass note. :) (#7392)
* Apply ruby official guide documents (#7393)
* Fix group_by_exp filter example (#7394)
* Adjust team page listings (#7395)
* Update resources.md (#7396)
* Update resources.md (#7397)
* Remove alt attribute from a tags (#7407)
* Fix grammatical error in permalinks.md (#7409)
* Fix BASH code-block in ubuntu.md (#7420)
* zlib is missing (#7428)
* Include docs for `{{ page.collection }}` (#7430)
* Permalink docs typo fixes (#7459)
* Fixed unnecessary aticles and pronouns (#7466)
* Grammatical correction (#7464)
* Update resources.md (#7472)
* Store SSL key and cert in site source (#7473)
* Minor doc fixes (#7495)
* Changed order of steps (#7503)
* Hosting with AWS Amplify (#7510)
* Fix typo in tutorial for converting existing site (#7524)
* Add CloudSh to resource page. (#7497)
* Check if var exists before include tag (#7530)
* Added formX to form-backend resources (#7536)
* Clarify docs on collections regarding the need for front matter (#7538)
* Fix incorrect Windows path in themes.md (#7525)
* Document where Jekyll looks for layouts in a site (#7564)
* Mention CommonMark plugins (#7418)
* Addresses bundle not found. (#7351)
* Example of CircleCI deployment through CircleCI v2 (#7024)
* v4.0 development post (#6934)
* Release post for v3.8.0 (#6849)
* Release Post for v3.6.3, v3.7.4 and v3.8.4 (#7259)
* Adds Statictastic to the list of resources (#7593)
* Update 07-assets.md (#7599)
* Fix link space (#7600)
* Added Formspark to form resources (#7601)
* Simplify couple of includes in the docs site (#7607)
* Avoid generating empty classnames (#7610)
* Install Docs that Work on MacOS 10.14 (#7561)
* Update the contribution docs for draft pull requests (#7619)
* Doc: Data file section adds TSV (#7640)
* Indicate where the _sass folder is by default (#7644)
* Docs: add version tags to new placeholders (#5981) for permalinks (#7647)
* Solve &#34;GitHub Page build failure&#34; in 10-deployment.md (#7648)
* Fix typo from &#39;Github&#39; to &#39;GitHub&#39; (#7691)
* fix link to Site Source config (#7708)
* Add Jekpack to resources page (#7598)
* Introduce frontmatter in step 2 (#7704)
* Add recursive navigation tutorial (#7720)
* Fix misspelling of &#34;additional&#34; (#7764)
* docs: improve how to include rouge stylesheets (#7752)
### Site Enhancements
* Add @ashmaroli to Core Team listing (#7398)
* Lnk to Tidelift in site&#39;s footer (#7377)
* Link to OpenCollective backing (#7378
* Link to sponsor listing in README (#7405)
* Better Performance (#7388)
* Simplify assigning classname to docs&#39; aside-links (#7609)
### release
* Release v4.0.0.pre.alpha1 (#7574)
## 3.8.6 / 2019-07-02
### Bug Fixes
* Update log output for an invalid theme directory (#7734)
* Memoize `SiteDrop#documents` to reduce allocations (#7722)
* Excerpt handling of custom and intermediate tags (#7467)
* Escape valid special chars in a site's path name (#7573)
* Revert memoizing `Site#docs_to_write` and refactor `#documents` (#7689)
* Fix broken `include_relative` usage in excerpt (#7690)
* Install platform-specific gems as required (3c06609406)
### Security Fixes
* Theme gems: ensure directories aren't symlinks (#7424)
## 3.8.5 / 2018-11-04
### Bug Fixes
* Re-implement handling Liquid blocks in excerpts (#7250)
## 3.8.4 / 2018-09-18
### Bug Fixes
* 3.8.x: security: fix `include` bypass of `EntryFilter#filter` symlink check (#7228)
* security: fix `include` bypass of `EntryFilter#filter` symlink check (#7228)
## 3.8.3 / 2018-06-05
@@ -382,10 +47,10 @@
* Minimize array allocations in the `where` filter (#6860)
* Bump JRuby (#6878)
* Assert existence of &lt;collection&gt;.files (#6907)
* Bump RuboCop to 0.54.x (#6915)
* Bump Rubocop to 0.54.x (#6915)
* Regenerate unconditionally unless its an incremental build (#6917)
* Centralize require statements (#6910)
* Bump to RuboCop 0.55 (#6929)
* Bump to Rubocop 0.55 (#6929)
* Refactor private method `HighlightBlock#parse_options` (#6822)
### Minor Enhancements
@@ -456,12 +121,6 @@
* Handle liquid tags in excerpts robustly (#6891)
* Allow front matter defaults to be applied properly to documents gathered under custom `collections_dir` (#6885)
## 3.7.4 / 2018-09-07
### Bug Fixes
* Security: fix `include` bypass of EntryFilter#filter symlink check (#7224)
## 3.7.3 / 2018-02-25
### Bug Fixes
@@ -628,12 +287,6 @@
* Improve docs styling for code to be run in shell (#6641)
* Fix permalink icon markup in news-item layout (#6639)
## 3.6.3 / 2018-09-18
### Bug Fixes
* 3.6.x: security: fix `include` bypass of `EntryFilter#filter` symlink check (#7229)
## 3.6.2 / 2017-10-21
### Development Fixes
@@ -706,7 +359,7 @@
* add SUPPORT file for GitHub (#6324)
* Rename CODE_OF_CONDUCT to show in banner (#6325)
* Docs : illustrate page.id for a collection&#39;s document (#6329)
* Docs: post&#39;s date can be overriden in front matter (#6334)
* Docs: post&#39;s date can be overriden in YAML front matter (#6334)
* Docs: `site.url` behavior on development and production environments (#6270)
* Fix typo in site.url section of variables.md :-[ (#6337)
* Docs: updates (#6343)
@@ -1372,7 +1025,7 @@
* Fix typo on Chocolatey name in Windows documentation (#4686)
* Use the correct URL, Fixes #4698 (#4699)
* Add jekyll-paspagon plugin (#4700)
* Bold-italicize note in assets documentation about needing front matter (#4706)
* Bold-italicize note in assets documentation about needing yaml front matter (#4706)
* Highlight the `script/` calls in the Contributing documentation (#4712)
* Add Hawkins to the list of third-party plugins (#4755)
* Fix a typo in pagination doc (#4763)
@@ -1540,7 +1193,7 @@
* Drop: fix hash setter precedence (#4312)
* utils: `has_yaml_header?` should accept files with extraneous spaces (#4290)
* Escape html from site.title and page.title in site template (#4307)
* Allow custom file extensions if defined in `permalink` front matter (#4314)
* Allow custom file extensions if defined in `permalink` YAML front matter (#4314)
* Fix deep_merge_hashes! handling of drops and hashes (#4359)
* Page should respect output extension of its permalink (#4373)
* Disable auto-regeneration when running server detached (#4376)
@@ -1743,7 +1396,7 @@
* Internal: trigger hooks by owner symbol (#3871)
* Update MIME types from mime-db (#3933)
* Add header to site template `_config.yml` for clarity & direction (#3997)
* Site template: add timezone offset to post date front matter (#4001)
* Site template: add timezone offset to post date frontmatter (#4001)
* Make a constant for the regex to find hidden files (#4032)
* Site template: refactor github & twitter icons into includes (#4049)
* Site template: add background to Kramdown Rouge-ified backtick code blocks (#4053)
@@ -1760,7 +1413,7 @@
* Fix nav items alignment when on multiple rows (#3264)
* Highlight: Only Strip Newlines/Carriage Returns, not Spaces (#3278)
* Find variables in front matter defaults by searching with relative file path. (#2774)
* Allow variables (e.g `:categories`) in front matter permalinks (#3320)
* Allow variables (e.g `:categories`) in YAML front matter permalinks (#3320)
* Handle nil URL placeholders in permalinks (#3325)
* Template: Fix nav items alignment when in "burger" mode (#3329)
* Template: Remove `!important` from nav SCSS introduced in #3329 (#3375)
@@ -1777,7 +1430,7 @@
* Add WOFF2 font MIME type to Jekyll server MIME types (#3647)
* Be smarter about extracting the extname in `StaticFile` (#3632)
* Process metadata for all dependencies (#3608)
* Show error message if the front matter on a page/post is invalid. (#3643)
* Show error message if the YAML front matter on a page/post is invalid. (#3643)
* Upgrade redcarpet to 3.2 (Security fix: OSVDB-120415) (#3652)
* Create #mock_expects that goes directly to RSpec Mocks. (#3658)
* Open `.jekyll-metadata` in binary mode to read binary Marshal data (#3713)
@@ -1855,7 +1508,7 @@
* Add a Resources link to tutorial on building dynamic navbars (#3185)
* Semantic structure improvements to the post and page layouts (#3251)
* Add new AsciiDoc plugin to list of third-party plugins. (#3277)
* Specify that all transformable collection documents must contain front matter (#3271)
* Specify that all transformable collection documents must contain YAML front matter (#3271)
* Assorted accessibility fixes (#3256)
* Update configuration docs to mention `keep_files` for `destination` (#3288, #3296)
* Break when we successfully generate nav link to save CPU cycles. (#3291)
@@ -1883,7 +1536,7 @@
* Add a link on all the docs pages to "Improve this page". (#3510)
* Add jekyll-auto-image generator to the list of third-party plugins (#3489)
* Replace link to the proposed `picture` element spec (#3530)
* Add front matter date formatting information (#3469)
* Add frontmatter date formatting information (#3469)
* Improve consistency and clarity of plugins options note (#3546)
* Add permalink warning to pagination docs (#3551)
* Fix grammar in Collections docs API stability warning (#3560)
@@ -2392,7 +2045,7 @@
* Clean up the `<head>` in the site template (#2186)
* Permit YAML blocks to end with three dots to better conform with the YAML spec (#2110)
* Use `File.exist?` instead of deprecated `File.exists?` (#2214)
* Require newline after start of front matter header (#2211)
* Require newline after start of YAML Front Matter header (#2211)
* Add the ability for pages to be marked as `published: false` (#1492)
* Add `Jekyll::LiquidExtensions` with `.lookup_variable` method for easy looking up of variable values in a Liquid context. (#2253)
* Remove literal lang name from class (#2292)
@@ -3070,7 +2723,7 @@
* Bullet-proof `limit_posts` option (#1004)
* Read in YAML as UTF-8 to accept non-ASCII chars (#836)
* Fix the CLI option `--plugins` to actually accept dirs and files (#993)
* Allow 'excerpt' in front matter to override the extracted excerpt (#946)
* Allow 'excerpt' in YAML front matter to override the extracted excerpt (#946)
* Fix cascade problem with site.baseurl, site.port and site.host. (#935)
* Filter out directories with valid post names (#875)
* Fix symlinked static files not being correctly built in unsafe mode (#909)
@@ -3082,7 +2735,7 @@
* Patch for multibyte URI problem with `jekyll serve` (#723)
* Order plugin execution by priority (#864)
* Fixed Page#dir and Page#url for edge cases (#536)
* Fix broken `post_url` with posts with a time in their front matter (#831)
* Fix broken `post_url` with posts with a time in their YAML front matter (#831)
* Look for plugins under the source directory (#654)
* Tumblr Migrator: finds `_posts` dir correctly, fixes truncation of long post names (#775)
* Force Categories to be Strings (#767)
@@ -3273,7 +2926,7 @@
* Bug Fixes
* Require redcloth >= 4.2.1 in tests (#92)
* Don't break on triple dashes in front matter (#93)
* Don't break on triple dashes in yaml front matter (#93)
### Minor Enhancements
@@ -3305,7 +2958,7 @@
* Added --paginate option to the executable along with a paginator object for the payload (@calavera)
* Upgraded RedCloth to 4.2.1, which makes `<notextile>` tags work once again.
* Configuration options set in config.yml are now available through the site payload (@vilcans)
* Posts can now have an empty front matter or none at all (@ bahuvrihi)
* Posts can now have an empty YAML front matter or none at all (@ bahuvrihi)
* Bug Fixes
* Fixing Ruby 1.9 issue that requires `#to_s` on the err object (@Chrononaut)
* Fixes for pagination and ordering posts on the same day (@ujh)
@@ -3313,7 +2966,7 @@
* Index.html file should always have index.html permalink (@eugenebolshakov)
* Added trailing slash to pretty permalink style so Apache is happy (@eugenebolshakov)
* Bad markdown processor in config fails sooner and with better message (@ gcnovus)
* Allow CRLFs in front matter (@juretta)
* Allow CRLFs in yaml front matter (@juretta)
* Added Date#xmlschema for Ruby versions < 1.9
## 0.5.1 / 2009-05-06
@@ -3392,7 +3045,7 @@
* Added post categories based on directories containing `_posts` (@mreid)
* Added post topics based on directories underneath `_posts`
* Added new date filter that shows the full month name (@mreid)
* Merge Post's front matter into its to_liquid payload (@remi)
* Merge Post's YAML front matter into its to_liquid payload (@remi)
* Restrict includes to regular files underneath `_includes`
* Bug Fixes
* Change YAML delimiter matcher so as to not chew up 2nd level markdown headers (@mreid)

View File

@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
The MIT License (MIT)
Copyright (c) 2008-present Tom Preston-Werner and Jekyll contributors
Copyright (c) 2008-2018 Tom Preston-Werner and Jekyll contributors
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal

View File

@@ -3,13 +3,13 @@
[![Gem Version](https://img.shields.io/gem/v/jekyll.svg)][ruby-gems]
[![Linux Build Status](https://img.shields.io/travis/jekyll/jekyll/master.svg?label=Linux%20build)][travis]
[![Windows Build status](https://img.shields.io/appveyor/ci/jekyll/jekyll/master.svg?label=Windows%20build)][appveyor]
[![Maintainability](https://api.codeclimate.com/v1/badges/8ba0cb5b17bb9848e128/maintainability)][codeclimate]
[![Test Coverage](https://api.codeclimate.com/v1/badges/8ba0cb5b17bb9848e128/test_coverage)][coverage]
[![Maintainability](https://api.codeclimate.com/v1/badges/8ba0cb5b17bb9848e128/maintainability)](codeclimate)
[![Test Coverage](https://api.codeclimate.com/v1/badges/8ba0cb5b17bb9848e128/test_coverage)](coverage)
[![Dependency Status](https://img.shields.io/gemnasium/jekyll/jekyll.svg)][gemnasium]
[![Security](https://hakiri.io/github/jekyll/jekyll/master.svg)][hakiri]
[![Backers on Open Collective](https://opencollective.com/jekyll/backers/badge.svg)](#backers)
[![Sponsors on Open Collective](https://opencollective.com/jekyll/sponsors/badge.svg)](#sponsors)
[ruby-gems]: https://rubygems.org/gems/jekyll
[gemnasium]: https://gemnasium.com/jekyll/jekyll
[codeclimate]: https://codeclimate.com/github/jekyll/jekyll
[coverage]: https://codeclimate.com/github/jekyll/jekyll/coverage
[hakiri]: https://hakiri.io/github/jekyll/jekyll/master
@@ -24,28 +24,18 @@ Jekyll does what you tell it to do — no more, no less. It doesn't try to outs
See: https://jekyllrb.com/philosophy
## Having trouble?
See: https://jekyllrb.com/docs/troubleshooting/
## Getting Started
* [Install](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/installation/) the gem
* Read up about its [Usage](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/usage/) and [Configuration](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/configuration/)
* Take a gander at some existing [Sites](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll/wiki/sites)
* Take a gander at some existing [Sites](https://wiki.github.com/jekyll/jekyll/sites)
* [Fork](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll/fork) and [Contribute](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/contributing/) your own modifications
* Have questions? Check out our official forum community [Jekyll Talk](https://talk.jekyllrb.com/) or [`#jekyll` on irc.freenode.net](https://botbot.me/freenode/jekyll/)
## Diving In
* [Migrate](http://import.jekyllrb.com/docs/home/) from your previous system
* Learn how [Front Matter](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/front-matter/) works
* Put information on your site with [Variables](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/variables/)
* Customize the [Permalinks](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/permalinks/) your posts are generated with
* Use the built-in [Liquid Extensions](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/templates/) to make your life easier
* Use custom [Plugins](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/plugins/) to generate content specific to your site
* Watch [video tutorials from Giraffe Academy](https://jekyllrb.com/tutorials/video-walkthroughs/)
## Need help?
If you don't find the answer to your problem in our [docs](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/), or in the [troubleshooting section](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/troubleshooting/), ask the [community](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/community/) for help.
## Code of Conduct
In order to have a more open and welcoming community, Jekyll adheres to a
@@ -55,35 +45,16 @@ conduct.
Please adhere to this code of conduct in any interactions you have in the
Jekyll community. It is strictly enforced on all official Jekyll
repositories, websites, and resources. If you encounter someone violating
these terms, please let one of our [core team members](https://jekyllrb.com/team/#core-team) know and we will address it as soon as possible.
these terms, please let one of our core team members [Olivia](mailto:olivia@jekyllrb.com?subject=Jekyll%20CoC%20Violation), [Pat](mailto:pat@jekyllrb.com?subject=Jekyll%20CoC%20Violation), [Matt](mailto:matt@jekyllrb.com?subject=Jekyll%20CoC%20Violation) or [Parker](mailto:parker@jekyllrb.com?subject=Jekyll%20CoC%20Violation) know and we will address it as soon as possible.
## Credits
## Diving In
### Sponsors
Support this project by becoming a sponsor. Your logo will show up in this README with a link to your website. [Become a sponsor!](https://opencollective.com/jekyll#sponsor)
<a href="https://opencollective.com/jekyll/sponsor/0/website" target="_blank"><img src="https://opencollective.com/jekyll/sponsor/0/avatar.svg" /></a>
<a href="https://opencollective.com/jekyll/sponsor/1/website" target="_blank"><img src="https://opencollective.com/jekyll/sponsor/1/avatar.svg" /></a>
<a href="https://opencollective.com/jekyll/sponsor/2/website" target="_blank"><img src="https://opencollective.com/jekyll/sponsor/2/avatar.svg" /></a>
<a href="https://opencollective.com/jekyll/sponsor/3/website" target="_blank"><img src="https://opencollective.com/jekyll/sponsor/3/avatar.svg" /></a>
<a href="https://opencollective.com/jekyll/sponsor/4/website" target="_blank"><img src="https://opencollective.com/jekyll/sponsor/4/avatar.svg" /></a>
<a href="https://opencollective.com/jekyll/sponsor/5/website" target="_blank"><img src="https://opencollective.com/jekyll/sponsor/5/avatar.svg" /></a>
<a href="https://opencollective.com/jekyll/sponsor/6/website" target="_blank"><img src="https://opencollective.com/jekyll/sponsor/6/avatar.svg" /></a>
<a href="https://opencollective.com/jekyll/sponsor/7/website" target="_blank"><img src="https://opencollective.com/jekyll/sponsor/7/avatar.svg" /></a>
<a href="https://opencollective.com/jekyll/sponsor/8/website" target="_blank"><img src="https://opencollective.com/jekyll/sponsor/8/avatar.svg" /></a>
<a href="https://opencollective.com/jekyll/sponsor/9/website" target="_blank"><img src="https://opencollective.com/jekyll/sponsor/9/avatar.svg" /></a>
### Contributors
This project exists thanks to all the people who contribute.
<a href="../../graphs/contributors"><img src="https://opencollective.com/jekyll/contributors.svg?width=890&button=false" /></a>
### Backers
Thank you to all our backers! 🙏 [Become a backer](https://opencollective.com/jekyll#backer)
<a href="https://opencollective.com/jekyll#backers" target="_blank"><img src="https://opencollective.com/jekyll/backers.svg?width=890" /></a>
* [Migrate](http://import.jekyllrb.com/docs/home/) from your previous system
* Learn how the [YAML Front Matter](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/frontmatter/) works
* Put information on your site with [Variables](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/variables/)
* Customize the [Permalinks](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/permalinks/) your posts are generated with
* Use the built-in [Liquid Extensions](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/templates/) to make your life easier
* Use custom [Plugins](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/plugins/) to generate content specific to your site
## License

View File

@@ -1,34 +1,35 @@
version: "{build}"
clone_depth: 5
clone_depth: 10
branches:
only:
- master
- themes
- /.*-stable/
build: off
install:
- SET PATH=C:\Ruby%RUBY_FOLDER_VER%\bin;%PATH%
- bundle install --retry 5 --jobs=%NUMBER_OF_PROCESSORS% --clean --path vendor\bundle
environment:
BUNDLE_WITHOUT: "benchmark:development"
BUNDLE_WITHOUT: "benchmark:site:development"
matrix:
- RUBY_FOLDER_VER: "25"
TEST_SUITE: "test"
- RUBY_FOLDER_VER: "25"
TEST_SUITE: "cucumber"
- RUBY_FOLDER_VER: "25"
TEST_SUITE: "default-site"
- RUBY_FOLDER_VER: "25-x64"
TEST_SUITE: "test"
- RUBY_FOLDER_VER: "24"
TEST_SUITE: "test"
- RUBY_FOLDER_VER: "26"
- RUBY_FOLDER_VER: "23"
TEST_SUITE: "test"
- RUBY_FOLDER_VER: "22"
TEST_SUITE: "test"
- RUBY_FOLDER_VER: "26"
TEST_SUITE: "default-site"
- RUBY_FOLDER_VER: "26"
TEST_SUITE: "profile-docs"
- RUBY_FOLDER_VER: "26"
TEST_SUITE: "memprof"
- RUBY_FOLDER_VER: "26"
TEST_SUITE: "cucumber"
install:
- SET PATH=C:\Ruby%RUBY_FOLDER_VER%-x64\bin;%PATH%
- bundle install --retry 5 --jobs=%NUMBER_OF_PROCESSORS% --clean --path vendor\bundle
test_script:
- ruby --version
@@ -37,5 +38,5 @@ test_script:
- bash ./script/cibuild
cache:
# If one of the files after the right arrow changes, cache will be invalidated
# If one of the files after the right arrow changes, cache will be skipped
- 'vendor\bundle -> appveyor.yml,Gemfile,jekyll.gemspec'

View File

@@ -90,21 +90,26 @@ end
Correctness.new(site_docs, "redirect_from".freeze).assert!
Correctness.new(site_docs, "title".freeze).assert!
def test_property(property, meta_key)
Benchmark.ips do |x|
x.config(time: 10, warmup: 5)
x.report("sort_by_property_directly with #{property} property") do
sort_by_property_directly(site_docs, meta_key)
end
x.report("schwartzian_transform with #{property} property") do
schwartzian_transform(site_docs, meta_key)
end
x.compare!
# First, test with a property only a handful of documents have.
Benchmark.ips do |x|
x.config(time: 10, warmup: 5)
x.report('sort_by_property_directly with sparse property') do
sort_by_property_directly(site_docs, "redirect_from".freeze)
end
x.report('schwartzian_transform with sparse property') do
schwartzian_transform(site_docs, "redirect_from".freeze)
end
x.compare!
end
# First, test with a property only a handful of documents have.
test_property('sparse', 'redirect_from')
# Next, test with a property they all have.
test_property('non-sparse', 'title')
Benchmark.ips do |x|
x.config(time: 10, warmup: 5)
x.report('sort_by_property_directly with non-sparse property') do
sort_by_property_directly(site_docs, "title".freeze)
end
x.report('schwartzian_transform with non-sparse property') do
schwartzian_transform(site_docs, "title".freeze)
end
x.compare!
end

2
docs/.gitignore vendored
View File

@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
_site/
.idea/
*.swp
pkg/
test/
.idea/

View File

@@ -1,6 +1,5 @@
---
version: 3.8.6
min_ruby_version: 2.4.0
version: 3.8.4
name: Jekyll • Simple, blog-aware, static sites
description: Transform your plain text into static websites and blogs
url: https://jekyllrb.com
@@ -11,7 +10,6 @@ twitter:
logo: "/img/logo-2x.png"
google_analytics_id: UA-50755011-1
google_site_verification: onQcXpAvtHBrUI5LlroHNE_FP0b2qvFyPq7VZw36iEY
collections:
docs:
permalink: "/:collection/:path/"
@@ -21,7 +19,6 @@ collections:
output: true
tutorials:
output: true
defaults:
- scope:
path: _docs
@@ -33,11 +30,7 @@ defaults:
type: posts
values:
layout: news_item
- scope:
path: ""
values:
image: "/img/jekyll-og.png"
image: "/img/twitter-card.png"
plugins:
- jekyll-avatar
- jekyll-feed
@@ -46,17 +39,10 @@ plugins:
- jekyll-seo-tag
- jekyll-sitemap
- jemoji
feed:
categories:
- release
sass:
style: compressed
exclude:
- .gitignore
- .jekyll-cache
- ".gitignore"
- CNAME
- icomoon-selection.json
- readme.md

53
docs/_data/docs.yml Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,53 @@
- title: Getting Started
docs:
- home
- quickstart
- installation
- windows
- usage
- structure
- configuration
- title: Your Content
docs:
- frontmatter
- posts
- drafts
- pages
- static-files
- variables
- collections
- datafiles
- assets
- migrations
- title: Customization
docs:
- templates
- includes
- permalinks
- pagination
- plugins
- themes
- extras
- title: Deployment
docs:
- github-pages
- deployment-methods
- continuous-integration
- title: Miscellaneous
docs:
- troubleshooting
- sites
- resources
- upgrading/0-to-2
- upgrading/2-to-3
- title: Meta
docs:
- contributing
- maintaining
- conduct
- history

View File

@@ -1,36 +0,0 @@
- title: Getting Started
docs:
- link: /docs/
- link: /docs/ruby-101/
- link: /docs/installation/
- link: /docs/community/
- link: /docs/step-by-step/01-setup/
- title: Build
docs:
- link: /docs/usage/
- link: /docs/configuration/
- title: Content
docs:
- link: /docs/pages/
- link: /docs/posts/
- link: /docs/front-matter/
- link: /docs/collections/
- link: /docs/datafiles/
- link: /docs/assets/
- link: /docs/static-files/
- title: Site Structure
docs:
- link: /docs/structure/
- link: /docs/liquid/
- link: /docs/variables/
- link: /docs/includes/
- link: /docs/layouts/
- link: /docs/permalinks/
- link: /docs/themes/
- link: /docs/pagination/
- title: Guides
docs:
- link: /docs/plugins/
- link: /docs/migrations/
- link: /docs/upgrading/
- link: /docs/deployment/

View File

@@ -1,298 +0,0 @@
#
# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# List of Liquid Filters provided by Jekyll Core that will be utilized for their
# documentation.
#
# To document a new filter, create a new "list-item" below with the following keys:
# name: : [REQUIRED] A string label that identifies the filter
# description: : [REQUIRED] A short description of what to expect from the filter
# version_badge: : [OPTIONAL] Jekyll version that introduced the filter
# examples: : [REQUIRED] A 'nested list' comprised of inputs and outputs
# input: : [REQUIRED] The filter syntax and usage
# output: : [OPTIONAL] The output from the filter
#
# Tip: Use YAML Block notations to "fold" a long string, or to "break" a long string
# to the following line. Block notations can also be used to avoid having to use
# backslashes to escape quotes.
# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
#
- name: Relative URL
description: >-
Prepend the <code>baseurl</code> value to the input. Useful if
your site is hosted at a subpath rather than the root of the domain.
examples:
- input: '{{ "/assets/style.css" | relative_url }}'
output: '/my-baseurl/assets/style.css'
#
- name: Absolute URL
description: Prepend the <code>url</code> and <code>baseurl</code> value to the input.
examples:
- input: '{{ "/assets/style.css" | absolute_url }}'
output: 'http://example.com/my-baseurl/assets/style.css'
#
- name: Date to XML Schema
description: Convert a Date into XML Schema (ISO 8601) format.
examples:
- input: '{{ site.time | date_to_xmlschema }}'
output: '2008-11-07T13:07:54-08:00'
#
- name: Date to RFC-822 Format
description: Convert a Date into the RFC-822 format used for RSS feeds.
examples:
- input: '{{ site.time | date_to_rfc822 }}'
output: 'Mon, 07 Nov 2008 13:07:54 -0800'
#
- name: Date to String
description: Convert a date to short format.
examples:
- input: '{{ site.time | date_to_string }}'
output: '07 Nov 2008'
#
- name: Date to String in ordinal US style
description: 'Format a date to ordinal, US, short format.'
version_badge: 3.8.0
examples:
- input: '{{ site.time | date_to_string: "ordinal", "US" }}'
output: 'Nov 7th, 2008'
#
- name: Date to Long String
description: Format a date to long format.
examples:
- input: '{{ site.time | date_to_long_string }}'
output: '07 November 2008'
#
- name: Date to Long String in ordinal UK style
description: 'Format a date to ordinal, UK, long format.'
version_badge: 3.8.0
examples:
- input: '{{ site.time | date_to_long_string: "ordinal" }}'
output: '7th November 2008'
#
- name: Where
description: Select all the objects in an array where the key has the given value.
examples:
- input: '{{ site.members | where:"graduation_year","2014" }}'
output:
#
- name: Where Expression
description: Select all the objects in an array where the expression is true.
version_badge: 3.2.0
examples:
- input: |-
{{ site.members | where_exp:"item",
"item.graduation_year == 2014" }}
output:
- input: |-
{{ site.members | where_exp:"item",
"item.graduation_year < 2014" }}
output:
- input: |-
{{ site.members | where_exp:"item",
"item.projects contains 'foo'" }}
output:
#
- name: Group By
description: Group an array's items by a given property.
examples:
- input: '{{ site.members | group_by:"graduation_year" }}'
output: |-
[{"name"=>"2013", "items"=>[...]},
{"name"=>"2014", "items"=>[...]}]
#
- name: Group By Expression
description: Group an array's items using a Liquid expression.
version_badge: 3.4.0
examples:
- input: |-
{{ site.members | group_by_exp: "item",
"item.graduation_year | truncate: 3, ''" }}
output: |-
[{"name"=>"201", "items"=>[...]},
{"name"=>"200", "items"=>[...]}]
#
- name: XML Escape
description: Escape some text for use in XML.
examples:
- input: '{{ page.content | xml_escape }}'
output:
#
- name: CGI Escape
description: >-
CGI escape a string for use in a URL. Replaces any special characters
with appropriate <code>%XX</code> replacements. CGI escape normally
replaces a space with a plus <code>+</code> sign.
examples:
- input: '{{ "foo, bar; baz?" | cgi_escape }}'
output: 'foo%2C+bar%3B+baz%3F'
#
- name: URI Escape
description: >-
Percent encodes any special characters in a URI.
URI escape normally replaces a space with <code>%20</code>.
<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Percent-encoding#Types_of_URI_characters">Reserved characters</a>
will not be escaped.
examples:
- input: '{{ "http://foo.com/?q=foo, \bar?" | uri_escape }}'
output: 'http://foo.com/?q=foo,%20%5Cbar?'
#
- name: Number of Words
description: Count the number of words in some text.
examples:
- input: '{{ page.content | number_of_words }}'
output: 1337
#
- name: Array to Sentence
description: >-
Convert an array into a sentence. Useful for listing tags.
Optional argument for connector.
examples:
- input: '{{ page.tags | array_to_sentence_string }}'
output: 'foo, bar, and baz'
- input: '{{ page.tags | array_to_sentence_string: "or" }}'
output: 'foo, bar, or baz'
#
- name: Markdownify
description: Convert a Markdown-formatted string into HTML.
examples:
- input: '{{ page.excerpt | markdownify }}'
output:
#
- name: Smartify
description: 'Convert "quotes" into &ldquo;smart quotes.&rdquo;'
examples:
- input: '{{ page.title | smartify }}'
output:
#
- name: Converting Sass/SCSS
description: Convert a Sass- or SCSS-formatted string into CSS.
examples:
- input: '{{ some_sass | sassify }}'
output:
- input: '{{ some_scss | scssify }}'
output:
#
- name: Slugify
description: Convert a string into a lowercase URL "slug". See below for options.
examples:
- input: '{{ "The _config.yml file" | slugify }}'
output: 'the-config-yml-file'
- input: '{{ "The _config.yml file" | slugify: "pretty" }}'
output: 'the-_config.yml-file'
- input: '{{ "The _cönfig.yml file" | slugify: "ascii" }}'
output: 'the-c-nfig-yml-file'
- input: '{{ "The cönfig.yml file" | slugify: "latin" }}'
output: 'the-config-yml-file'
#
- name: Data To JSON
description: Convert Hash or Array to JSON.
examples:
- input: '{{ site.data.projects | jsonify }}'
output:
#
- name: Normalize Whitespace
description: Replace any occurrence of whitespace with a single space.
examples:
- input: '{{ "a \n b" | normalize_whitespace }}'
output:
#
- name: Sort
description: >-
Sort an array. Optional arguments for hashes
1.&nbsp;property name
2.&nbsp;nils order (<em>first</em> or <em>last</em>).
examples:
- input: '{{ page.tags | sort }}'
output:
- input: '{{ site.posts | sort: "author" }}'
output:
- input: '{{ site.pages | sort: "title", "last" }}'
output:
#
- name: Sample
description: 'Pick a random value from an array. Optionally, pick multiple values.'
examples:
- input: '{{ site.pages | sample }}'
output:
- input: '{{ site.pages | sample: 2 }}'
output:
#
- name: To Integer
description: Convert a string or boolean to integer.
examples:
- input: '{{ some_var | to_integer }}'
output:
#
- name: Array Filters
description: >-
Push, pop, shift, and unshift elements from an Array.
These are <strong>NON-DESTRUCTIVE</strong>, i.e. they do not mutate the array,
but rather make a copy and mutate that.
examples:
- input: '{{ page.tags | push: "Spokane" }}'
output: '["Seattle", "Tacoma", "Spokane"]'
- input: '{{ page.tags | pop }}'
output: '["Seattle"]'
- input: '{{ page.tags | shift }}'
output: '["Tacoma"]'
- input: '{{ page.tags | unshift: "Olympia" }}'
output: '["Olympia", "Seattle", "Tacoma"]'
#
- name: Inspect
description: Convert an object into its String representation for debugging.
examples:
- input: '{{ some_var | inspect }}'
output:

View File

@@ -1,175 +0,0 @@
# Variables provided by Jekyll core
#
# name: : name of the variable
# description: : content returned by the varialble
global:
- name: site
description: >-
Site wide information + configuration settings from <code>_config.yml</code>.
See below for details.
- name: page
description: >-
Page specific information + the <a href="/docs/front-matter/">front matter</a>.
Custom variables set via the front matter will be available here. See below for details.
- name: layout
description: >-
Layout specific information + the <a href="/docs/front-matter/">front matter</a>.
Custom variables set via front matter in layouts will be available here.
- name: content
description: >-
In layout files, the rendered content of the Post or Page being wrapped.
Not defined in Post or Page files.
- name: paginator
description: >-
When the <code>paginate</code> configuration option is set, this variable becomes available
for use. See <a href="../pagination/">Pagination</a> for details.
site:
- name: site.time
description: >-
The current time (when you run the <code>jekyll</code> command).
- name: site.pages
description: >-
A list of all Pages.
- name: site.posts
description: >-
A reverse chronological list of all Posts.
- name: site.related_posts
description: >-
If the page being processed is a Post, this contains a list of up to ten related Posts.
By default, these are the ten most recent posts. For high quality but slow to compute
results, run the <code>jekyll</code> command with the <code>--lsi</code>
(<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latent_semantic_analysis#Latent_semantic_indexing">latent semantic indexing</a>)
option. Also note GitHub Pages does not support the
<code>lsi</code> option when generating sites.
- name: site.static_files
description: >-
A list of all <a href="/docs/static-files/">static files</a> (i.e.
files not processed by Jekyll's converters or the Liquid renderer).
Each file has five properties: <code>path</code>, <code>modified_time</code>,
<code>name</code>, <code>basename</code> and <code>extname</code>.
- name: site.html_pages
description: >-
A subset of `site.pages` listing those which end in `.html`.
- name: site.html_files
description: >-
A subset of `site.static_files` listing those which end in `.html`.
- name: site.collections
description: >-
A list of all the collections (including posts).
- name: site.data
description: >-
A list containing the data loaded from the YAML files located in the <code>_data</code>
directory.
- name: site.documents
description: >-
A list of all the documents in every collection.
- name: site.categories.CATEGORY
description: >-
The list of all Posts in category <code>CATEGORY</code>.
- name: site.tags.TAG
description: >-
The list of all Posts with tag <code>TAG</code>.
- name: site.url
description: >-
Contains the url of your site as it is configured in the <code>_config.yml</code>.
For example, if you have <code>url: http://mysite.com</code> in your configuration file,
then it will be accessible in Liquid as <code>site.url</code>. For the development
environment there is <a href="/news/#3-siteurl-is-set-by-the-development-server">an
exception</a>, if you are running <code>jekyll serve</code> in a development environment
<code>site.url</code> will be set to the value of <code>host</code>, <code>port</code>,
and SSL-related options. This defaults to <code>url: http://localhost:4000</code>.
- name: "site.[CONFIGURATION_DATA]"
description: >-
All the variables set via the command line and your <code>_config.yml</code> are available
through the <code>site</code> variable. For example, if you have <code>foo: bar</code> in
your configuration file, then it will be accessible in Liquid as <code>site.foo</code>.
Jekyll does not parse changes to <code>_config.yml</code> in
<code>watch</code> mode, you must restart Jekyll to see changes to variables.
page:
- name: page.content
description: >-
The content of the Page, rendered or un-rendered depending upon
what Liquid is being processed and what <code>page</code> is.
- name: page.title
description: >-
The title of the Page.
- name: page.excerpt
description: >-
The un-rendered excerpt of a document.
- name: page.url
description: >-
The URL of the Post without the domain, but with a leading slash, e.g.
<code>/2008/12/14/my-post.html</code>
- name: page.date
description: >-
The Date assigned to the Post. This can be overridden in a Posts front matter by specifying
a new date/time in the format <code>YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS</code> (assuming UTC), or
<code>YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS +/-TTTT</code> (to specify a time zone using an offset from UTC.
e.g. <code>2008-12-14 10:30:00 +0900</code>).
- name: page.id
description: >-
An identifier unique to a document in a Collection or a Post (useful in RSS feeds). e.g.
<code>/2008/12/14/my-post</code><code>/my-collection/my-document</code>
- name: page.categories
description: >-
The list of categories to which this post belongs. Categories are derived from the directory
structure above the <code>_posts</code> directory. For example, a post at
<code>/work/code/_posts/2008-12-24-closures.md</code> would have this field set to
<code>['work', 'code']</code>. These can also be specified in the
<a href="/docs/front-matter/">front matter</a>.
- name: page.collection
description: >-
The label of the collection to which this document belongs. e.g. <code>posts</code> for a post, or
<code>puppies</code> for a document at path <code>_puppies/rover.md</code>. If not part of a
collection, an empty string is returned.
- name: page.tags
description: >-
The list of tags to which this post belongs. These can be specified in the
<a href="/docs/front-matter/">front matter</a>.
- name: page.dir
description: >-
The path between the source directory and the file of the post or page, e.g.
<code>/pages/</code>.
This can be overridden by <code>permalink</code> in the <a href="/docs/front-matter/">front matter</a>.
- name: page.name
description: >-
The filename of the post or page, e.g. <code>about.md</code>
- name: page.path
description: >-
The path to the raw post or page. Example usage: Linking back to the page or posts source
on GitHub. This can be overridden in the <a href="/docs/front-matter/">front matter</a>.
- name: page.next
description: >-
The next post relative to the position of the current post in <code>site.posts</code>.
Returns <code>nil</code> for the last entry.
- name: page.previous
description: >-
The previous post relative to the position of the current post in <code>site.posts</code>.
Returns <code>nil</code> for the first entry.
paginator:
- name: paginator.page
description: The number of the current page
- name: paginator.per_page
description: Number of posts per page
- name: paginator.posts
description: Posts available for the current page
- name: paginator.total_posts
description: Total number of posts
- name: paginator.total_pages
description: Total number of pages
- name: paginator.previous_page
description: >-
The number of the previous page, or <code>nil</code> if no previous page exists
- name: paginator.previous_page_path
description: >-
The path to the previous page, or <code>nil</code> if no previous page exists
- name: paginator.next_page
description: >-
The number of the next page, or <code>nil</code> if no subsequent page exists
- name: paginator.next_page_path
description: >-
The path to the next page, or <code>nil</code> if no subsequent page exists

View File

@@ -53,7 +53,7 @@
year: 2016
- speaker: Amy Johnston
twitter_handle: AmyJohnstonXL
twitter_handle: amybeukenex
youtube_id: HR12JiUI2Zc
topic: Jekyll for Technical Documentation
year: 2016
@@ -83,7 +83,7 @@
year: 2016
- speaker: Julio Faerman
twitter_handle: juliodevrel
twitter_handle: jmfaerman
youtube_id: SOMonG8Iqak
topic: Jekyll on AWS
year: 2016
@@ -131,7 +131,7 @@
year: 2016
- speaker: Nils Borchers
twitter_handle: nilsbo
twitter_handle: nilsborchers
youtube_id: DtNMjuv6Rbo
topic: Building a living brand guide with Jekyll and Hologram
year: 2016

View File

@@ -1,15 +0,0 @@
- title: Home
link: /
show_on_mobile: true
- title: Docs
link: /docs/
show_on_mobile: true
- title: Resources
link: /resources/
show_on_mobile: true
- title: Showcase
link: /showcase/
show_on_mobile: false
- title: News
link: /news/
show_on_mobile: true

View File

@@ -1,241 +0,0 @@
- name: Tom Preston Werner Blog
url: http://tom.preston-werner.com/
categories:
- personal
- blog
- name: GitHub On Demand Training
url: https://services.github.com/on-demand/
categories:
- software
- knowledgebase
- name: Vesterheim Norwegian-American Museum
url: http://vesterheim.org/
categories:
- marketing-site
- name: KOTN
url: https://kotn.com/
categories:
- marketing-site
- name: MvvmCross
url: https://www.mvvmcross.com/
categories:
- software
- marketing-site
- name: Vidgrid
url: https://www.vidgrid.com/
categories:
- software
- marketing-site
- name: Bitcoin
url: https://bitcoin.org/en/
categories:
- software
- marketing-site
- name: Mapwize
url: https://www.mapwize.io/
categories:
- software
- marketing-site
- name: Auth0 Blog
url: https://auth0.com/blog/
categories:
- software
- blog
- name: AWS Amplify
url: https://aws-amplify.github.io/
categories:
- open-source
- marketing-site
- name: Yeoman
url: http://yeoman.io/
categories:
- open-source
- marketing-site
- name: Ionic Framwork
url: https://ionicframework.com/
categories:
- software
- marketing-site
- name: Release Management Blog
url: https://release.mozilla.org/
categories:
- software
- blog
- name: Freedom of Information Act
url: https://www.foia.gov/
categories:
- government
- name: Art & About Sydney
url: https://www.artandabout.com.au/
categories:
- government
- name: Passbolt Help
url: https://help.passbolt.com/
categories:
- knowledgebase
- name: We are COLLINS
url: https://www.wearecollins.com/
categories:
- agency
- name: Light Burn
url: https://lightburn.co/
categories:
- agency
- name: italia.it
url: https://developers.italia.it/
categories:
- community
- name: Sydney New Years Eve
url: https://www.sydneynewyearseve.com/
categories:
- government
- name: Login.gov
url: https://login.gov/
categories:
- government
- name: plainlanguage.gov
url: https://plainlanguage.gov/
categories:
- government
- name: U.S. Web Design Standards
url: https://standards.usa.gov/
categories:
- government
- name: Grantmaker Search
url: https://www.grantmakers.io/
categories:
- marketing-site
- name: Rehan Butt
url: http://rehanbutt.com/
categories:
- personal
- portfolio
- name: The Markdown Guide
url: https://www.markdownguide.org/
categories:
- knowledgebase
- name: PROBOT
url: https://probot.github.io/
categories:
- documentation
- name: Matt Grey
url: https://himatt.com/
categories:
- personal
- portfolio
- name: frame.ai
url: https://frame.ai/
categories:
- software
- marketing-site
- name: AdHawk
url: https://www.tryadhawk.com/
categories:
- agency
- name: City of Boston Budget
url: https://budget.boston.gov/
categories:
- government
- name: Lattice
url: https://latticehq.com/
categories:
- software
- marketing-site
- name: MailTape
url: https://www.mailta.pe/
categories:
- other
- name: Digital Democracy
url: http://www.digital-democracy.org/
categories:
- other
- name: HTML Reference
url: http://htmlreference.io/
categories:
- documentation
- name: CSS Reference
url: http://cssreference.io/
categories:
- documentation
- name: Chain
url: https://chain.com/
categories:
- marketing-site
- name: Boxy Suite
url: https://www.boxysuite.com/
categories:
- marketing-site
- software
- name: Pattern Lab
url: http://patternlab.io/
categories:
- documentation
- name: IBM MobileFirst Foundation
url: https://mobilefirstplatform.ibmcloud.com/
categories:
- documentation
- name: 18F
url: https://18f.gsa.gov/
categories:
- agency
- government
- name: Mapbox
url: https://mapbox.com/
categories:
- marketing-site
- name: Development Seed
url: https://developmentseed.org/
categories:
- agency
- name: Isomer - Singapore Government Static Websites
url: https://isomer.gov.sg/
categories:
- government
- name: SiteLeaf
url: https://siteleaf.com
categories:
- software
- marketing-site
- name: CloudCannon
url: https://cloudcannon.com/
categories:
- software
- marketing-site
- name: Ruby on Rails
url: http://rubyonrails.org/
categories:
- marketing-site
- documentation
- name: White House Social and Behavioral Sciences Team
url: https://sbst.gov/
categories:
- government
- name: UN World Statistics
url: https://worldstatisticsday.org
categories:
- government
- name: Sketch App
url: https://sketchapp.com/
categories:
- software
- marketing-site
- name: Netflix Devices
url: https://devices.netflix.com/en/
categories:
- marketing-site
- name: TwitchCon
url: https://www.twitchcon.com/
categories:
- marketing-site
- conference
- name: Twitch Developer Documentation
url: https://dev.twitch.tv/
categories:
- marketing-site
- documentation
- name: Spotify for Developers
url: https://developer.spotify.com
categories:
- marketing-site
- documentation
- software

View File

@@ -3,11 +3,10 @@ title: Assets
permalink: /docs/assets/
---
Jekyll provides built-in support for [Sass](https://sass-lang.com/)
and can work with [CoffeeScript](https://coffeescript.org/) via a Ruby gem.
In order to use them, you must first create a file with the proper extension
name (one of `.sass`, `.scss`, or `.coffee`) and
***start the file with two lines of triple dashes***, like this:
Jekyll provides built-in support for Sass and can work with CoffeeScript via
a Ruby gem. In order to use them, you must first create a file with the
proper extension name (one of `.sass`, `.scss`, or `.coffee`) and ***start the
file with two lines of triple dashes***, like this:
```sass
---
@@ -43,7 +42,8 @@ them to be in the output file, such as `<source>/css`. For an example, take
a look at [this example site using Sass support in Jekyll][example-sass].
If you are using Sass `@import` statements, you'll need to ensure that your
`sass_dir` is set to the base directory that contains your Sass files:
`sass_dir` is set to the base directory that contains your Sass files. You
can do that thusly:
```yaml
sass:
@@ -61,8 +61,8 @@ The Sass converter will default the `sass_dir` configuration option to
Note that the <code>sass_dir</code> becomes the load path for Sass imports,
nothing more. This means that Jekyll does not know about these files
directly. Any files here should not contain the empty front matter as
described above. If they do, they'll not be transformed as described above. This
directly, so any files here should not contain the YAML Front Matter as
described above nor will they be transformed as described above. This
folder should only contain imports.
</p>
@@ -89,5 +89,5 @@ To enable Coffeescript in Jekyll 3.0 and up you must
```yaml
plugins:
- jekyll-coffeescript
- jekyll-coffeescript
```

View File

@@ -6,42 +6,25 @@ redirect_from: "/conduct/index.html"
editable: false
---
## Our Pledge
As contributors and maintainers of this project, and in the interest of
fostering an open and welcoming community, we pledge to respect all people who
contribute through reporting issues, posting feature requests, updating
documentation, submitting pull requests or patches, and other activities.
In the interest of fostering an open and welcoming environment, we as
contributors and maintainers pledge to making participation in our project and
our community a harassment-free experience for everyone, regardless of age, body
size, disability, ethnicity, sex characteristics, gender identity and expression,
level of experience, education, socio-economic status, nationality, personal
appearance, race, religion, or sexual identity and orientation.
## Our Standards
Examples of behavior that contributes to creating a positive environment
include:
* Using welcoming and inclusive language
* Being respectful of differing viewpoints and experiences
* Gracefully accepting constructive criticism
* Focusing on what is best for the community
* Showing empathy towards other community members
We are committed to making participation in this project a harassment-free
experience for everyone, regardless of level of experience, gender, gender
identity and expression, sexual orientation, disability, personal appearance,
body size, race, ethnicity, age, religion, or nationality.
Examples of unacceptable behavior by participants include:
* The use of sexualized language or imagery and unwelcome sexual attention or
advances
* Trolling, insulting/derogatory comments, and personal or political attacks
* The use of sexualized language or imagery
* Personal attacks
* Trolling or insulting/derogatory comments
* Public or private harassment
* Publishing others' private information, such as a physical or electronic
address, without explicit permission
* Other conduct which could reasonably be considered inappropriate in a
professional setting
## Our Responsibilities
Project maintainers are responsible for clarifying the standards of acceptable
behavior and are expected to take appropriate and fair corrective action in
response to any instances of unacceptable behavior.
* Publishing other's private information, such as physical or electronic
addresses, without explicit permission
* Other unethical or unprofessional conduct
Project maintainers have the right and responsibility to remove, edit, or
reject comments, commits, code, wiki edits, issues, and other contributions
@@ -49,34 +32,24 @@ that are not aligned to this Code of Conduct, or to ban temporarily or
permanently any contributor for other behaviors that they deem inappropriate,
threatening, offensive, or harmful.
## Scope
By adopting this Code of Conduct, project maintainers commit themselves to
fairly and consistently applying these principles to every aspect of managing
this project. Project maintainers who do not follow or enforce the Code of
Conduct may be permanently removed from the project team.
This Code of Conduct applies both within project spaces and in public spaces
when an individual is representing the project or its community. Examples of
representing a project or community include using an official project e-mail
address, posting via an official social media account, or acting as an appointed
representative at an online or offline event. Representation of a project may be
further defined and clarified by project maintainers.
## Enforcement
when an individual is representing the project or its community.
Instances of abusive, harassing, or otherwise unacceptable behavior may be
reported by contacting the project team at [olivia@jekyllrb.com](mailto:olivia@jekyllrb.com). All
complaints will be reviewed and investigated and will result in a response that
is deemed necessary and appropriate to the circumstances. The project team is
obligated to maintain confidentiality with regard to the reporter of an incident.
Further details of specific enforcement policies may be posted separately.
reported by opening an issue or contacting a project maintainer. All complaints
will be reviewed and investigated and will result in a response that is deemed
necessary and appropriate to the circumstances. Maintainers are obligated to
maintain confidentiality with regard to the reporter of an incident.
Project maintainers who do not follow or enforce the Code of Conduct in good
faith may face temporary or permanent repercussions as determined by other
members of the project's leadership.
## Attribution
This Code of Conduct is adapted from the [Contributor Covenant][homepage],
version 1.3.0, available at
[http://contributor-covenant.org/version/1/3/0/][version]
This Code of Conduct is adapted from the [Contributor Covenant][homepage], version 1.4,
available at [https://www.contributor-covenant.org/version/1/4/code-of-conduct.html](https://www.contributor-covenant.org/version/1/4/code-of-conduct.html)
[homepage]: https://www.contributor-covenant.org
For answers to common questions about this code of conduct, see
[https://www.contributor-covenant.org/faq](https://www.contributor-covenant.org/faq)
[homepage]: http://contributor-covenant.org
[version]: http://contributor-covenant.org/version/1/3/0/

View File

@@ -3,25 +3,47 @@ title: Collections
permalink: /docs/collections/
---
Collections are a great way to group related content like members of a team or
talks at a conference.
Not everything is a post or a page. Maybe you want to document the various
methods in your open source project, members of a team, or talks at a
conference. Collections allow you to define a new type of document that behave
like Pages or Posts do normally, but also have their own unique properties and
namespace.
## Setup
## Using Collections
To use a Collection you first need to define it in your `_config.yml`. For
example here's a collection of staff members:
To start using collections, follow these 3 steps:
* [Step 1: Tell Jekyll to read in your collection](#step1)
* [Step 2: Add your content](#step2)
* [Step 3: Optionally render your collection's documents into independent files](#step3)
### Step 1: Tell Jekyll to read in your collection {#step1}
Add the following to your site's `_config.yml` file, replacing `my_collection`
with the name of your collection:
```yaml
collections:
- staff_members
- my_collection
```
You can optionally specify metadata for your collection in the configuration:
```yaml
collections:
staff_members:
people: true
my_collection:
foo: bar
```
Default attributes can also be set for a collection:
```yaml
defaults:
- scope:
path: ""
type: my_collection
values:
layout: page
```
<div class="note">
@@ -34,31 +56,17 @@ collections:
</div>
<div class="note warning">
<h5>Be sure to move drafts and posts into custom collections directory</h5>
<h5>Be sure to move posts into custom collections directory</h5>
<p>If you specify a directory to store all your collections in the same place with <code>collections_dir: my_collections</code>, then you will need to move your <code>_drafts</code> and <code>_posts</code> directory to <code>my_collections/_drafts</code> and <code>my_collections/_posts</code>. Note that, the name of your collections directory cannot start with an underscore (`_`).</p>
<p>If you specify a directory to store all your collections in the same place with <code>collections_dir: my_collections</code>, then you will need to move your <code>_posts</code> directory to <code>my_collections/_posts</code>. Note that, the name of your collections directory cannot start with an underscore (`_`).</p>
</div>
## Add content
### Step 2: Add your content {#step2}
Create a corresponding folder (e.g. `<source>/_staff_members`) and add
documents. Front matter is processed if the front matter exists, and everything
after the front matter is pushed into the document's `content` attribute. If no front
matter is provided, Jekyll will consider it to be a [static file](/docs/static-files/)
and copy it to the destination (e.g. `_site`) without processing. If front matter
is provided, Jekyll will process the file in your collection but will not write to disk
unless `output: true` is set in the collection's metadata.
For example here's how you would add a staff member to the collection set above.
The filename is `./_staff_members/jane.md` with the following content:
```markdown
---
name: Jane Doe
position: Developer
---
Jane has worked on Jekyll for the past *five years*.
```
Create a corresponding folder (e.g. `<source>/_my_collection`) and add
documents. YAML front matter is processed if the front matter exists, and everything
after the front matter is pushed into the document's `content` attribute. If no YAML front
matter is provided, Jekyll will not generate the file in your collection.
<div class="note info">
<h5>Be sure to name your directories correctly</h5>
@@ -68,109 +76,190 @@ your <code>_config.yml</code> file, with the addition of the preceding <code>_</
</p>
</div>
## Output
### Step 3: Optionally render your collection's documents into independent files {#step3}
Now you can iterate over `site.staff_members` on a page and output the content
for each staff member. Similar to posts, the body of the document is accessed
using the `content` variable:
{% raw %}
```liquid
{% for staff_member in site.staff_members %}
<h2>{{ staff_member.name }} - {{ staff_member.position }}</h2>
<p>{{ staff_member.content | markdownify }}</p>
{% endfor %}
```
{% endraw %}
If you'd like Jekyll to create a rendered page for each document in your
collection, you can set the `output` key to `true` in your collection
metadata in `_config.yml`:
If you'd like Jekyll to create a public-facing, rendered version of each
document in your collection, set the `output` key to `true` in your collection
metadata in your `_config.yml`:
```yaml
collections:
staff_members:
my_collection:
output: true
```
You can link to the generated page using the `url` attribute:
This will produce a file for each document in the collection.
For example, if you have `_my_collection/some_subdir/some_doc.md`,
it will be rendered using Liquid and the Markdown converter of your
choice and written out to `<dest>/my_collection/some_subdir/some_doc.html`.
If you wish a specific page to be shown when accessing `/my_collection/`,
simply add `permalink: /my_collection/index.html` to a page.
To list items from the collection, on that page or any other, you can use:
{% raw %}
```liquid
{% for staff_member in site.staff_members %}
<h2>
<a href="{{ staff_member.url }}">
{{ staff_member.name }} - {{ staff_member.position }}
</a>
</h2>
<p>{{ staff_member.content | markdownify }}</p>
{% for item in site.my_collection %}
<h2>{{ item.title }}</h2>
<p>{{ item.description }}</p>
<p><a href="{{ item.url }}">{{ item.title }}</a></p>
{% endfor %}
```
{% endraw %}
## Permalinks
<div class="note info">
<h5>Don't forget to add YAML for processing</h5>
<p>
Files in collections that do not have front matter are treated as
<a href="/docs/static-files">static files</a> and simply copied to their
output location without processing.
</p>
</div>
There are special [permalink variables for collections](/docs/permalinks/) to
help you control the output url for the entire collection.
## Configuring permalinks for collections {#permalinks}
{% if site.version == '4.0.0' %}{% comment %} Remove this encapsulation when v4.0 ships {% endcomment %}
## Custom Sorting of Documents
By default, documents in a collection are sorted by their paths. But you can control this sorting via the collection's metadata.
### Sort By Front Matter Key
Documents can be sorted based on a front matter key by setting a `sort_by` metadata to the front matter key string. For example,
to sort a collection of tutorials based on key `lesson`, the configuration would be:
If you wish to specify a custom pattern for the URLs where your Collection pages
will reside, you may do so with the [`permalink` property](../permalinks/):
```yaml
collections:
tutorials:
sort_by: lesson
my_collection:
output: true
permalink: /:collection/:name
```
The documents are arranged in the increasing order of the key's value. If a document does not have the front matter key defined
then that document is placed immediately after sorted documents. When multiple documents do not have the front matter key defined,
those documents are sorted by their dates or paths and then placed immediately after the sorted documents.
### Examples
### Manually Ordering Documents
For a collection with the following source file structure,
You can also manually order the documents by setting an `order` metadata with **the filenames listed** in the desired order.
For example, a collection of tutorials would be configured as:
```yaml
collections:
tutorials:
order:
- hello-world.md
- introduction.md
- basic-concepts.md
- advanced-concepts.md
```
_my_collection/
└── some_subdir
└── some_doc.md
```
Any documents with filenames that do not match the list entry simply gets placed after the rearranged documents. If a document is
nested under subdirectories, include them in entries as well:
each of the following `permalink` configurations will produce the document structure shown below it.
```yaml
collections:
tutorials:
order:
- hello-world.md
- introduction.md
- concepts/basics.md
- concepts/advanced.md
```
* **Default**
Same as `permalink: /:collection/:path`.
If both metadata keys have been defined properly, `order` list takes precedence.
{% endif %}
```
_site/
├── my_collection
│   └── some_subdir
│   └── some_doc.html
...
```
* `permalink: pretty`
Same as `permalink: /:collection/:path/`.
```
_site/
├── my_collection
│   └── some_subdir
│   └── some_doc
│   └── index.html
...
```
* `permalink: /doc/:path`
```
_site/
├── doc
│   └── some_subdir
│   └── some_doc.html
...
```
* `permalink: /doc/:name`
```
_site/
├── doc
│   └── some_doc.html
...
```
* `permalink: /:name`
```
_site/
├── some_doc.html
...
```
### Template Variables
<div class="mobile-side-scroller">
<table>
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Variable</th>
<th>Description</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:collection</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>Label of the containing collection.</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:path</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>Path to the document relative to the collection's directory.</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:name</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>The document's base filename, with every sequence of spaces
and non-alphanumeric characters replaced by a hyphen.</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:title</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
The <code>:title</code> template variable will take the
<code>slug</code> <a href="/docs/frontmatter/">front matter</a>
variable value if any is present in the document; if none is
defined then <code>:title</code> will be equivalent to
<code>:name</code>, aka the slug generated from the filename.
</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:output_ext</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>Extension of the output file. (Included by default and usually unnecessary.)</p>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
## Liquid Attributes
### Collections
Collections are also available under `site.collections`, with the metadata
Each collection is accessible as a field on the `site` variable. For example, if
you want to access the `albums` collection found in `_albums`, you'd use
`site.albums`.
Each collection is itself an array of documents (e.g., `site.albums` is an array of documents, much like `site.pages` and
`site.posts`). See the table below for how to access attributes of those documents.
The collections are also available under `site.collections`, with the metadata
you specified in your `_config.yml` (if present) and the following information:
<div class="mobile-side-scroller">
@@ -264,7 +353,7 @@ you specified in your `_config.yml` (if present) and the following information:
<p>Except for documents in hard-coded default collection <code>posts</code>, all documents in collections
you create, are accessible via Liquid irrespective of their assigned date, if any, and therefore renderable.
</p>
<p>Documents are attempted to be written to disk only if the concerned collection
<p>However documents are attempted to be written to disk only if the concerned collection
metadata has <code>output: true</code>. Additionally, future-dated documents are only written if
<code>site.future</code> <em>is also true</em>.
</p>
@@ -276,7 +365,7 @@ you specified in your `_config.yml` (if present) and the following information:
### Documents
In addition to any front matter provided in the document's corresponding
In addition to any YAML Front Matter provided in the document's corresponding
file, each document has the following attributes:
<div class="mobile-side-scroller">
@@ -294,9 +383,9 @@ file, each document has the following attributes:
</td>
<td>
<p>
The (unrendered) content of the document. If no front matter is
The (unrendered) content of the document. If no YAML Front Matter is
provided, Jekyll will not generate the file in your collection. If
front matter is used, then this is all the contents of the file
YAML Front Matter is used, then this is all the contents of the file
after the terminating
`---` of the front matter.
</p>
@@ -366,3 +455,51 @@ file, each document has the following attributes:
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
## Accessing Collection Attributes
Attributes from the YAML front matter can be accessed as data anywhere in the
site. Using the above example for configuring a collection as `site.albums`,
you might have front matter in an individual file structured as follows (which
must use a supported markup format, and cannot be saved with a `.yaml`
extension):
```yaml
title: "Josquin: Missa De beata virgine and Missa Ave maris stella"
artist: "The Tallis Scholars"
director: "Peter Phillips"
works:
- title: "Missa De beata virgine"
composer: "Josquin des Prez"
tracks:
- title: "Kyrie"
duration: "4:25"
- title: "Gloria"
duration: "9:53"
- title: "Credo"
duration: "9:09"
- title: "Sanctus & Benedictus"
duration: "7:47"
- title: "Agnus Dei I, II & III"
duration: "6:49"
```
Every album in the collection could be listed on a single page with a template:
```liquid
{% raw %}
{% for album in site.albums %}
<h2>{{ album.title }}</h2>
<p>Performed by {{ album.artist }}{% if album.director %}, directed by {{ album.director }}{% endif %}</p>
{% for work in album.works %}
<h3>{{ work.title }}</h3>
<p>Composed by {{ work.composer }}</p>
<ul>
{% for track in work.tracks %}
<li>{{ track.title }} ({{ track.duration }})</li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
{% endfor %}
{% endfor %}
{% endraw %}
```

View File

@@ -1,8 +0,0 @@
---
title: Report a bug
permalink: "/docs/community/bug/"
---
If you think you've found a bug within a Jekyll plugin, open an issue in that plugin's repository &mdash; First [look for the plugin on rubygems](https://rubygems.org/) then click on the `Homepage` link to access the plugin repository.
If you think you've found a bug within Jekyll itself, [open an issue](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll/issues/new).

View File

@@ -1,38 +0,0 @@
---
title: Community
permalink: /docs/community/
redirect_from: "/help/index.html"
---
## Jekyll Contributor Code of Conduct
As contributors and maintainers of this project, and in the interest of fostering an open and welcoming community, we pledge to respect all people who contribute through reporting issues, posting feature requests, updating documentation, submitting pull requests or patches, and other activities.
Read the full [code of conduct](/docs/conduct/)
## Where to get support
If you're looking for support for Jekyll, there are a lot of options:
* Read the [Jekyll Documentation](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/)
* If you have a question about using Jekyll, start a discussion on the [Jekyll Forum](https://talk.jekyllrb.com/) or [StackOverflow](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/jekyll)
* Chat with Jekyllers &mdash; Join our [Gitter channel](https://gitter.im/jekyll/jekyll) or our [IRC channel on Freenode](irc:irc.freenode.net/jekyll)
There are a bunch of helpful community members on these services that should be willing to point you in the right direction.
**Reminder: Jekyll's issue tracker is not a support forum.**
## Ways to contribute
* [How to Contribute](/docs/contributing/)
* [How to file a bug](/docs/community/bug/)
* [Guide for maintaining Jekyll](/docs/maintaining/)
## Jekyllconf
[Watch videos](/jekyllconf/) from members of the Jekyll community speak about interesting use cases, tricks theyve learned or meta Jekyll topics.
## Jekyll on Twitter
The [official Jekyll Twitter account](https://twitter.com/jekyllrb).

View File

@@ -6,42 +6,25 @@ redirect_from: "/conduct/index.html"
editable: false
---
## Our Pledge
As contributors and maintainers of this project, and in the interest of
fostering an open and welcoming community, we pledge to respect all people who
contribute through reporting issues, posting feature requests, updating
documentation, submitting pull requests or patches, and other activities.
In the interest of fostering an open and welcoming environment, we as
contributors and maintainers pledge to making participation in our project and
our community a harassment-free experience for everyone, regardless of age, body
size, disability, ethnicity, sex characteristics, gender identity and expression,
level of experience, education, socio-economic status, nationality, personal
appearance, race, religion, or sexual identity and orientation.
## Our Standards
Examples of behavior that contributes to creating a positive environment
include:
* Using welcoming and inclusive language
* Being respectful of differing viewpoints and experiences
* Gracefully accepting constructive criticism
* Focusing on what is best for the community
* Showing empathy towards other community members
We are committed to making participation in this project a harassment-free
experience for everyone, regardless of level of experience, gender, gender
identity and expression, sexual orientation, disability, personal appearance,
body size, race, ethnicity, age, religion, or nationality.
Examples of unacceptable behavior by participants include:
* The use of sexualized language or imagery and unwelcome sexual attention or
advances
* Trolling, insulting/derogatory comments, and personal or political attacks
* The use of sexualized language or imagery
* Personal attacks
* Trolling or insulting/derogatory comments
* Public or private harassment
* Publishing others' private information, such as a physical or electronic
address, without explicit permission
* Other conduct which could reasonably be considered inappropriate in a
professional setting
## Our Responsibilities
Project maintainers are responsible for clarifying the standards of acceptable
behavior and are expected to take appropriate and fair corrective action in
response to any instances of unacceptable behavior.
* Publishing other's private information, such as physical or electronic
addresses, without explicit permission
* Other unethical or unprofessional conduct
Project maintainers have the right and responsibility to remove, edit, or
reject comments, commits, code, wiki edits, issues, and other contributions
@@ -49,34 +32,24 @@ that are not aligned to this Code of Conduct, or to ban temporarily or
permanently any contributor for other behaviors that they deem inappropriate,
threatening, offensive, or harmful.
## Scope
By adopting this Code of Conduct, project maintainers commit themselves to
fairly and consistently applying these principles to every aspect of managing
this project. Project maintainers who do not follow or enforce the Code of
Conduct may be permanently removed from the project team.
This Code of Conduct applies both within project spaces and in public spaces
when an individual is representing the project or its community. Examples of
representing a project or community include using an official project e-mail
address, posting via an official social media account, or acting as an appointed
representative at an online or offline event. Representation of a project may be
further defined and clarified by project maintainers.
## Enforcement
when an individual is representing the project or its community.
Instances of abusive, harassing, or otherwise unacceptable behavior may be
reported by contacting the project team at [olivia@jekyllrb.com](mailto:olivia@jekyllrb.com). All
complaints will be reviewed and investigated and will result in a response that
is deemed necessary and appropriate to the circumstances. The project team is
obligated to maintain confidentiality with regard to the reporter of an incident.
Further details of specific enforcement policies may be posted separately.
reported by opening an issue or contacting a project maintainer. All complaints
will be reviewed and investigated and will result in a response that is deemed
necessary and appropriate to the circumstances. Maintainers are obligated to
maintain confidentiality with regard to the reporter of an incident.
Project maintainers who do not follow or enforce the Code of Conduct in good
faith may face temporary or permanent repercussions as determined by other
members of the project's leadership.
## Attribution
This Code of Conduct is adapted from the [Contributor Covenant][homepage],
version 1.3.0, available at
[http://contributor-covenant.org/version/1/3/0/][version]
This Code of Conduct is adapted from the [Contributor Covenant][homepage], version 1.4,
available at [https://www.contributor-covenant.org/version/1/4/code-of-conduct.html](https://www.contributor-covenant.org/version/1/4/code-of-conduct.html)
[homepage]: https://www.contributor-covenant.org
For answers to common questions about this code of conduct, see
[https://www.contributor-covenant.org/faq](https://www.contributor-covenant.org/faq)
[homepage]: http://contributor-covenant.org
[version]: http://contributor-covenant.org/version/1/3/0/

View File

@@ -3,16 +3,831 @@ title: Configuration
permalink: /docs/configuration/
---
Jekyll gives you a lot of flexibility to customize how it builds your site. These
options can either be specified in a `_config.yml` or `_config.toml` file placed
in your sites root directory, or can be specified as flags for the `jekyll`
executable in the terminal.
Jekyll allows you to concoct your sites in any way you can dream up, and its
thanks to the powerful and flexible configuration options that this is possible.
These options can either be specified in a `_config.yml` file placed in your
sites root directory, or can be specified as flags for the `jekyll` executable
in the terminal.
* [Configuration Options](/docs/configuration/options/)
* [Default Configuration](/docs/configuration/default/)
* [Front Matter Defaults](/docs/configuration/front-matter-defaults/)
* [Environments](/docs/configuration/environments/)
* [Markdown Options](/docs/configuration/markdown/)
* [Liquid Options](/docs/configuration/liquid/)
* [Webrick Options](/docs/configuration/webrick/)
* [Incremental Regeneration](/docs/configuration/incremental-regeneration/)
## Configuration Settings
### Global Configuration
The table below lists the available settings for Jekyll, and the various <code
class="option">options</code> (specified in the configuration file) and <code
class="flag">flags</code> (specified on the command-line) that control them.
<div class="mobile-side-scroller">
<table>
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Setting</th>
<th>
<span class="option">Options</span> and <span class="flag">Flags</span>
</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Site Source</strong></p>
<p class="description">Change the directory where Jekyll will read files</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">source: DIR</code></p>
<p><code class="flag">-s, --source DIR</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Site Destination</strong></p>
<p class="description">Change the directory where Jekyll will write files</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">destination: DIR</code></p>
<p><code class="flag">-d, --destination DIR</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Safe</strong></p>
<p class="description">Disable <a href="../plugins/">custom plugins, and ignore symbolic links</a>.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">safe: BOOL</code></p>
<p><code class="flag">--safe</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Exclude</strong></p>
<p class="description">
Exclude directories and/or files from the
conversion. These exclusions are relative to the site's
source directory and cannot be outside the source directory.
</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">exclude: [DIR, FILE, ...]</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Include</strong></p>
<p class="description">
Force inclusion of directories and/or files in the conversion.
<code>.htaccess</code> is a good example since dotfiles are excluded
by default.
</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">include: [DIR, FILE, ...]</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Keep files</strong></p>
<p class="description">
When clobbering the site destination, keep the selected files.
Useful for files that are not generated by jekyll; e.g. files or
assets that are generated by your build tool.
The paths are relative to the <code>destination</code>.
</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">keep_files: [DIR, FILE, ...]</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Time Zone</strong></p>
<p class="description">
Set the time zone for site generation. This sets the <code>TZ</code>
environment variable, which Ruby uses to handle time and date
creation and manipulation. Any entry from the
<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tz_database">IANA Time Zone
Database</a> is valid, e.g. <code>America/New_York</code>. A list of all
available values can be found <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tz_database_time_zones">
here</a>. When serving on a local machine, the default time zone is set by your operating system. But when served on a remote host/server, the default time zone depends on the server's setting or location.
</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">timezone: TIMEZONE</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Encoding</strong></p>
<p class="description">
Set the encoding of files by name (only available for Ruby
1.9 or later).
The default value is <code>utf-8</code> starting in 2.0.0,
and <code>nil</code> before 2.0.0, which will yield the Ruby
default of <code>ASCII-8BIT</code>.
Available encodings can be shown by the
command <code>ruby -e 'puts Encoding::list.join("\n")'</code>.
</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">encoding: ENCODING</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p class='name'><strong>Defaults</strong></p>
<p class='description'>
Set defaults for <a href="../frontmatter/" title="YAML Front Matter">YAML Front Matter</a>
variables.
</p>
</td>
<td class='align-center'>
<p>see <a href="#front-matter-defaults" title="details">below</a></p>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
<div class="note warning">
<h5>Destination folders are cleaned on site builds</h5>
<p>
The contents of <code>&lt;destination&gt;</code> are automatically
cleaned, by default, when the site is built. Files or folders that are not
created by your site will be removed. Some files could be retained
by specifying them within the <code>&lt;keep_files&gt;</code> configuration directive.
</p>
<p>
Do not use an important location for <code>&lt;destination&gt;</code>; instead, use it as
a staging area and copy files from there to your web server.
</p>
</div>
### Build Command Options
<div class="mobile-side-scroller">
<table>
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Setting</th>
<th><span class="option">Options</span> and <span class="flag">Flags</span></th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Regeneration</strong></p>
<p class="description">Enable auto-regeneration of the site when files are modified.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="flag">-w, --[no-]watch</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Configuration</strong></p>
<p class="description">Specify config files instead of using <code>_config.yml</code> automatically. Settings in later files override settings in earlier files.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="flag">--config FILE1[,FILE2,...]</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Drafts</strong></p>
<p class="description">Process and render draft posts.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">show_drafts: BOOL</code></p>
<p><code class="flag">--drafts</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Environment</strong></p>
<p class="description">Use a specific environment value in the build.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="flag">JEKYLL_ENV=production</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Future</strong></p>
<p class="description">Publish posts or collection documents with a future date.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">future: BOOL</code></p>
<p><code class="flag">--future</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Unpublished</strong></p>
<p class="description">Render posts that were marked as unpublished.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">unpublished: BOOL</code></p>
<p><code class="flag">--unpublished</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>LSI</strong></p>
<p class="description">Produce an index for related posts. Requires the <a href="http://www.classifier-reborn.com/">classifier-reborn</a> plugin.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">lsi: BOOL</code></p>
<p><code class="flag">--lsi</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Limit Posts</strong></p>
<p class="description">Limit the number of posts to parse and publish.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">limit_posts: NUM</code></p>
<p><code class="flag">--limit_posts NUM</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Force polling</strong></p>
<p class="description">Force watch to use polling.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="flag">--force_polling</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Verbose output</strong></p>
<p class="description">Print verbose output.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="flag">-V, --verbose</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Silence Output</strong></p>
<p class="description">Silence the normal output from Jekyll
during a build</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="flag">-q, --quiet</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Incremental build</strong></p>
<p class="description">
Enable the experimental incremental build feature. Incremental build only
re-builds posts and pages that have changed, resulting in significant performance
improvements for large sites, but may also break site generation in certain
cases.
</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">incremental: BOOL</code></p>
<p><code class="flag">-I, --incremental</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Liquid profiler</strong></p>
<p class="description">
Generate a Liquid rendering profile to help you identify performance bottlenecks.
</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">profile: BOOL</code></p>
<p><code class="flag">--profile</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Strict Front Matter</strong></p>
<p class="description">
Cause a build to fail if there is a YAML syntax error in a page's front matter.
</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">strict_front_matter: BOOL</code></p>
<p><code class="flag">--strict_front_matter</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
### Serve Command Options
In addition to the options below, the `serve` sub-command can accept any of the options
for the `build` sub-command, which are then applied to the site build which occurs right
before your site is served.
<div class="mobile-side-scroller">
<table>
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Setting</th>
<th><span class="option">Options</span> and <span class="flag">Flags</span></th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Local Server Port</strong></p>
<p class="description">Listen on the given port.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">port: PORT</code></p>
<p><code class="flag">--port PORT</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Local Server Hostname</strong></p>
<p class="description">Listen at the given hostname.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">host: HOSTNAME</code></p>
<p><code class="flag">--host HOSTNAME</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Base URL</strong></p>
<p class="description">Serve the website from the given base URL</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">baseurl: URL</code></p>
<p><code class="flag">--baseurl URL</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Detach</strong></p>
<p class="description">Detach the server from the terminal</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">detach: BOOL</code></p>
<p><code class="flag">-B, --detach</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Skips the initial site build.</strong></p>
<p class="description">Skips the initial site build which occurs before the server is started.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="flag">--skip-initial-build</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>X.509 (SSL) Private Key</strong></p>
<p class="description">SSL Private Key.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="flag">--ssl-key</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>X.509 (SSL) Certificate</strong></p>
<p class="description">SSL Public certificate.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="flag">--ssl-cert</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
<div class="note warning">
<h5>Do not use tabs in configuration files</h5>
<p>
This will either lead to parsing errors, or Jekyll will revert to the
default settings. Use spaces instead.
</p>
</div>
## Custom WEBrick Headers
You can provide custom headers for your site by adding them to `_config.yml`
```yaml
# File: _config.yml
webrick:
headers:
My-Header: My-Value
My-Other-Header: My-Other-Value
```
### Defaults
We provide by default `Content-Type` and `Cache-Control` response headers: one
dynamic in order to specify the nature of the data being served, the other
static in order to disable caching so that you don't have to fight with Chrome's
aggressive caching when you are in development mode.
## Specifying a Jekyll environment at build time
In the build (or serve) arguments, you can specify a Jekyll environment and value. The build will then apply this value in any conditional statements in your content.
For example, suppose you set this conditional statement in your code:
```liquid
{% raw %}
{% if jekyll.environment == "production" %}
{% include disqus.html %}
{% endif %}
{% endraw %}
```
When you build your Jekyll site, the content inside the `if` statement won't be run unless you also specify a `production` environment in the build command, like this:
```sh
JEKYLL_ENV=production jekyll build
```
Specifying an environment value allows you to make certain content available only within specific environments.
The default value for `JEKYLL_ENV` is `development`. Therefore if you omit `JEKYLL_ENV` from the build arguments, the default value will be `JEKYLL_ENV=development`. Any content inside `{% raw %}{% if jekyll.environment == "development" %}{% endraw %}` tags will automatically appear in the build.
Your environment values can be anything you want (not just `development` or `production`). Some elements you might want to hide in development environments include Disqus comment forms or Google Analytics. Conversely, you might want to expose an "Edit me in GitHub" button in a development environment but not include it in production environments.
By specifying the option in the build command, you avoid having to change values in your configuration files when moving from one environment to another.
## Front Matter defaults
Using [YAML Front Matter](../frontmatter/) is one way that you can specify configuration in the pages and posts for your site. Setting things like a default layout, or customizing the title, or specifying a more precise date/time for the post can all be added to your page or post front matter.
Often times, you will find that you are repeating a lot of configuration options. Setting the same layout in each file, adding the same category - or categories - to a post, etc. You can even add custom variables like author names, which might be the same for the majority of posts on your blog.
Instead of repeating this configuration each time you create a new post or page, Jekyll provides a way to set these defaults in the site configuration. To do this, you can specify site-wide defaults using the `defaults` key in the `_config.yml` file in your project's root directory.
The `defaults` key holds an array of scope/values pairs that define what defaults should be set for a particular file path, and optionally, a file type in that path.
Let's say that you want to add a default layout to all pages and posts in your site. You would add this to your `_config.yml` file:
```yaml
defaults:
-
scope:
path: "" # an empty string here means all files in the project
values:
layout: "default"
```
<div class="note info">
<h5>Please stop and rerun `jekyll serve` command.</h5>
<p>
The <code>_config.yml</code> master configuration file contains global configurations
and variable definitions that are read once at execution time. Changes made to <code>_config.yml</code>
during automatic regeneration are not loaded until the next execution.
</p>
<p>
Note <a href="../datafiles">Data Files</a> are included and reloaded during automatic regeneration.
</p>
</div>
Here, we are scoping the `values` to any file that exists in the path `scope`. Since the path is set as an empty string, it will apply to **all files** in your project. You probably don't want to set a layout on every file in your project - like css files, for example - so you can also specify a `type` value under the `scope` key.
```yaml
defaults:
-
scope:
path: "" # an empty string here means all files in the project
type: "posts" # previously `post` in Jekyll 2.2.
values:
layout: "default"
```
Now, this will only set the layout for files where the type is `posts`.
The different types that are available to you are `pages`, `posts`, `drafts` or any collection in your site. While `type` is optional, you must specify a value for `path` when creating a `scope/values` pair.
As mentioned earlier, you can set multiple scope/values pairs for `defaults`.
```yaml
defaults:
-
scope:
path: ""
type: "pages"
values:
layout: "my-site"
-
scope:
path: "projects"
type: "pages" # previously `page` in Jekyll 2.2.
values:
layout: "project" # overrides previous default layout
author: "Mr. Hyde"
```
With these defaults, all pages would use the `my-site` layout. Any html files that exist in the `projects/` folder will use the `project` layout, if it exists. Those files will also have the `page.author` [liquid variable](../variables/) set to `Mr. Hyde`.
```yaml
collections:
my_collection:
output: true
defaults:
-
scope:
path: ""
type: "my_collection" # a collection in your site, in plural form
values:
layout: "default"
```
In this example, the `layout` is set to `default` inside the
[collection](../collections/) with the name `my_collection`.
### Glob patterns in Front Matter defaults
It is also possible to use glob patterns (currently limited to patterns that contain `*`) when matching defaults. For example, it is possible to set specific layout for each `special-page.html` in any subfolder of `section` folder. {%- include docs_version_badge.html version="3.7.0" -%}
```yaml
collections:
my_collection:
output: true
defaults:
-
scope:
path: "section/*/special-page.html"
values:
layout: "specific-layout"
```
<div class="note warning">
<h5>Globbing and Performance</h5>
<p>
Please note that globbing a path is known to have a negative effect on
performance and is currently not optimized, especially on Windows.
Globbing a path will increase your build times in proportion to the size
of the associated collection directory.
</p>
</div>
### Precedence
Jekyll will apply all of the configuration settings you specify in the `defaults` section of your `_config.yml` file. However, you can choose to override settings from other scope/values pair by specifying a more specific path for the scope.
You can see that in the second to last example above. First, we set the default page layout to `my-site`. Then, using a more specific path, we set the default layout for pages in the `projects/` path to `project`. This can be done with any value that you would set in the page or post front matter.
Finally, if you set defaults in the site configuration by adding a `defaults` section to your `_config.yml` file, you can override those settings in a post or page file. All you need to do is specify the settings in the post or page front matter. For example:
```yaml
# In _config.yml
...
defaults:
-
scope:
path: "projects"
type: "pages"
values:
layout: "project"
author: "Mr. Hyde"
category: "project"
...
```
```yaml
# In projects/foo_project.md
---
author: "John Smith"
layout: "foobar"
---
The post text goes here...
```
The `projects/foo_project.md` would have the `layout` set to `foobar` instead
of `project` and the `author` set to `John Smith` instead of `Mr. Hyde` when
the site is built.
## Default Configuration
Jekyll runs with the following configuration options by default. Alternative
settings for these options can be explicitly specified in the configuration
file or on the command-line.
<div class="note warning">
<h5>There are two unsupported kramdown options</h5>
<p>
Please note that both <code>remove_block_html_tags</code> and
<code>remove_span_html_tags</code> are currently unsupported in Jekyll due
to the fact that they are not included within the kramdown HTML converter.
</p>
</div>
```yaml
# Where things are
source: .
destination: ./_site
collections_dir: .
plugins_dir: _plugins
layouts_dir: _layouts
data_dir: _data
includes_dir: _includes
collections:
posts:
output: true
# Handling Reading
safe: false
include: [".htaccess"]
exclude: ["Gemfile", "Gemfile.lock", "node_modules", "vendor/bundle/", "vendor/cache/", "vendor/gems/", "vendor/ruby/"]
keep_files: [".git", ".svn"]
encoding: "utf-8"
markdown_ext: "markdown,mkdown,mkdn,mkd,md"
strict_front_matter: false
# Filtering Content
show_drafts: null
limit_posts: 0
future: false
unpublished: false
# Plugins
whitelist: []
plugins: []
# Conversion
markdown: kramdown
highlighter: rouge
lsi: false
excerpt_separator: "\n\n"
incremental: false
# Serving
detach: false
port: 4000
host: 127.0.0.1
baseurl: "" # does not include hostname
show_dir_listing: false
# Outputting
permalink: date
paginate_path: /page:num
timezone: null
quiet: false
verbose: false
defaults: []
liquid:
error_mode: warn
strict_filters: false
strict_variables: false
# Markdown Processors
rdiscount:
extensions: []
redcarpet:
extensions: []
kramdown:
auto_ids: true
entity_output: as_char
toc_levels: 1..6
smart_quotes: lsquo,rsquo,ldquo,rdquo
input: GFM
hard_wrap: false
footnote_nr: 1
show_warnings: false
```
## Liquid Options
Liquid's response to errors can be configured by setting `error_mode`. The
options are
- `lax` --- Ignore all errors.
- `warn` --- Output a warning on the console for each error.
- `strict` --- Output an error message and stop the build.
You can also configure Liquid's renderer to catch non-assigned variables and
non-existing filters by setting `strict_variables` and / or `strict_filters`
to `true` respectively. {% include docs_version_badge.html version="3.8.0" %}
Do note that while `error_mode` configures Liquid's parser, the `strict_variables`
and `strict_filters` options configure Liquid's renderer and are consequently,
mutually exclusive.
## Markdown Options
The various Markdown renderers supported by Jekyll sometimes have extra options
available.
### Redcarpet
Redcarpet can be configured by providing an `extensions` sub-setting, whose
value should be an array of strings. Each string should be the name of one of
the `Redcarpet::Markdown` class's extensions; if present in the array, it will
set the corresponding extension to `true`.
Jekyll handles two special Redcarpet extensions:
- `no_fenced_code_blocks` --- By default, Jekyll sets the `fenced_code_blocks`
extension (for delimiting code blocks with triple tildes or triple backticks)
to `true`, probably because GitHub's eager adoption of them is starting to make
them inescapable. Redcarpet's normal `fenced_code_blocks` extension is inert
when used with Jekyll; instead, you can use this inverted version of the
extension for disabling fenced code.
Note that you can also specify a language for highlighting after the first
delimiter:
```ruby
# ...ruby code
```
With both fenced code blocks and highlighter enabled, this will statically
highlight the code; without any syntax highlighter, it will add a
`class="LANGUAGE"` attribute to the `<code>` element, which can be used as a
hint by various JavaScript code highlighting libraries.
- `smart` --- This pseudo-extension turns on SmartyPants, which converts
straight quotes to curly quotes and runs of hyphens to em (`---`) and en (`--`) dashes.
All other extensions retain their usual names from Redcarpet, and no renderer
options aside from `smart` can be specified in Jekyll. [A list of available
extensions can be found in the Redcarpet README file.][redcarpet_extensions]
Make sure you're looking at the README for the right version of
Redcarpet: Jekyll currently uses v3.2.x. The most commonly used
extensions are:
- `tables`
- `no_intra_emphasis`
- `autolink`
[redcarpet_extensions]: https://github.com/vmg/redcarpet/blob/v3.2.2/README.markdown#and-its-like-really-simple-to-use
### Custom Markdown Processors
If you're interested in creating a custom markdown processor, you're in luck! Create a new class in the `Jekyll::Converters::Markdown` namespace:
```ruby
class Jekyll::Converters::Markdown::MyCustomProcessor
def initialize(config)
require 'funky_markdown'
@config = config
rescue LoadError
STDERR.puts 'You are missing a library required for Markdown. Please run:'
STDERR.puts ' $ [sudo] gem install funky_markdown'
raise FatalException.new("Missing dependency: funky_markdown")
end
def convert(content)
::FunkyMarkdown.new(content).convert
end
end
```
Once you've created your class and have it properly set up either as a plugin
in the `_plugins` folder or as a gem, specify it in your `_config.yml`:
```yaml
markdown: MyCustomProcessor
```
## Incremental Regeneration
<div class="note warning">
<h5>Incremental regeneration is still an experimental feature</h5>
<p>
While incremental regeneration will work for the most common cases, it will
not work correctly in every scenario. Please be extremely cautious when
using the feature, and report any problems not listed below by
<a href="https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll/issues/new">opening an issue on GitHub</a>.
</p>
</div>
Incremental regeneration helps shorten build times by only generating documents
and pages that were updated since the previous build. It does this by keeping
track of both file modification times and inter-document dependencies in the
`.jekyll-metadata` file.
Under the current implementation, incremental regeneration will only generate a
document or page if either it, or one of its dependencies, is modified. Currently,
the only types of dependencies tracked are includes (using the
{% raw %}`{% include %}`{% endraw %} tag) and layouts. This means that plain
references to other documents (for example, the common case of iterating over
`site.posts` in a post listings page) will not be detected as a dependency.
To remedy some of these shortfalls, putting `regenerate: true` in the front-matter
of a document will force Jekyll to regenerate it regardless of whether it has been
modified. Note that this will generate the specified document only; references
to other documents' contents will not work since they won't be re-rendered.
Incremental regeneration can be enabled via the `--incremental` flag (`-I` for
short) from the command-line or by setting `incremental: true` in your
configuration file.

View File

@@ -1,88 +0,0 @@
---
title: Default Configuration
permalink: "/docs/configuration/default/"
---
Jekyll runs with the following configuration options by default. Alternative
settings for these options can be explicitly specified in the configuration
file or on the command-line.
```yaml
# Where things are
source : .
destination : ./_site
collections_dir : .
plugins_dir : _plugins
layouts_dir : _layouts
data_dir : _data
includes_dir : _includes
sass:
sass_dir: _sass
collections:
posts:
output : true
# Handling Reading
safe : false
include : [".htaccess"]
exclude : ["Gemfile", "Gemfile.lock", "node_modules", "vendor/bundle/", "vendor/cache/", "vendor/gems/", "vendor/ruby/"]
keep_files : [".git", ".svn"]
encoding : "utf-8"
markdown_ext : "markdown,mkdown,mkdn,mkd,md"
strict_front_matter : false
# Filtering Content
show_drafts : null
limit_posts : 0
future : false
unpublished : false
# Plugins
whitelist : []
plugins : []
# Conversion
markdown : kramdown
highlighter : rouge
lsi : false
excerpt_separator : "\n\n"
incremental : false
# Serving
detach : false
port : 4000
host : 127.0.0.1
baseurl : "" # does not include hostname
show_dir_listing : false
# Outputting
permalink : date
paginate_path : /page:num
timezone : null
quiet : false
verbose : false
defaults : []
liquid:
error_mode : warn
strict_filters : false
strict_variables : false
# Markdown Processors
rdiscount:
extensions : []
redcarpet:
extensions : []
kramdown:
auto_ids : true
entity_output : as_char
toc_levels : 1..6
smart_quotes : lsquo,rsquo,ldquo,rdquo
input : GFM
hard_wrap : false
footnote_nr : 1
show_warnings : false
```

View File

@@ -1,49 +0,0 @@
---
title: Environments
permalink: "/docs/configuration/environments/"
---
In the `build` (or `serve`) arguments, you can specify a Jekyll environment
and value. The build will then apply this value in any conditional statements
in your content.
For example, suppose you set this conditional statement in your code:
{% raw %}
```liquid
{% if jekyll.environment == "production" %}
{% include disqus.html %}
{% endif %}
```
{% endraw %}
When you build your Jekyll site, the content inside the `if` statement won't be
run unless you also specify a `production` environment in the build command,
like this:
```sh
JEKYLL_ENV=production jekyll build
```
Specifying an environment value allows you to make certain content available
only within specific environments.
The default value for `JEKYLL_ENV` is `development`. Therefore if you omit
`JEKYLL_ENV` from the build arguments, the default value will be
`JEKYLL_ENV=development`. Any content inside
{% raw %}`{% if jekyll.environment == "development" %}`{% endraw %} tags will
automatically appear in the build.
Your environment values can be anything you want (not just `development` or
`production`). Some elements you might want to hide in development
environments include Disqus comment forms or Google Analytics. Conversely,
you might want to expose an "Edit me in GitHub" button in a development
environment but not include it in production environments.
By specifying the option in the build command, you avoid having to change
values in your configuration files when moving from one environment to another.
<div class="note info">
<p>
To switch part of your config settings depending on the environment, use the <a href="/docs/configuration/options/#build-command-options">build command option</a>, for example <code>--config _config.yml,_config_development.yml</code>. Settings in later files override settings in earlier files.
</p>
</div>

View File

@@ -1,152 +0,0 @@
---
title: Front Matter Defaults
permalink: "/docs/configuration/front-matter-defaults/"
---
Using [front matter](/docs/front-matter/) is one way that you can specify configuration in the pages and posts for your site. Setting things like a default layout, or customizing the title, or specifying a more precise date/time for the post can all be added to your page or post front matter.
Often times, you will find that you are repeating a lot of configuration options. Setting the same layout in each file, adding the same category - or categories - to a post, etc. You can even add custom variables like author names, which might be the same for the majority of posts on your blog.
Instead of repeating this configuration each time you create a new post or page, Jekyll provides a way to set these defaults in the site configuration. To do this, you can specify site-wide defaults using the `defaults` key in the `_config.yml` file in your project's root directory.
The `defaults` key holds an array of scope/values pairs that define what defaults should be set for a particular file path, and optionally, a file type in that path.
Let's say that you want to add a default layout to all pages and posts in your site. You would add this to your `_config.yml` file:
```yaml
defaults:
-
scope:
path: "" # an empty string here means all files in the project
values:
layout: "default"
```
<div class="note info">
<h5>Stop and rerun `jekyll serve` command.</h5>
<p>
The <code>_config.yml</code> master configuration file contains global configurations
and variable definitions that are read once at execution time. Changes made to <code>_config.yml</code>
during automatic regeneration are not loaded until the next execution.
</p>
<p>
Note <a href="/docs/datafiles">Data Files</a> are included and reloaded during automatic regeneration.
</p>
</div>
Here, we are scoping the `values` to any file that exists in the path `scope`. Since the path is set as an empty string, it will apply to **all files** in your project. You probably don't want to set a layout on every file in your project - like css files, for example - so you can also specify a `type` value under the `scope` key.
```yaml
defaults:
-
scope:
path: "" # an empty string here means all files in the project
type: "posts" # previously `post` in Jekyll 2.2.
values:
layout: "default"
```
Now, this will only set the layout for files where the type is `posts`.
The different types that are available to you are `pages`, `posts`, `drafts` or any collection in your site. While `type` is optional, you must specify a value for `path` when creating a `scope/values` pair.
As mentioned earlier, you can set multiple scope/values pairs for `defaults`.
```yaml
defaults:
-
scope:
path: ""
type: "pages"
values:
layout: "my-site"
-
scope:
path: "projects"
type: "pages" # previously `page` in Jekyll 2.2.
values:
layout: "project" # overrides previous default layout
author: "Mr. Hyde"
```
With these defaults, all pages would use the `my-site` layout. Any html files that exist in the `projects/` folder will use the `project` layout, if it exists. Those files will also have the `page.author` [liquid variable](/docs/variables/) set to `Mr. Hyde`.
```yaml
collections:
my_collection:
output: true
defaults:
-
scope:
path: ""
type: "my_collection" # a collection in your site, in plural form
values:
layout: "default"
```
In this example, the `layout` is set to `default` inside the
[collection](/docs/collections/) with the name `my_collection`.
### Glob patterns in Front Matter defaults
It is also possible to use glob patterns (currently limited to patterns that contain `*`) when matching defaults. For example, it is possible to set specific layout for each `special-page.html` in any subfolder of `section` folder. {%- include docs_version_badge.html version="3.7.0" -%}
```yaml
collections:
my_collection:
output: true
defaults:
-
scope:
path: "section/*/special-page.html"
values:
layout: "specific-layout"
```
<div class="note warning">
<h5>Globbing and Performance</h5>
<p>
Please note that globbing a path is known to have a negative effect on
performance and is currently not optimized, especially on Windows.
Globbing a path will increase your build times in proportion to the size
of the associated collection directory.
</p>
</div>
### Precedence
Jekyll will apply all of the configuration settings you specify in the `defaults` section of your `_config.yml` file. You can choose to override settings from other scope/values pair by specifying a more specific path for the scope.
You can see that in the second to last example above. First, we set the default page layout to `my-site`. Then, using a more specific path, we set the default layout for pages in the `projects/` path to `project`. This can be done with any value that you would set in the page or post front matter.
Finally, if you set defaults in the site configuration by adding a `defaults` section to your `_config.yml` file, you can override those settings in a post or page file. All you need to do is specify the settings in the post or page front matter. For example:
```yaml
# In _config.yml
...
defaults:
-
scope:
path: "projects"
type: "pages"
values:
layout: "project"
author: "Mr. Hyde"
category: "project"
...
```
```yaml
# In projects/foo_project.md
---
author: "John Smith"
layout: "foobar"
---
The post text goes here...
```
The `projects/foo_project.md` would have the `layout` set to `foobar` instead
of `project` and the `author` set to `John Smith` instead of `Mr. Hyde` when
the site is built.

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@@ -1,36 +0,0 @@
---
title: Default Configuration
permalink: "/docs/configuration/incremental-regeneration/"
---
## Incremental Regeneration
<div class="note warning">
<h5>Incremental regeneration is still an experimental feature</h5>
<p>
While incremental regeneration will work for the most common cases, it will
not work correctly in every scenario. Please be extremely cautious when
using the feature, and report any problems not listed below by
<a href="https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll/issues/new">opening an issue on GitHub</a>.
</p>
</div>
Incremental regeneration helps shorten build times by only generating documents
and pages that were updated since the previous build. It does this by keeping
track of both file modification times and inter-document dependencies in the
`.jekyll-metadata` file.
Under the current implementation, incremental regeneration will only generate a
document or page if either it, or one of its dependencies, is modified. Currently,
the only types of dependencies tracked are includes (using the
{% raw %}`{% include %}`{% endraw %} tag) and layouts. This means that plain
references to other documents (for example, the common case of iterating over
`site.posts` in a post listings page) will not be detected as a dependency.
To remedy some of these shortfalls, putting `regenerate: true` in the front-matter
of a document will force Jekyll to regenerate it regardless of whether it has been
modified. Note that this will generate the specified document only; references
to other documents' contents will not work since they won't be re-rendered.
Incremental regeneration can be enabled via the `--incremental` flag (`-I` for
short) from the command-line or by setting `incremental: true` in your
configuration file.

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@@ -1,18 +0,0 @@
---
title: Liquid Options
permalink: "/docs/configuration/liquid/"
---
Liquid's response to errors can be configured by setting `error_mode`. The
options are
- `lax` --- Ignore all errors.
- `warn` --- Output a warning on the console for each error.
- `strict` --- Output an error message and stop the build.
You can also configure Liquid's renderer to catch non-assigned variables and
non-existing filters by setting `strict_variables` and / or `strict_filters`
to `true` respectively. {% include docs_version_badge.html version="3.8.0" %}
Do note that while `error_mode` configures Liquid's parser, the `strict_variables`
and `strict_filters` options configure Liquid's renderer and are consequently,
mutually exclusive.

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@@ -1,130 +0,0 @@
---
title: Markdown Options
permalink: "/docs/configuration/markdown/"
---
The various Markdown renderers supported by Jekyll sometimes have extra options
available.
### Kramdown
Kramdown is the default Markdown renderer for Jekyll. Below is a list of the
currently supported options:
* **auto_id_prefix** - Prefix used for automatically generated header IDs
* **auto_id_stripping** - Strip all formatting from header text for automatic ID generation
* **auto_ids** - Use automatic header ID generation
* **coderay_bold_every** - Defines how often a line number should be made bold
* **coderay_css** - Defines how the highlighted code gets styled
* **coderay_default_lang** - Sets the default language for highlighting code blocks
* **coderay_line_number_start** - The start value for the line numbers
* **coderay_line_numbers** - Defines how and if line numbers should be shown
* **coderay_tab_width** - The tab width used in highlighted code
* **coderay_wrap** - Defines how the highlighted code should be wrapped
* **enable_coderay** - Use coderay for syntax highlighting
* **entity_output** - Defines how entities are output
* **footnote_backlink** - Defines the text that should be used for the footnote backlinks
* **footnote_backlink_inline** - Specifies whether the footnote backlink should always be inline
* **footnote_nr** - The number of the first footnote
* **gfm_quirks** - Enables a set of GFM specific quirks
* **hard_wrap** - Interprets line breaks literally
* **header_offset** - Sets the output offset for headers
* **html_to_native** - Convert HTML elements to native elements
* **line_width** - Defines the line width to be used when outputting a document
* **link_defs** - Pre-defines link definitions
* **math_engine** - Set the math engine
* **math_engine_opts** - Set the math engine options
* **parse_block_html** - Process kramdown syntax in block HTML tags
* **parse_span_html** - Process kramdown syntax in span HTML tags
* **smart_quotes** - Defines the HTML entity names or code points for smart quote output
* **syntax_highlighter** - Set the syntax highlighter
* **syntax_highlighter_opts** - Set the syntax highlighter options
* **toc_levels** - Defines the levels that are used for the table of contents
* **transliterated_header_ids** - Transliterate the header text before generating the ID
* **typographic_symbols** - Defines a mapping from typographical symbol to output characters
<div class="note warning">
<h5>There are two unsupported kramdown options</h5>
<p>
Please note that both <code>remove_block_html_tags</code> and
<code>remove_span_html_tags</code> are currently unsupported in Jekyll due
to the fact that they are not included within the kramdown HTML converter.
</p>
</div>
For more details about these options have a look at the [Kramdown configuration documentation](https://kramdown.gettalong.org/options.html).
### CommonMark
[CommonMark](https://commonmark.org/) is a rationalized version of Markdown syntax, implemented in C and thus faster than default Kramdown implemented in Ruby. It [slightly differs](https://github.com/commonmark/CommonMark#differences-from-original-markdown) from original Markdown and does not support all the syntax elements implemented in Kramdown, like [Block Inline Attribute Lists](https://kramdown.gettalong.org/syntax.html#block-ials).
It comes in two flavors: basic CommonMark with [jekyll-commonmark](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll-commonmark) plugin and [GitHub Flavored Markdown supported by GitHub Pages](https://github.com/github/jekyll-commonmark-ghpages).
### Redcarpet
Redcarpet can be configured by providing an `extensions` sub-setting, whose
value should be an array of strings. Each string should be the name of one of
the `Redcarpet::Markdown` class's extensions; if present in the array, it will
set the corresponding extension to `true`.
Jekyll handles two special Redcarpet extensions:
- `no_fenced_code_blocks` --- By default, Jekyll sets the `fenced_code_blocks`
extension (for delimiting code blocks with triple tildes or triple backticks)
to `true`, probably because GitHub's eager adoption of them is starting to make
them inescapable. Redcarpet's normal `fenced_code_blocks` extension is inert
when used with Jekyll; instead, you can use this inverted version of the
extension for disabling fenced code.
Note that you can also specify a language for highlighting after the first
delimiter:
```ruby
# ...ruby code
```
With both fenced code blocks and highlighter enabled, this will statically
highlight the code; without any syntax highlighter, it will add a
`class="LANGUAGE"` attribute to the `<code>` element, which can be used as a
hint by various JavaScript code highlighting libraries.
- `smart` --- This pseudo-extension turns on SmartyPants, which converts
straight quotes to curly quotes and runs of hyphens to em (`---`) and en (`--`) dashes.
All other extensions retain their usual names from Redcarpet, and no renderer
options aside from `smart` can be specified in Jekyll. [A list of available
extensions can be found in the Redcarpet README file.](https://github.com/vmg/redcarpet/blob/v3.2.2/README.markdown#and-its-like-really-simple-to-use)
Make sure you're looking at the README for the right version of
Redcarpet: Jekyll currently uses v3.2.x. The most commonly used
extensions are:
- `tables`
- `no_intra_emphasis`
- `autolink`
### Custom Markdown Processors
If you're interested in creating a custom markdown processor, you're in luck! Create a new class in the `Jekyll::Converters::Markdown` namespace:
```ruby
class Jekyll::Converters::Markdown::MyCustomProcessor
def initialize(config)
require 'funky_markdown'
@config = config
rescue LoadError
STDERR.puts 'You are missing a library required for Markdown. Please run:'
STDERR.puts ' $ [sudo] gem install funky_markdown'
raise FatalException.new("Missing dependency: funky_markdown")
end
def convert(content)
::FunkyMarkdown.new(content).convert
end
end
```
Once you've created your class and have it properly set up either as a plugin
in the `_plugins` folder or as a gem, specify it in your `_config.yml`:
```yaml
markdown: MyCustomProcessor
```

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@@ -1,419 +0,0 @@
---
title: Configuration Options
permalink: "/docs/configuration/options/"
---
The tables below list the available settings for Jekyll, and the various <code
class="option">options</code> (specified in the configuration file) and <code
class="flag">flags</code> (specified on the command-line) that control them.
### Global Configuration
<div class="mobile-side-scroller">
<table>
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Setting</th>
<th>
<span class="option">Options</span> and <span class="flag">Flags</span>
</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Site Source</strong></p>
<p class="description">Change the directory where Jekyll will read files</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">source: DIR</code></p>
<p><code class="flag">-s, --source DIR</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Site Destination</strong></p>
<p class="description">Change the directory where Jekyll will write files</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">destination: DIR</code></p>
<p><code class="flag">-d, --destination DIR</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Safe</strong></p>
<p class="description">Disable <a href="/docs/plugins/">custom plugins, and ignore symbolic links</a>.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">safe: BOOL</code></p>
<p><code class="flag">--safe</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Exclude</strong></p>
<p class="description">
Exclude directories and/or files from the
conversion. These exclusions are relative to the site's
source directory and cannot be outside the source directory.
</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">exclude: [DIR, FILE, ...]</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Include</strong></p>
<p class="description">
Force inclusion of directories and/or files in the conversion.
<code>.htaccess</code> is a good example since dotfiles are excluded
by default.
</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">include: [DIR, FILE, ...]</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Keep files</strong></p>
<p class="description">
When clobbering the site destination, keep the selected files.
Useful for files that are not generated by jekyll; e.g. files or
assets that are generated by your build tool.
The paths are relative to the <code>destination</code>.
</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">keep_files: [DIR, FILE, ...]</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Time Zone</strong></p>
<p class="description">
Set the time zone for site generation. This sets the <code>TZ</code>
environment variable, which Ruby uses to handle time and date
creation and manipulation. Any entry from the
<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tz_database">IANA Time Zone
Database</a> is valid, e.g. <code>America/New_York</code>. A list of all
available values can be found <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tz_database_time_zones">
here</a>. When serving on a local machine, the default time zone is set by your operating system. But when served on a remote host/server, the default time zone depends on the server's setting or location.
</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">timezone: TIMEZONE</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Encoding</strong></p>
<p class="description">
Set the encoding of files by name (only available for Ruby
1.9 or later).
The default value is <code>utf-8</code> starting in 2.0.0,
and <code>nil</code> before 2.0.0, which will yield the Ruby
default of <code>ASCII-8BIT</code>.
Available encodings can be shown by the
command <code>ruby -e 'puts Encoding::list.join("\n")'</code>.
</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">encoding: ENCODING</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p class='name'><strong>Defaults</strong></p>
<p class='description'>
Set defaults for <a href="/docs/front-matter/" title="front matter">front matter</a>
variables.
</p>
</td>
<td class='align-center'>
<p>see <a href="/docs/configuration/front-matter-defaults/" title="details">below</a></p>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
<div class="note warning">
<h5>Destination folders are cleaned on site builds</h5>
<p>
The contents of <code>&lt;destination&gt;</code> are automatically
cleaned, by default, when the site is built. Files or folders that are not
created by your site will be removed. Some files could be retained
by specifying them within the <code>&lt;keep_files&gt;</code> configuration directive.
</p>
<p>
Do not use an important location for <code>&lt;destination&gt;</code>; instead, use it as
a staging area and copy files from there to your web server.
</p>
</div>
### Build Command Options
<div class="mobile-side-scroller">
<table>
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Setting</th>
<th><span class="option">Options</span> and <span class="flag">Flags</span></th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Regeneration</strong></p>
<p class="description">Enable auto-regeneration of the site when files are modified.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="flag">-w, --[no-]watch</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Configuration</strong></p>
<p class="description">Specify config files instead of using <code>_config.yml</code> automatically. Settings in later files override settings in earlier files.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="flag">--config FILE1[,FILE2,...]</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Drafts</strong></p>
<p class="description">Process and render draft posts.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">show_drafts: BOOL</code></p>
<p><code class="flag">--drafts</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Environment</strong></p>
<p class="description">Use a specific environment value in the build.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="flag">JEKYLL_ENV=production</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Future</strong></p>
<p class="description">Publish posts or collection documents with a future date.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">future: BOOL</code></p>
<p><code class="flag">--future</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Unpublished</strong></p>
<p class="description">Render posts that were marked as unpublished.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">unpublished: BOOL</code></p>
<p><code class="flag">--unpublished</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>LSI</strong></p>
<p class="description">Produce an index for related posts. Requires the <a href="http://www.classifier-reborn.com/">classifier-reborn</a> plugin.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">lsi: BOOL</code></p>
<p><code class="flag">--lsi</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Limit Posts</strong></p>
<p class="description">Limit the number of posts to parse and publish.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">limit_posts: NUM</code></p>
<p><code class="flag">--limit_posts NUM</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Force polling</strong></p>
<p class="description">Force watch to use polling.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="flag">--force_polling</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Verbose output</strong></p>
<p class="description">Print verbose output.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="flag">-V, --verbose</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Silence Output</strong></p>
<p class="description">Silence the normal output from Jekyll
during a build</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="flag">-q, --quiet</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Incremental build</strong></p>
<p class="description">
Enable the experimental incremental build feature. Incremental build only
re-builds posts and pages that have changed, resulting in significant performance
improvements for large sites, but may also break site generation in certain
cases.
</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">incremental: BOOL</code></p>
<p><code class="flag">-I, --incremental</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Liquid profiler</strong></p>
<p class="description">
Generate a Liquid rendering profile to help you identify performance bottlenecks.
</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">profile: BOOL</code></p>
<p><code class="flag">--profile</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Strict Front Matter</strong></p>
<p class="description">
Cause a build to fail if there is a YAML syntax error in a page's front matter.
</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">strict_front_matter: BOOL</code></p>
<p><code class="flag">--strict_front_matter</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
### Serve Command Options
In addition to the options below, the `serve` sub-command can accept any of the options
for the `build` sub-command, which are then applied to the site build which occurs right
before your site is served.
<div class="mobile-side-scroller">
<table>
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Setting</th>
<th><span class="option">Options</span> and <span class="flag">Flags</span></th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Local Server Port</strong></p>
<p class="description">Listen on the given port.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">port: PORT</code></p>
<p><code class="flag">--port PORT</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Local Server Hostname</strong></p>
<p class="description">Listen at the given hostname.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">host: HOSTNAME</code></p>
<p><code class="flag">--host HOSTNAME</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Base URL</strong></p>
<p class="description">Serve the website from the given base URL.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">baseurl: URL</code></p>
<p><code class="flag">--baseurl URL</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Live Reload</strong></p>
<p class="description">Reload a page automatically on the browser when its content is edited.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">livereload: true</code></p>
<p><code class="flag">--livereload</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Detach</strong></p>
<p class="description">Detach the server from the terminal.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="option">detach: BOOL</code></p>
<p><code class="flag">-B, --detach</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>Skips the initial site build</strong></p>
<p class="description">Skips the initial site build which occurs before the server is started.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="flag">--skip-initial-build</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>X.509 (SSL) Private Key</strong></p>
<p class="description">SSL Private Key, stored or symlinked in the site source.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="flag">--ssl-key</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr class="setting">
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>X.509 (SSL) Certificate</strong></p>
<p class="description">SSL Public certificate, stored or symlinked in the site source.</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
<p><code class="flag">--ssl-cert</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
<div class="note warning">
<h5>Do not use tabs in configuration files</h5>
<p>
This will either lead to parsing errors, or Jekyll will revert to the
default settings. Use spaces instead.
</p>
</div>

View File

@@ -1,20 +0,0 @@
---
title: WEBrick Options
permalink: "/docs/configuration/webrick/"
---
You can provide custom headers for your site by adding them to `_config.yml`
```yaml
# File: _config.yml
webrick:
headers:
My-Header: My-Value
My-Other-Header: My-Other-Value
```
### Defaults
Jekyll provides by default `Content-Type` and `Cache-Control` response
headers: one dynamic in order to specify the nature of the data being served,
the other static in order to disable caching so that you don't have to fight
with Chrome's aggressive caching when you are in development mode.

View File

@@ -21,6 +21,8 @@ title: "Buddy"
Whenever you make a push to the selected branch, the Jekyll action runs `jekyll build` in an isolated [Jekyll Docker image][jekyll-docker-image]. The output is generated to the `/filesystem` directory, and can be further deployed to FTP/SFTP and IaaS services. You can add your own commands, install additional packages, attach services, and run Selenium tests, as well as add other actions down the pipeline, eg. a Slack notification or an SSH script that will restart your server.
![Jekyll Build](https://buddy.works/data/blog/_images/buddyworks-jekyll-small.png)
[jekyll-docker-image]: https://hub.docker.com/r/jekyll/jekyll/
## 3. Using YAML for configuration

View File

@@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ Building, testing, and deploying your Jekyll-generated website can quickly be do
To start building your project on CircleCI, all you need to do is 'follow' your project from CircleCI's website:
1. Visit the 'Add Projects' page
1. Visit the 'Add Projects' page: <https://circleci.com/add-projects>
1. From the GitHub or Bitbucket tab on the left, choose a user or organization.
1. Find your project in the list and click 'Build project' on the right.
1. The first build will start on its own. You can start telling CircleCI how to build your project by creating a [circle.yml][3] file in the root of your repository.
@@ -34,11 +34,11 @@ gem 'jekyll'
gem 'html-proofer'
```
CircleCI detects when `Gemfile` is present and will automatically run `bundle install` for you in the `dependencies` phase.
CircleCI detects when `Gemfile` is present is will automatically run `bundle install` for you in the `dependencies` phase.
## 3. Testing
The most basic test that can be run is seeing if `jekyll build` actually works. This is a blocker, a dependency if you will, for other tests you might run on the generate site. So we'll run Jekyll, via Bundler, in the `dependencies` phase.
The most basic test that can be run is simply seeing if `jekyll build` actually works. This is a blocker, a dependency if you will, for other tests you might run on the generate site. So we'll run Jekyll, via Bundler, in the `dependencies` phase.
```yaml
dependencies:
@@ -61,7 +61,7 @@ test:
## Complete Example circle.yml File
When you put it all together, here's an example of what that `circle.yml` file could look like in v1:
When you put it all together, here's an example of what that `circle.yml` file could look like:
```yaml
machine:
@@ -83,75 +83,6 @@ deployment:
- rsync -va --delete ./_site username@my-website:/var/html
```
for CircleCI v2, a Docker-based system which new projects will follow, set the `S3_BUCKET_NAME` environment variable (an example of the required config file is shown below).
```yaml
defaults: &defaults
working_directory: ~/repo
version: 2
jobs:
build:
<<: *defaults
docker:
- image: circleci/ruby:2.5
environment:
BUNDLE_PATH: ~/repo/vendor/bundle
steps:
- checkout
- restore_cache:
keys:
- rubygems-v1-{% raw %}{{ checksum "Gemfile.lock" }}{% endraw %}
- rubygems-v1-fallback
- run:
name: Bundle Install
command: bundle check || bundle install
- save_cache:
key: rubygems-v1-{% raw %}{{ checksum "Gemfile.lock" }}{% endraw %}
paths:
- vendor/bundle
- run:
name: Jekyll build
command: bundle exec jekyll build
- run:
name: HTMLProofer tests
command: |
bundle exec htmlproofer ./_site \
--allow-hash-href \
--check-favicon \
--check-html \
--disable-external
- persist_to_workspace:
root: ./
paths:
- _site
deploy:
<<: *defaults
docker:
- image: circleci/python:3.6.3
environment:
S3_BUCKET_NAME: <<YOUR BUCKET NAME HERE>>
steps:
- attach_workspace:
at: ./
- run:
name: Install AWS CLI
command: pip install awscli --upgrade --user
- run:
name: Upload to s3
command: ~/.local/bin/aws s3 sync ./_site s3://$S3_BUCKET_NAME/ --delete --acl public-read
workflows:
version: 2
test-deploy:
jobs:
- build
- deploy:
requires:
- build
filters:
branches:
only: master
```
## Questions?
This entire guide is open-source. Go ahead and [edit it][7] if you have a fix or [ask for help][8] if you run into trouble and need some help. CircleCI also has an [online community][9] for help.

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,10 @@
---
title: Continuous Integration
permalink: /docs/continuous-integration/
---
Continuous Integration (CI) enables you to publish your Jekyll generated website with confidence by automating the quality assurance and deployment processes. You can quickly get started using CI with one of the providers below:
* [Travis CI](travis-ci)
* [CircleCI](circleci)
* [Buddy](buddyworks)

View File

@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
title: "Travis CI"
---
You can test your website build against one or more versions of Ruby.
You can easily test your website build against one or more versions of Ruby.
The following guide will show you how to set up a free build environment on
[Travis][travis], with [GitHub][github] integration for pull requests.
@@ -11,7 +11,7 @@ The following guide will show you how to set up a free build environment on
## 1. Enabling Travis and GitHub
To enable Travis builds for your GitHub repository:
Enabling Travis builds for your GitHub repository is pretty simple:
1. Go to your profile on travis-ci.org: https://travis-ci.org/profile/username
2. Find the repository for which you're interested in enabling builds.
@@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ To enable Travis builds for your GitHub repository:
## 2. The Test Script
The simplest test script runs `jekyll build` and ensures that Jekyll
The simplest test script simply runs `jekyll build` and ensures that Jekyll
doesn't fail to build the site. It doesn't check the resulting site, but it
does ensure things are built properly.
@@ -76,7 +76,7 @@ with Ruby and requires RubyGems to install, we use the Ruby language build
environment. Below is a sample `.travis.yml` file, followed by
an explanation of each line.
**Note:** You will need a Gemfile as well, [Travis will automatically install](https://docs.travis-ci.com/user/languages/ruby/#Dependency-Management) the dependencies based on the referenced gems. Here is an example `Gemfile` with two referenced gems, "jekyll" and "html-proofer":
**Note:** You will need a Gemfile as well, [Travis will automatically install](https://docs.travis-ci.com/user/languages/ruby/#Dependency-Management) the dependencies based on the referenced gems:
```ruby
source "https://rubygems.org"
@@ -90,7 +90,7 @@ Your `.travis.yml` file should look like this:
```yaml
language: ruby
rvm:
- 2.4.1
- 2.3.3
before_script:
- chmod +x ./script/cibuild # or do this locally and commit
@@ -109,18 +109,7 @@ env:
global:
- NOKOGIRI_USE_SYSTEM_LIBRARIES=true # speeds up installation of html-proofer
addons:
apt:
packages:
- libcurl4-openssl-dev
sudo: false # route your build to the container-based infrastructure for a faster build
cache: bundler # caching bundler gem packages will speed up build
# Optional: disable email notifications about the outcome of your builds
notifications:
email: false
```
Ok, now for an explanation of each line:
@@ -134,13 +123,12 @@ access to Bundler, RubyGems, and a Ruby runtime.
```yaml
rvm:
- 2.4.1
- 2.3.3
```
RVM is a popular Ruby Version Manager (like rbenv, chruby, etc). This
directive tells Travis the Ruby version to use when running your test
script. Use a [version which is pre-installed on the Travis build docker][5]
image to speed up the build.
script.
```yaml
before_script:
@@ -222,23 +210,6 @@ does need `sudo` access, modify the line to `sudo: required`.
sudo: false
```
To speed up the build, you should cache the gem packages created by `bundler`.
Travis has a pre-defined [cache strategy for this tool][6] which should have
all the default configs to do exactly that.
```yaml
cache: bundler
```
Optionally, if you are not interested in the build email notifications you
can disable them with this configuration. Travis supports a wide array of
notification services, you may find [another one more useful (e.g. slack)][7].
```yaml
notifications:
email: false
```
### Troubleshooting
**Travis error:** *"You are trying to install in deployment mode after changing
@@ -256,6 +227,3 @@ fix or [ask for help][4] if you run into trouble and need some help.
[3]: https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll/edit/master/docs/_docs/continuous-integration/travis-ci.md
[4]: https://jekyllrb.com/help/
[5]: https://docs.travis-ci.com/user/languages/ruby/#Specifying-Ruby-versions-and-implementations
[6]: https://docs.travis-ci.com/user/caching/#Caching-directories-(Bundler%2C-dependencies)
[7]: https://docs.travis-ci.com/user/notifications/

View File

@@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ Hi there! Interested in contributing to Jekyll? We'd love your help. Jekyll is a
## Where to get help or report a problem
See the [support guidelines](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/support/)
See [the support guidelines](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/support/)
## Ways to contribute
@@ -16,9 +16,9 @@ Whether you're a developer, a designer, or just a Jekyll devotee, there are lots
* [Install Jekyll on your computer](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/installation/) and kick the tires. Does it work? Does it do what you'd expect? If not, [open an issue](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll/issues/new) and let us know.
* Comment on some of the project's [open issues](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll/issues). Have you experienced the same problem? Know a work around? Do you have a suggestion for how the feature could be better?
* Read through the [documentation](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/home/), and click the "improve this page" button, any time you see something confusing, or have a suggestion for something that could be improved.
* Browse through the [Jekyll discussion forum](https://talk.jekyllrb.com/), and lend a hand answering questions. There's a good chance you've already experienced what another user is experiencing.
* Find an [open issue](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll/issues) (especially [those labeled `help-wanted`](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+label%3Ahelp-wanted)), and submit a proposed fix. If it's your first pull request, we promise we won't bite, and are glad to answer any questions.
* Read through [the documentation](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/home/), and click the "improve this page" button, any time you see something confusing, or have a suggestion for something that could be improved.
* Browse through [the Jekyll discussion forum](https://talk.jekyllrb.com/), and lend a hand answering questions. There's a good chance you've already experienced what another user is experiencing.
* Find [an open issue](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll/issues) (especially [those labeled `help-wanted`](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+label%3Ahelp-wanted)), and submit a proposed fix. If it's your first pull request, we promise we won't bite, and are glad to answer any questions.
* Help evaluate [open pull requests](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll/pulls), by testing the changes locally and reviewing what's proposed.
## Submitting a pull request
@@ -29,7 +29,7 @@ Whether you're a developer, a designer, or just a Jekyll devotee, there are lots
* The more information, the better. Make judicious use of the pull request body. Describe what changes were made, why you made them, and what impact they will have for users.
* If this is your first pull request, it may help to [understand GitHub Flow](https://guides.github.com/introduction/flow/).
* Pull requests are easy and fun. If this is your first pull request, it may help to [understand GitHub Flow](https://guides.github.com/introduction/flow/).
* If you're submitting a code contribution, be sure to read the [code contributions](#code-contributions) section below.
@@ -53,7 +53,7 @@ That's it! You'll be automatically subscribed to receive updates as others revie
2. Clone the repository locally `git clone https://github.com/<you-username>/jekyll`.
3. Create a new, descriptively named branch to contain your change ( `git checkout -b my-awesome-feature` ).
4. Hack away, add tests. Not necessarily in that order.
5. Make sure everything still passes by running `script/cibuild` (see the [tests section](#running-tests-locally) below)
5. Make sure everything still passes by running `script/cibuild` (see [the tests section](#running-tests-locally) below)
6. Push the branch up ( `git push origin my-awesome-feature` ).
7. Create a pull request by visiting `https://github.com/<your-username>/jekyll` and following the instructions at the top of the screen.
@@ -93,7 +93,7 @@ If you want to add your plugin to the [list of plugins](https://jekyllrb.com/doc
## Code Contributions
Interested in submitting a pull request? Awesome. Read on. There's a few common gotchas that we'd love to help you avoid.
Interesting in submitting a pull request? Awesome. Read on. There's a few common gotchas that we'd love to help you avoid.
### Tests and documentation
@@ -119,8 +119,6 @@ If your contribution changes any Jekyll behavior, make sure to update the docume
Jekyll's methods. It also provides you with helpful methods to quickly create a
site or configuration. [Feel free to check it out!](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll/blob/master/script/console)
* Previously, we've used the WIP Probot app to help contributors determine whether their pull request is ready for review. Please use a [draft pull request](https://help.github.com/en/articles/about-pull-requests#draft-pull-requests) instead. When you're ready, [mark the pull request as ready for review](https://help.github.com/en/articles/changing-the-stage-of-a-pull-request)
## Running tests locally
### Test Dependencies

View File

@@ -7,8 +7,9 @@ In addition to the [built-in variables](../variables/) available from Jekyll,
you can specify your own custom data that can be accessed via the [Liquid
templating system](https://wiki.github.com/shopify/liquid/liquid-for-designers).
Jekyll supports loading data from [YAML](http://yaml.org/), [JSON](http://www.json.org/), [CSV](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comma-separated_values), and [TSV](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tab-separated_values) files located in the `_data` directory.
Note that CSV and TSV files *must* contain a header row.
Jekyll supports loading data from [YAML](http://yaml.org/), [JSON](http://www.json.org/),
and [CSV](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comma-separated_values) files located in the `_data` directory.
Note that CSV files *must* contain a header row.
This powerful feature allows you to avoid repetition in your templates and to
set site specific options without changing `_config.yml`.
@@ -17,8 +18,9 @@ Plugins/themes can also leverage Data Files to set configuration variables.
## The Data Folder
The `_data` folder is where you can store additional data for Jekyll to use when
generating your site. These files must be YAML, JSON, or CSV files (using either
As explained on the [directory structure](../structure/) page, the `_data`
folder is where you can store additional data for Jekyll to use when generating
your site. These files must be YAML, JSON, or CSV files (using either
the `.yml`, `.yaml`, `.json` or `.csv` extension), and they will be
accessible via `site.data`.
@@ -68,7 +70,10 @@ You can now render the list of members in a template:
```
{% endraw %}
## Subfolders
{: .note .info }
If your Jekyll site has a lot of pages, such as with documentation websites, see the detailed examples in [how to build robust navigation for your site]({% link _tutorials/navigation.md %}).
## Example: Organizations
Data files can also be placed in sub-folders of the `_data` folder. Each folder
level will be added to a variable's namespace. The example below shows how
@@ -129,7 +134,7 @@ dave:
twitter: DavidSilvaSmith
```
The author can then be specified as a page variable in a post's front matter:
The author can then be specified as a page variable in a post's frontmatter:
{% raw %}
```liquid

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,216 @@
---
title: Deployment methods
permalink: /docs/deployment-methods/
---
Sites built using Jekyll can be deployed in a large number of ways due to the static nature of the generated output. A few of the most common deployment techniques are described below.
<div class="note">
<h5>ProTip™: Use GitHub Pages for zero-hassle Jekyll hosting</h5>
<p>GitHub Pages are powered by Jekyll behind the scenes, so if youre looking for a zero-hassle, zero-cost solution, GitHub Pages are a great way to <a href="../github-pages/">host your Jekyll-powered website for free</a>.</p>
</div>
## Netlify
Netlify provides Global CDN, Continuous Deployment, one click HTTPS and [much more](https://www.netlify.com/features/), providing developers the most robust toolset available for modern web projects, without added complexity. Netlify supports custom plugins for Jekyll and has a free plan for open source projects.
Read this [Jekyll step-by-step guide](https://www.netlify.com/blog/2015/10/28/a-step-by-step-guide-jekyll-3.0-on-netlify/) to setup your Jekyll site on Netlify.
## Aerobatic
[Aerobatic](https://www.aerobatic.com) has custom domains, global CDN distribution, basic auth, CORS proxying, and a growing list of plugins all included.
Automating the deployment of a Jekyll site is simple. See their [Jekyll docs](https://www.aerobatic.com/docs/static-site-generators/#jekyll) for more details. Your built `_site` folder is deployed to their highly-available, globally distributed hosting service.
## Kickster
Use [Kickster](http://kickster.nielsenramon.com/) for easy (automated) deploys to GitHub Pages when using unsupported plugins on GitHub Pages.
Kickster provides a basic Jekyll project setup packed with web best practises and useful optimization tools increasing your overall project quality. Kickster ships with automated and worry-free deployment scripts for GitHub Pages.
Setting up Kickster is very easy, just install the gem and you are good to go. More documentation can here found [here](https://github.com/nielsenramon/kickster#kickster). If you do not want to use the gem or start a new project you can just copy paste the deployment scripts for [Travis CI](https://github.com/nielsenramon/kickster/tree/master/snippets/travis) or [Circle CI](https://github.com/nielsenramon/kickster#automated-deployment-with-circle-ci).
## Web hosting providers (FTP)
Just about any traditional web hosting provider will let you upload files to their servers over FTP. To upload a Jekyll site to a web host using FTP, simply run the `jekyll build` command and copy the contents of the generated `_site` folder to the root folder of your hosting account. This is most likely to be the `httpdocs` or `public_html` folder on most hosting providers.
## Self-managed web server
If you have direct access to the deployment web server, the process is essentially the same, except you might have other methods available to you (such as `scp`, or even direct filesystem access) for transferring the files. Just remember to make sure the contents of the generated `_site` folder get placed in the appropriate web root directory for your web server.
## Automated methods
There are also a number of ways to easily automate the deployment of a Jekyll site. If youve got another method that isnt listed below, wed love it if you [contributed](../contributing/) so that everyone else can benefit too.
### Git post-update hook
If you store your Jekyll site in [Git](https://git-scm.com/) (you are using
version control, right?), its pretty easy to automate the
deployment process by setting up a post-update hook in your Git
repository, [like
this](http://web.archive.org/web/20091223025644/http://www.taknado.com/en/2009/03/26/deploying-a-jekyll-generated-site/).
### Git post-receive hook
To have a remote server handle the deploy for you every time you push changes using Git, you can create a user account which has all the public keys that are authorized to deploy in its `authorized_keys` file. With that in place, setting up the post-receive hook is done as follows:
```sh
laptop$ ssh deployer@example.com
server$ mkdir myrepo.git
server$ cd myrepo.git
server$ git --bare init
server$ cp hooks/post-receive.sample hooks/post-receive
server$ mkdir /var/www/myrepo
```
Next, add the following lines to hooks/post-receive and be sure Jekyll is
installed on the server:
```bash
GIT_REPO=$HOME/myrepo.git
TMP_GIT_CLONE=$HOME/tmp/myrepo
GEMFILE=$TMP_GIT_CLONE/Gemfile
PUBLIC_WWW=/var/www/myrepo
git clone $GIT_REPO $TMP_GIT_CLONE
BUNDLE_GEMFILE=$GEMFILE bundle install
BUNDLE_GEMFILE=$GEMFILE bundle exec jekyll build -s $TMP_GIT_CLONE -d $PUBLIC_WWW
rm -Rf $TMP_GIT_CLONE
exit
```
Finally, run the following command on any users laptop that needs to be able to
deploy using this hook:
```sh
laptops$ git remote add deploy deployer@example.com:~/myrepo.git
```
Deploying is now as easy as telling nginx or Apache to look at
`/var/www/myrepo` and running the following:
```sh
laptops$ git push deploy master
```
### Static Publisher
[Static Publisher](https://github.com/static-publisher/static-publisher) is another automated deployment option with a server listening for webhook posts, though it's not tied to GitHub specifically. It has a one-click deploy to Heroku, it can watch multiple projects from one server, it has an easy to user admin interface and can publish to either S3 or to a git repository (e.g. gh-pages).
### Rake
Another way to deploy your Jekyll site is to use [Rake](https://github.com/ruby/rake), [HighLine](https://github.com/JEG2/highline), and
[Net::SSH](https://github.com/net-ssh/net-ssh). A more complex example of deploying Jekyll with Rake that deals with multiple branches can be found in [Git Ready](https://github.com/gitready/gitready/blob/cdfbc4ec5321ff8d18c3ce936e9c749dbbc4f190/Rakefile).
### scp
Once youve generated the `_site` directory, you can easily scp its content using a
`tasks/deploy` shell script similar to [this deploy script][]. Youd obviously
need to change the values to reflect your sites details. There is even [a
matching TextMate command][] that will help you run this script.
[this deploy script]: https://github.com/henrik/henrik.nyh.se/blob/master/script/deploy
[a matching TextMate command]: https://gist.github.com/henrik/214959
### rsync
Once youve generated the `_site` directory, you can easily rsync its content using a `tasks/deploy` shell script similar to [this deploy script here](https://github.com/vitalyrepin/vrepinblog/blob/master/transfer.sh). Youd obviously need to change the values to reflect your sites details.
Certificate-based authorization is another way to simplify the publishing
process. It makes sense to restrict rsync access only to the directory which it is supposed to sync. This can be done using rrsync.
#### Step 1: Install rrsync to your home folder (server-side)
If it is not already installed by your host, you can do it yourself:
- [Download rrsync](https://ftp.samba.org/pub/unpacked/rsync/support/rrsync)
- Place it in the `bin` subdirectory of your home folder (`~/bin`)
- Make it executable (`chmod +x`)
#### Step 2: Set up certificate-based SSH access (server side)
This [process](https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/SSH#Passwordless_Authentication) is
described in several places online. What is different from the typical approach
is to put the restriction to certificate-based authorization in
`~/.ssh/authorized_keys`. Then, launch `rrsync` and supply
it with the folder it shall have read-write access to:
```sh
command="$HOME/bin/rrsync <folder>",no-agent-forwarding,no-port-forwarding,no-pty,no-user-rc,no-X11-forwarding ssh-rsa <cert>
```
`<folder>` is the path to your site. E.g., `~/public_html/you.org/blog-html/`.
#### Step 3: Rsync (client-side)
Add the `deploy` script to the site source folder:
```sh
#!/bin/sh
rsync -crvz --rsh='ssh -p2222' --delete-after --delete-excluded <folder> <user>@<site>:
```
Command line parameters are:
- `--rsh=ssh -p2222` &mdash; The port for SSH access. It is required if
your host uses a different port than the default (e.g, HostGator)
- `<folder>` &mdash; The name of the local output folder (defaults to `_site`)
- `<user>` &mdash; The username for your hosting account
- `<site>` &mdash; Your hosting server
Using this setup, you might run the following command:
```sh
rsync -crvz --rsh='ssh -p2222' --delete-after --delete-excluded _site/ hostuser@example.org:
```
Don't forget the column `:` after server name!
#### Step 4 (Optional): Exclude the transfer script from being copied to the output folder.
This step is recommended if you use these instructions to deploy your site. If
you put the `deploy` script in the root folder of your project, Jekyll will
copy it to the output folder. This behavior can be changed in `_config.yml`.
Just add the following line:
```yaml
# Do not copy these files to the output directory
exclude: ["deploy"]
```
Alternatively, you can use an `rsync-exclude.txt` file to control which files will be transferred to your server.
#### Done!
Now it's possible to publish your website simply by running the `deploy`
script. If your SSH certificate is [passphrase-protected](https://martin.kleppmann.com/2013/05/24/improving-security-of-ssh-private-keys.html), you will be asked to enter it when the
script executes.
## Rack-Jekyll
[Rack-Jekyll](https://github.com/adaoraul/rack-jekyll/) is an easy way to deploy your site on any Rack server such as Amazon EC2, Slicehost, Heroku, and so forth. It also can run with [shotgun](https://github.com/rtomayko/shotgun/), [rackup](https://github.com/rack/rack), [mongrel](https://github.com/mongrel/mongrel), [unicorn](https://github.com/defunkt/unicorn/), and [others](https://github.com/adaoraul/rack-jekyll#readme).
Read [this post](http://andycroll.com/ruby/serving-a-jekyll-blog-using-heroku/) on how to deploy to Heroku using Rack-Jekyll.
## Jekyll-Admin for Rails
If you want to maintain Jekyll inside your existing Rails app, [Jekyll-Admin](https://github.com/zkarpinski/Jekyll-Admin) contains drop in code to make this possible. See Jekyll-Admins [README](https://github.com/zkarpinski/Jekyll-Admin/blob/master/README) for more details.
## Amazon S3
If you want to host your site in Amazon S3, you can do so by
using the [s3_website](https://github.com/laurilehmijoki/s3_website)
application. It will push your site to Amazon S3 where it can be served like
any web server,
dynamically scaling to almost unlimited traffic. This approach has the
benefit of being about the cheapest hosting option available for
low-volume blogs as you only pay for what you use.
## OpenShift
If you'd like to deploy your site to an OpenShift gear, there's [a cartridge
for that](https://github.com/openshift-quickstart/jekyll-openshift).

View File

@@ -1,11 +0,0 @@
---
title: Deployment
permalink: /docs/deployment/
redirect_from: "/docs/deployment-methods/index.html"
---
Sites built using Jekyll can be deployed in a large number of ways due to the static nature of the generated output. Here's some of the most common ways:
* [Manually](/docs/deployment/manual/)
* [Automated](/docs/deployment/automated/)
* [Third Party](/docs/deployment/third-party/)

View File

@@ -1,69 +0,0 @@
---
title: Automated Deployment
permalink: /docs/deployment/automated/
---
There are a number of ways to easily automate the deployment of a Jekyll site.
## Continuous Integration Service
One of the easiest ways to set up an automated deployment flow is by using a
CI.
These services run a script when there's a commit on your Git repository.
You might want this script to build the site, run tests over the output then deploy it to the
service of your choice.
We have guides for the following providers:
* [Travis CI](/docs/continuous-integration/travis-ci/)
* [CircleCI](/docs/continuous-integration/circleci/)
* [Buddy](/docs/continuous-integration/buddyworks/)
## Git post-receive hook
To have a remote server handle the deploy for you every time you push changes using Git, you can create a user account which has all the public keys that are authorized to deploy in its `authorized_keys` file. With that in place, setting up the post-receive hook is done as follows:
```sh
laptop$ ssh deployer@example.com
server$ mkdir myrepo.git
server$ cd myrepo.git
server$ git --bare init
server$ cp hooks/post-receive.sample hooks/post-receive
server$ mkdir /var/www/myrepo
```
Next, add the following lines to hooks/post-receive and be sure Jekyll is
installed on the server:
```bash
#!/bin/bash -l
# Install Ruby Gems to ~/gems
export GEM_HOME=$HOME/gems
export PATH=$GEM_HOME/bin:$PATH
GIT_REPO=$HOME/myrepo.git
TMP_GIT_CLONE=$HOME/tmp/myrepo
GEMFILE=$TMP_GIT_CLONE/Gemfile
PUBLIC_WWW=/var/www/myrepo
git clone $GIT_REPO $TMP_GIT_CLONE
BUNDLE_GEMFILE=$GEMFILE bundle install
BUNDLE_GEMFILE=$GEMFILE bundle exec jekyll build -s $TMP_GIT_CLONE -d $PUBLIC_WWW
rm -Rf $TMP_GIT_CLONE
exit
```
Finally, run the following command on any users laptop that needs to be able to
deploy using this hook:
```sh
laptops$ git remote add deploy deployer@example.com:~/myrepo.git
```
Deploying is now as easy as telling nginx or Apache to look at
`/var/www/myrepo` and running the following:
```sh
laptops$ git push deploy master
```

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@@ -1,37 +0,0 @@
---
title: Manual Deployment
permalink: /docs/deployment/manual/
---
Jekyll generates your static site to the `_site` directory by default. You can
transfer the contents of this directory to almost any hosting provider to get
your site live. Here are some manual ways of achieving this:
## rsync
Rsync is similar to scp except it can be faster as it will only send changed
parts of files as opposed to the entire file. You can learn more about using
rsync in the [Digital Ocean tutorial](https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-use-rsync-to-sync-local-and-remote-directories-on-a-vps).
## Amazon S3
If you want to host your site in Amazon S3, you can do so by
using the [s3_website](https://github.com/laurilehmijoki/s3_website)
application. It will push your site to Amazon S3 where it can be served like
any web server,
dynamically scaling to almost unlimited traffic. This approach has the
benefit of being about the cheapest hosting option available for
low-volume blogs as you only pay for what you use.
## FTP
Most traditional web hosting provider let you upload files to their servers over FTP. To upload a Jekyll site to a web host using FTP, run the `jekyll build` command and copy the contents of the generated `_site` folder to the root folder of your hosting account. This is most likely to be the `httpdocs` or `public_html` folder on most hosting providers.
## scp
If you have direct access to the deployment web server, the process is essentially the same, except you might have other methods available to you (such as `scp`, or even direct filesystem access) for transferring the files. Remember to make sure the contents of the generated `_site` folder get placed in the appropriate web root directory for your web server.
## Rack-Jekyll
[Rack-Jekyll](https://github.com/adaoraul/rack-jekyll/) allows you to deploy your site on any Rack server such as Amazon EC2, Slicehost, Heroku, and so forth. It also can run with [shotgun](https://github.com/rtomayko/shotgun/), [rackup](https://github.com/rack/rack), [mongrel](https://github.com/mongrel/mongrel), [unicorn](https://github.com/defunkt/unicorn/), and [others](https://github.com/adaoraul/rack-jekyll#readme).

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@@ -1,45 +0,0 @@
---
title: 3rd Party
permalink: /docs/deployment/third-party/
---
## Aerobatic
[Aerobatic](https://www.aerobatic.com) has custom domains, global CDN distribution, basic auth, CORS proxying, and a growing list of plugins all included.
Automating the deployment of a Jekyll site is simple. See their [Jekyll docs](https://www.aerobatic.com/docs/static-site-generators/#jekyll) for more details. Your built `_site` folder is deployed to their highly-available, globally distributed hosting service.
## AWS Amplify
The [AWS Amplify Console](https://console.amplify.aws) provides continuous deployment and hosting for modern web apps (single page apps and static site generators). Continuous deployment allows developers to deploy updates to their web app on every code commit to their Git repository. Hosting includes features such as globally available CDNs, 1-click custom domain setup + HTTPS, feature branch deployments, redirects, trailing slashes, and password protection.
Read this [step-by-step guide](https://medium.com/@FizzyInTheHall/build-and-publish-a-jekyll-powered-blog-easily-with-aws-amplify-529852042ab6) to deploy and host your Jekyll site on AWS Amplify.
## CloudCannon
[CloudCannon](https://cloudcannon.com) has everything you need to build, host
and update Jekyll websites. Take advantage of our global CDN, automated SSL,
continuous deployment and [more](https://cloudcannon.com/features/).
## GitHub Pages
Sites on GitHub Pages are powered by Jekyll behind the scenes, so if youre looking for a zero-hassle, zero-cost solution, GitHub Pages are a great way to [host your Jekyll-powered website for free](/docs/github-pages/).
## Kickster
Use [Kickster](http://kickster.nielsenramon.com/) for automated deploys to GitHub Pages when using unsupported plugins on GitHub Pages.
Kickster provides a basic Jekyll project setup packed with web best practises and useful optimization tools increasing your overall project quality. Kickster ships with automated and worry-free deployment scripts for GitHub Pages.
Install the Kickster gem and you are good to go. More documentation can here found [here](https://github.com/nielsenramon/kickster#kickster). If you do not want to use the gem or start a new project you can just copy paste the deployment scripts for [Travis CI](https://github.com/nielsenramon/kickster/tree/master/snippets/travis) or [Circle CI](https://github.com/nielsenramon/kickster#automated-deployment-with-circle-ci).
## Netlify
Netlify provides Global CDN, Continuous Deployment, one click HTTPS and [much more](https://www.netlify.com/features/), providing developers the most robust toolset available for modern web projects, without added complexity. Netlify supports custom plugins for Jekyll and has a free plan for open source projects.
Read this [Jekyll step-by-step guide](https://www.netlify.com/blog/2015/10/28/a-step-by-step-guide-jekyll-3.0-on-netlify/) to setup your Jekyll site on Netlify.
## Static Publisher
[Static Publisher](https://github.com/static-publisher/static-publisher) is another automated deployment option with a server listening for webhook posts, though it's not tied to GitHub specifically. It has a one-click deploy to Heroku, it can watch multiple projects from one server, it has an easy to user admin interface and can publish to either S3 or to a git repository (e.g. gh-pages).

19
docs/_docs/drafts.md Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,19 @@
---
title: Working with drafts
permalink: /docs/drafts/
---
Drafts are posts without a date. They're posts you're still working on and
don't want to publish yet. To get up and running with drafts, create a
`_drafts` folder in your site's root (as described in the [site structure](/docs/structure/) section) and create your
first draft:
```text
|-- _drafts/
| |-- a-draft-post.md
```
To preview your site with drafts, simply run `jekyll serve` or `jekyll build`
with the `--drafts` switch. Each will be assigned the value modification time
of the draft file for its date, and thus you will see currently edited drafts
as the latest posts.

31
docs/_docs/extras.md Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,31 @@
---
title: Extras
permalink: /docs/extras/
---
There are a number of (optional) extra features that Jekyll supports that you
may want to install, depending on how you plan to use Jekyll.
## Web Highlights and Commenting
Register your site with [txtpen](https://txtpen.com). Then append
```html
<script src="https://txtpen.com/embed.js?site=<your site name>"></script>
```
to your template files in `/_layout` folder.
## Math Support
Kramdown comes with optional support for LaTeX to PNG rendering via [MathJax](https://www.mathjax.org) within math blocks. See the Kramdown documentation on [math blocks](http://kramdown.gettalong.org/syntax.html#math-blocks) and [math support](http://kramdown.gettalong.org/converter/html.html#math-support) for more details. MathJax requires you to include JavaScript or CSS to render the LaTeX, e.g.
```html
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/mathjax/2.7.0/MathJax.js?config=TeX-AMS-MML_HTMLorMML" type="text/javascript"></script>
```
For more information about getting started, check out [this excellent blog post](http://gastonsanchez.com/visually-enforced/opinion/2014/02/16/Mathjax-with-jekyll/).
## Alternative Markdown Processors
See the Markdown section on the [configuration page](/docs/configuration/#markdown-options) for instructions on how to use and configure alternative Markdown processors, as well as how to create [custom processors](/docs/configuration/#custom-markdown-processors).

View File

@@ -1,13 +1,13 @@
---
title: Front Matter
permalink: /docs/front-matter/
redirect_from: /docs/frontmatter/index.html
permalink: /docs/frontmatter/
---
Any file that contains a [YAML](https://yaml.org/) front matter block will be
processed by Jekyll as a special file. The front matter must be the first thing
in the file and must take the form of valid YAML set between triple-dashed
lines. Here is a basic example:
The front matter is where Jekyll starts to get really cool. Any file that
contains a [YAML](http://yaml.org/) front matter block will be processed by
Jekyll as a special file. The front matter must be the first thing in the file
and must take the form of valid YAML set between triple-dashed lines. Here is a
basic example:
```yaml
---
@@ -28,14 +28,14 @@ relies on.
If you use UTF-8 encoding, make sure that no <code>BOM</code> header
characters exist in your files or very, very bad things will happen to
Jekyll. This is especially relevant if youre running
<a href="/docs/installation/windows/">Jekyll on Windows</a>.
<a href="../windows/">Jekyll on Windows</a>.
</p>
</div>
<div class="note">
<h5>ProTip™: Front Matter Variables Are Optional</h5>
<p>
If you want to use <a href="/docs/variables/">Liquid tags and variables</a>
If you want to use <a href="../variables/">Liquid tags and variables</a>
but dont need anything in your front matter, just leave it empty! The set
of triple-dashed lines with nothing in between will still get Jekyll to
process your file. (This is useful for things like CSS and RSS feeds!)
@@ -71,14 +71,14 @@ front matter of a page or post.
<ul>
<li>
Using <code>null</code> will produce a file without using a layout
file. This is overridden if the file is a post/document and has a
layout defined in the <a href="/docs/configuration/front-matter-defaults/">
front matter defaults</a>.
file. However this is overridden if the file is a post/document and has a
layout defined in the <a href="../configuration/#front-matter-defaults">
frontmatter defaults</a>.
</li>
<li>
Starting from version 3.5.0, using <code>none</code> in a post/document will
produce a file without using a layout file regardless of front matter defaults.
Using <code>none</code> in a page will cause Jekyll to attempt to
produce a file without using a layout file regardless of frontmatter defaults.
Using <code>none</code> in a page, however, will cause Jekyll to attempt to
use a layout named "none".
</li>
</ul>
@@ -116,26 +116,28 @@ front matter of a page or post.
<div class="note">
<h5>ProTip™: Render Posts Marked As Unpublished</h5>
<p>
To preview unpublished pages, run `jekyll serve` or `jekyll build`
with the `--unpublished` switch. Jekyll also has a handy <a href="/docs/posts/#drafts">drafts</a>
To preview unpublished pages, simply run `jekyll serve` or `jekyll build`
with the `--unpublished` switch. Jekyll also has a handy <a href="../drafts/">drafts</a>
feature tailored specifically for blog posts.
</p>
</div>
## Custom Variables
You can also set your own front matter variables you can access in Liquid. For
instance, if you set a variable called `food`, you can use that in your page:
Any variables in the front matter that are not predefined are mixed into the
data that is sent to the Liquid templating engine during the conversion. For
instance, if you set a title, you can use that in your layout to set the page
title:
{% raw %}
```liquid
---
food: Pizza
---
<h1>{{ page.food }}</h1>
<!DOCTYPE HTML>
<html>
<head>
<title>{% raw %}{{ page.title }}{% endraw %}</title>
</head>
<body>
```
{% endraw %}
## Predefined Variables for Posts
@@ -204,7 +206,7 @@ These are available out-of-the-box to be used in the front matter for a post.
<h5>ProTip™: Don't repeat yourself</h5>
<p>
If you don't want to repeat your frequently used front matter variables
over and over, define <a href="/docs/configuration/front-matter-defaults/" title="Front Matter defaults">defaults</a>
over and over, just define <a href="../configuration/#front-matter-defaults" title="Front Matter defaults">defaults</a>
for them and only override them where necessary (or not at all). This works
both for predefined and custom variables.
</p>

View File

@@ -11,7 +11,7 @@ website for free.
Your site is automatically generated by GitHub Pages when you push your source
files. Note that GitHub Pages works equally well for regular HTML content,
simply because Jekyll treats files without front matter as static assets.
simply because Jekyll treats files without YAML front matter as static assets.
So if you only need to push generated HTML, you're good to go without any
further setup.
@@ -56,9 +56,9 @@ Be sure to run `bundle update` often.
### Project Page URL Structure
Sometimes it's nice to preview your Jekyll site before you push your `gh-pages`
branch to GitHub. The subdirectory-like URL structure GitHub uses for
branch to GitHub. However, the subdirectory-like URL structure GitHub uses for
Project Pages complicates the proper resolution of URLs. In order to assure your
site builds properly, use the handy [URL filters](/docs/liquid/filters/):
site builds properly, use the handy [URL filters](../templates/#filters):
{% raw %}
```liquid
@@ -122,7 +122,7 @@ to see more detailed examples.
<h5>Source files must be in the root directory</h5>
<p>
GitHub Pages <a href="https://help.github.com/articles/troubleshooting-github-pages-build-failures#source-setting">overrides</a>
the <a href="/docs/configuration/options/">“Site Source”</a>
the <a href="/docs/configuration/#global-configuration">“Site Source”</a>
configuration value, so if you locate your files anywhere other than the
root directory, your site may not build correctly.
</p>
@@ -135,6 +135,6 @@ to see more detailed examples.
While Windows is not officially supported, it is possible
to install the <code>github-pages</code> gem on Windows.
Special instructions can be found on our
<a href="/docs/installation/windows/">Windows-specific docs page</a>.
<a href="../windows/#installation">Windows-specific docs page</a>.
</p>
</div>

View File

@@ -4,42 +4,13 @@ permalink: "/docs/history/"
note: This file is autogenerated. Edit /History.markdown instead.
---
## 3.8.6 / 2019-07-02
{: #v3-8-6}
### Bug Fixes
{: #bug-fixes-v3-8-6}
- Update log output for an invalid theme directory ([#7734]({{ site.repository }}/issues/7734))
- Memoize `SiteDrop#documents` to reduce allocations ([#7722]({{ site.repository }}/issues/7722))
- Excerpt handling of custom and intermediate tags ([#7467]({{ site.repository }}/issues/7467))
- Escape valid special chars in a site's path name ([#7573]({{ site.repository }}/issues/7573))
- Revert memoizing `Site#docs_to_write` and refactor `#documents` ([#7689]({{ site.repository }}/issues/7689))
- Fix broken `include_relative` usage in excerpt ([#7690]({{ site.repository }}/issues/7690))
- Install platform-specific gems as required (3c06609406)
### Security Fixes
{: #security-fixes-v3-8-6}
- Theme gems: ensure directories aren't symlinks ([#7424]({{ site.repository }}/issues/7424))
## 3.8.5 / 2018-11-04
{: #v3-8-5}
### Bug Fixes
{: #bug-fixes-v3-8-5}
- Re-implement handling Liquid blocks in excerpts ([#7250]({{ site.repository }}/issues/7250))
## 3.8.4 / 2018-09-18
{: #v3-8-4}
### Bug Fixes
{: #bug-fixes-v3-8-4}
- 3.8.x: security: fix `include` bypass of `EntryFilter#filter` symlink check ([#7228]({{ site.repository }}/issues/7228))
- security: fix `include` bypass of `EntryFilter#filter` symlink check ([#7228]({{ site.repository }}/issues/7228))
## 3.8.3 / 2018-06-05
@@ -97,10 +68,10 @@ note: This file is autogenerated. Edit /History.markdown instead.
- Minimize array allocations in the `where` filter ([#6860]({{ site.repository }}/issues/6860))
- Bump JRuby ([#6878]({{ site.repository }}/issues/6878))
- Assert existence of &lt;collection&gt;.files ([#6907]({{ site.repository }}/issues/6907))
- Bump RuboCop to 0.54.x ([#6915]({{ site.repository }}/issues/6915))
- Bump Rubocop to 0.54.x ([#6915]({{ site.repository }}/issues/6915))
- Regenerate unconditionally unless its an incremental build ([#6917]({{ site.repository }}/issues/6917))
- Centralize require statements ([#6910]({{ site.repository }}/issues/6910))
- Bump to RuboCop 0.55 ([#6929]({{ site.repository }}/issues/6929))
- Bump to Rubocop 0.55 ([#6929]({{ site.repository }}/issues/6929))
- Refactor private method `HighlightBlock#parse_options` ([#6822]({{ site.repository }}/issues/6822))
### Minor Enhancements
@@ -175,15 +146,6 @@ note: This file is autogenerated. Edit /History.markdown instead.
- Allow front matter defaults to be applied properly to documents gathered under custom `collections_dir` ([#6885]({{ site.repository }}/issues/6885))
## 3.7.4 / 2018-09-07
{: #v3-7-4}
### Bug Fixes
{: #bug-fixes-v3-7-4}
- Security: fix `include` bypass of EntryFilter#filter symlink check ([#7224]({{ site.repository }}/issues/7224))
## 3.7.3 / 2018-02-25
{: #v3-7-3}
@@ -365,15 +327,6 @@ note: This file is autogenerated. Edit /History.markdown instead.
- Fix permalink icon markup in news-item layout ([#6639]({{ site.repository }}/issues/6639))
## 3.6.3 / 2018-09-18
{: #v3-6-3}
### Bug Fixes
{: #bug-fixes-v3-6-3}
- 3.6.x: security: fix `include` bypass of `EntryFilter#filter` symlink check ([#7229]({{ site.repository }}/issues/7229))
## 3.6.2 / 2017-10-21
{: #v3-6-2}
@@ -456,7 +409,7 @@ note: This file is autogenerated. Edit /History.markdown instead.
- add SUPPORT file for GitHub ([#6324]({{ site.repository }}/issues/6324))
- Rename CODE_OF_CONDUCT to show in banner ([#6325]({{ site.repository }}/issues/6325))
- Docs : illustrate page.id for a collection&#39;s document ([#6329]({{ site.repository }}/issues/6329))
- Docs: post&#39;s date can be overriden in front matter ([#6334]({{ site.repository }}/issues/6334))
- Docs: post&#39;s date can be overriden in YAML front matter ([#6334]({{ site.repository }}/issues/6334))
- Docs: `site.url` behavior on development and production environments ([#6270]({{ site.repository }}/issues/6270))
- Fix typo in site.url section of variables.md :-[ ([#6337]({{ site.repository }}/issues/6337))
- Docs: updates ([#6343]({{ site.repository }}/issues/6343))
@@ -1178,7 +1131,7 @@ note: This file is autogenerated. Edit /History.markdown instead.
- Fix typo on Chocolatey name in Windows documentation ([#4686]({{ site.repository }}/issues/4686))
- Use the correct URL, Fixes [#4698]({{ site.repository }}/issues/4698) ([#4699]({{ site.repository }}/issues/4699))
- Add jekyll-paspagon plugin ([#4700]({{ site.repository }}/issues/4700))
- Bold-italicize note in assets documentation about needing front matter ([#4706]({{ site.repository }}/issues/4706))
- Bold-italicize note in assets documentation about needing yaml front matter ([#4706]({{ site.repository }}/issues/4706))
- Highlight the `script/` calls in the Contributing documentation ([#4712]({{ site.repository }}/issues/4712))
- Add Hawkins to the list of third-party plugins ([#4755]({{ site.repository }}/issues/4755))
- Fix a typo in pagination doc ([#4763]({{ site.repository }}/issues/4763))
@@ -1371,7 +1324,7 @@ note: This file is autogenerated. Edit /History.markdown instead.
- Drop: fix hash setter precedence ([#4312]({{ site.repository }}/issues/4312))
- utils: `has_yaml_header?` should accept files with extraneous spaces ([#4290]({{ site.repository }}/issues/4290))
- Escape html from site.title and page.title in site template ([#4307]({{ site.repository }}/issues/4307))
- Allow custom file extensions if defined in `permalink` front matter ([#4314]({{ site.repository }}/issues/4314))
- Allow custom file extensions if defined in `permalink` YAML front matter ([#4314]({{ site.repository }}/issues/4314))
- Fix deep_merge_hashes! handling of drops and hashes ([#4359]({{ site.repository }}/issues/4359))
- Page should respect output extension of its permalink ([#4373]({{ site.repository }}/issues/4373))
- Disable auto-regeneration when running server detached ([#4376]({{ site.repository }}/issues/4376))
@@ -1595,7 +1548,7 @@ note: This file is autogenerated. Edit /History.markdown instead.
- Internal: trigger hooks by owner symbol ([#3871]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3871))
- Update MIME types from mime-db ([#3933]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3933))
- Add header to site template `_config.yml` for clarity & direction ([#3997]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3997))
- Site template: add timezone offset to post date front matter ([#4001]({{ site.repository }}/issues/4001))
- Site template: add timezone offset to post date frontmatter ([#4001]({{ site.repository }}/issues/4001))
- Make a constant for the regex to find hidden files ([#4032]({{ site.repository }}/issues/4032))
- Site template: refactor github & twitter icons into includes ([#4049]({{ site.repository }}/issues/4049))
- Site template: add background to Kramdown Rouge-ified backtick code blocks ([#4053]({{ site.repository }}/issues/4053))
@@ -1613,7 +1566,7 @@ note: This file is autogenerated. Edit /History.markdown instead.
- Fix nav items alignment when on multiple rows ([#3264]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3264))
- Highlight: Only Strip Newlines/Carriage Returns, not Spaces ([#3278]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3278))
- Find variables in front matter defaults by searching with relative file path. ([#2774]({{ site.repository }}/issues/2774))
- Allow variables (e.g `:categories`) in front matter permalinks ([#3320]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3320))
- Allow variables (e.g `:categories`) in YAML front matter permalinks ([#3320]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3320))
- Handle nil URL placeholders in permalinks ([#3325]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3325))
- Template: Fix nav items alignment when in "burger" mode ([#3329]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3329))
- Template: Remove `!important` from nav SCSS introduced in [#3329]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3329) ([#3375]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3375))
@@ -1630,7 +1583,7 @@ note: This file is autogenerated. Edit /History.markdown instead.
- Add WOFF2 font MIME type to Jekyll server MIME types ([#3647]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3647))
- Be smarter about extracting the extname in `StaticFile` ([#3632]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3632))
- Process metadata for all dependencies ([#3608]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3608))
- Show error message if the front matter on a page/post is invalid. ([#3643]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3643))
- Show error message if the YAML front matter on a page/post is invalid. ([#3643]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3643))
- Upgrade redcarpet to 3.2 (Security fix: OSVDB-120415) ([#3652]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3652))
- Create #mock_expects that goes directly to RSpec Mocks. ([#3658]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3658))
- Open `.jekyll-metadata` in binary mode to read binary Marshal data ([#3713]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3713))
@@ -1710,7 +1663,7 @@ note: This file is autogenerated. Edit /History.markdown instead.
- Add a Resources link to tutorial on building dynamic navbars ([#3185]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3185))
- Semantic structure improvements to the post and page layouts ([#3251]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3251))
- Add new AsciiDoc plugin to list of third-party plugins. ([#3277]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3277))
- Specify that all transformable collection documents must contain front matter ([#3271]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3271))
- Specify that all transformable collection documents must contain YAML front matter ([#3271]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3271))
- Assorted accessibility fixes ([#3256]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3256))
- Update configuration docs to mention `keep_files` for `destination` ([#3288]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3288), [#3296]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3296))
- Break when we successfully generate nav link to save CPU cycles. ([#3291]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3291))
@@ -1738,7 +1691,7 @@ note: This file is autogenerated. Edit /History.markdown instead.
- Add a link on all the docs pages to "Improve this page". ([#3510]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3510))
- Add jekyll-auto-image generator to the list of third-party plugins ([#3489]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3489))
- Replace link to the proposed `picture` element spec ([#3530]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3530))
- Add front matter date formatting information ([#3469]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3469))
- Add frontmatter date formatting information ([#3469]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3469))
- Improve consistency and clarity of plugins options note ([#3546]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3546))
- Add permalink warning to pagination docs ([#3551]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3551))
- Fix grammar in Collections docs API stability warning ([#3560]({{ site.repository }}/issues/3560))
@@ -2310,7 +2263,7 @@ note: This file is autogenerated. Edit /History.markdown instead.
- Clean up the `<head>` in the site template ([#2186]({{ site.repository }}/issues/2186))
- Permit YAML blocks to end with three dots to better conform with the YAML spec ([#2110]({{ site.repository }}/issues/2110))
- Use `File.exist?` instead of deprecated `File.exists?` ([#2214]({{ site.repository }}/issues/2214))
- Require newline after start of front matter header ([#2211]({{ site.repository }}/issues/2211))
- Require newline after start of YAML Front Matter header ([#2211]({{ site.repository }}/issues/2211))
- Add the ability for pages to be marked as `published: false` ([#1492]({{ site.repository }}/issues/1492))
- Add `Jekyll::LiquidExtensions` with `.lookup_variable` method for easy looking up of variable values in a Liquid context. ([#2253]({{ site.repository }}/issues/2253))
- Remove literal lang name from class ([#2292]({{ site.repository }}/issues/2292))
@@ -3078,7 +3031,7 @@ note: This file is autogenerated. Edit /History.markdown instead.
- Bullet-proof `limit_posts` option ([#1004]({{ site.repository }}/issues/1004))
- Read in YAML as UTF-8 to accept non-ASCII chars ([#836]({{ site.repository }}/issues/836))
- Fix the CLI option `--plugins` to actually accept dirs and files ([#993]({{ site.repository }}/issues/993))
- Allow 'excerpt' in front matter to override the extracted excerpt ([#946]({{ site.repository }}/issues/946))
- Allow 'excerpt' in YAML front matter to override the extracted excerpt ([#946]({{ site.repository }}/issues/946))
- Fix cascade problem with site.baseurl, site.port and site.host. ([#935]({{ site.repository }}/issues/935))
- Filter out directories with valid post names ([#875]({{ site.repository }}/issues/875))
- Fix symlinked static files not being correctly built in unsafe mode ([#909]({{ site.repository }}/issues/909))
@@ -3090,7 +3043,7 @@ note: This file is autogenerated. Edit /History.markdown instead.
- Patch for multibyte URI problem with `jekyll serve` ([#723]({{ site.repository }}/issues/723))
- Order plugin execution by priority ([#864]({{ site.repository }}/issues/864))
- Fixed Page#dir and Page#url for edge cases ([#536]({{ site.repository }}/issues/536))
- Fix broken `post_url` with posts with a time in their front matter ([#831]({{ site.repository }}/issues/831))
- Fix broken `post_url` with posts with a time in their YAML front matter ([#831]({{ site.repository }}/issues/831))
- Look for plugins under the source directory ([#654]({{ site.repository }}/issues/654))
- Tumblr Migrator: finds `_posts` dir correctly, fixes truncation of long post names ([#775]({{ site.repository }}/issues/775))
- Force Categories to be Strings ([#767]({{ site.repository }}/issues/767))
@@ -3321,7 +3274,7 @@ note: This file is autogenerated. Edit /History.markdown instead.
- Bug Fixes
- Require redcloth >= 4.2.1 in tests ([#92]({{ site.repository }}/issues/92))
- Don't break on triple dashes in front matter ([#93]({{ site.repository }}/issues/93))
- Don't break on triple dashes in yaml front matter ([#93]({{ site.repository }}/issues/93))
### Minor Enhancements
{: #minor-enhancements-v0-5-6}
@@ -3362,7 +3315,7 @@ note: This file is autogenerated. Edit /History.markdown instead.
- Added --paginate option to the executable along with a paginator object for the payload (@calavera)
- Upgraded RedCloth to 4.2.1, which makes `<notextile>` tags work once again.
- Configuration options set in config.yml are now available through the site payload (@vilcans)
- Posts can now have an empty front matter or none at all (@ bahuvrihi)
- Posts can now have an empty YAML front matter or none at all (@ bahuvrihi)
- Bug Fixes
- Fixing Ruby 1.9 issue that requires `#to_s` on the err object (@Chrononaut)
- Fixes for pagination and ordering posts on the same day (@ujh)
@@ -3370,7 +3323,7 @@ note: This file is autogenerated. Edit /History.markdown instead.
- Index.html file should always have index.html permalink (@eugenebolshakov)
- Added trailing slash to pretty permalink style so Apache is happy (@eugenebolshakov)
- Bad markdown processor in config fails sooner and with better message (@ gcnovus)
- Allow CRLFs in front matter (@juretta)
- Allow CRLFs in yaml front matter (@juretta)
- Added Date#xmlschema for Ruby versions < 1.9
@@ -3465,7 +3418,7 @@ note: This file is autogenerated. Edit /History.markdown instead.
- Added post categories based on directories containing `_posts` (@mreid)
- Added post topics based on directories underneath `_posts`
- Added new date filter that shows the full month name (@mreid)
- Merge Post's front matter into its to_liquid payload (@remi)
- Merge Post's YAML front matter into its to_liquid payload (@remi)
- Restrict includes to regular files underneath `_includes`
- Bug Fixes
- Change YAML delimiter matcher so as to not chew up 2nd level markdown headers (@mreid)

View File

@@ -48,9 +48,7 @@ You could then reference that variable in your include:
{% raw %}
```liquid
{% if page.my_variable %}
{% include {{ page.my_variable }} %}
{% endif %}
{% include {{ page.my_variable }} %}
```
{% endraw %}
@@ -88,7 +86,6 @@ For example, suppose you have a special image syntax with complex formatting, an
<a href="http://jekyllrb.com">
<img src="logo.png" style="max-width: 200px;"
alt="Jekyll logo" />
</a>
<figcaption>This is the Jekyll logo</figcaption>
</figure>
```
@@ -101,7 +98,6 @@ You could templatize this content in your include and make each value available
<a href="{{ include.url }}">
<img src="{{ include.file }}" style="max-width: {{ include.max-width }};"
alt="{{ include.alt }}"/>
</a>
<figcaption>{{ include.caption }}</figcaption>
</figure>
```
@@ -129,7 +125,7 @@ The result is the original HTML code shown earlier.
To safeguard situations where users don't supply a value for the parameter, you can use [Liquid's default filter](https://shopify.github.io/liquid/filters/default/).
Overall, you can create includes that act as templates for a variety of uses &mdash; inserting audio or video clips, alerts, special formatting, and more. Note that you should avoid using too many includes, as this will slow down the build time of your site. For example, don't use includes every time you insert an image. (The above technique shows a use case for special images.)
Overall, you can create includes that act as templates for a variety of uses &mdash; inserting audio or video clips, alerts, special formatting, and more. However, note that you should avoid using too many includes, as this will slow down the build time of your site. For example, don't use includes every time you insert an image. (The above technique shows a use case for special images.)
### Passing parameter variables to includes
@@ -154,3 +150,41 @@ Then pass this captured variable into the parameter for the include. Omit the qu
{% include note.html content=download_note %}
```
{% endraw %}
### Passing references to YAML files as parameter values
Instead of passing string variables to the include, you can pass a reference to a YAML data file stored in the `_data` folder.
Here's an example. In the `_data` folder, suppose you have a YAML file called `profiles.yml`. Its content looks like this:
```yaml
- name: John Doe
login_age: old
image: johndoe.jpg
- name: Jane Doe
login_age: new
image: janedoe.jpg
```
In the `_includes` folder, assume you have a file called `spotlight.html` with this code:
{% raw %}
```liquid
{% for person in include.participants %}
{% if person.login_age == "new" %}
{{ person.name }}
{% endif %}
{% endfor %}
```
{% endraw %}
Now when you insert the `spotlight.html` include file, you can submit the YAML file as a parameter:
{% raw %}
```liquid
{% include spotlight.html participants=site.data.profiles %}
```
{% endraw %}
In this instance, `site.data.profiles` gets inserted in place of {% raw %}`include.participants`{% endraw %} in the include file, and the Liquid logic processes. The result will be `Jane Doe`.

View File

@@ -1,38 +1,41 @@
---
title: Quickstart
permalink: /docs/
redirect_from:
- /docs/home/
- /docs/quickstart/
- /docs/extras/
title: Welcome
permalink: /docs/home/
redirect_from: /docs/index.html
---
Jekyll is a simple, extendable, static site generator. You give it text written
in your favorite markup language and it churns through layouts to create a
static website. Throughout that process you can tweak how you want the site URLs
to look, what data gets displayed in the layout, and more.
## Instructions
This site aims to be a comprehensive guide to Jekyll. Well cover topics such as getting your site up and running, creating and managing content, customizing your build, and deploying.
1. Install a full [Ruby development environment](/docs/installation/)
2. Install Jekyll and [bundler](/docs/ruby-101/#bundler) [gems](/docs/ruby-101/#gems)
```
gem install jekyll bundler
```
3. Create a new Jekyll site at `./myblog`
```
jekyll new myblog
```
4. Change into your new directory
```
cd myblog
```
5. Build the site and make it available on a local server
```
bundle exec jekyll serve
```
6. Now browse to [http://localhost:4000](http://localhost:4000){:target="_blank"}
## What is Jekyll, exactly?
If you encounter any unexpected errors during the above, please refer to the
[troubleshooting](/docs/troubleshooting/#configuration-problems) page or the
already-mentioned [requirements](/docs/installation/#requirements) page, as
you might be missing development headers or other prerequisites.
Jekyll is a simple, blog-aware, static site generator.
You create your content as text files ([Markdown](https://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/)), and organize them into folders. Then, you build the shell of your site using [Liquid](https://shopify.github.io/liquid/)-enhanced HTML templates. Jekyll automatically stitches the content and templates together, generating a website made entirely of static assets, suitable for uploading to any server.
Jekyll happens to be the engine behind [GitHub Pages](https://pages.github.com), so you can host your projects Jekyll page/blog/website on GitHubs servers **for free**.
## Navigating the Guide
Throughout this guide, you'll see these special sections that help you get the most out of Jekyll:
<div class="note">
<h5>ProTips™</h5>
<p>Tips and tricks that'll make you a Jekyll wizard!</p>
</div>
<div class="note info">
<h5>Notes</h5>
<p>Extra tidbits that are sometimes necessary to understand Jekyll.</p>
</div>
<div class="note warning">
<h5>Warnings</h5>
<p>Common pitfalls to avoid.</p>
</div>
<div class="note unreleased">
<h5>Unreleased</h5>
<p>Features planned for future versions of Jekyll, but not available yet.</p>
</div>
If you find anything we havent covered, or would like to share a tip that others might find handy, please [file an issue]({{ site.repository }}/issues/new) and well see about adding it to the guide.

View File

@@ -4,19 +4,168 @@ description: Official guide to install Jekyll on macOS, GNU/Linux or Windows.
permalink: /docs/installation/
---
Jekyll is a [Ruby Gem](/docs/ruby-101/#gems) that can be installed on most systems.
- [Requirements](#requirements)
- [Install on macOS](#macOS)
- [Install on Windows](../windows/)
- [Upgrade Jekyll](#upgrade-jekyll)
Installing Jekyll should be straight-forward if your system meets the requirements.
## Requirements
* [Ruby](https://www.ruby-lang.org/en/downloads/) version {{ site.min_ruby_version }} or above, including all development headers (ruby version can be checked by running `ruby -v`)
* [RubyGems](https://rubygems.org/pages/download) (which you can check by running `gem -v`)
* [GCC](https://gcc.gnu.org/install/) and [Make](https://www.gnu.org/software/make/) (in case your system doesn't have them installed, which you can check by running `gcc -v`,`g++ -v` and `make -v` in your system's command line interface)
Before you start, make sure your system has the following:
## Guides
- [Ruby](https://www.ruby-lang.org/en/downloads/) version 2.2.5 or above, including all development headers (ruby installation can be checked by running `ruby -v`)
- [RubyGems](https://rubygems.org/pages/download) (which you can check by running `gem -v`)
- [GCC](https://gcc.gnu.org/install/) and [Make](https://www.gnu.org/software/make/) (in case your system doesn't have them installed, which you can check by running `gcc -v`,`g++ -v` and `make -v` in your system's command line interface)
For detailed install instructions have a look at the guide for your operating system.
## Install on macOS {#macOS}
* [macOS](/docs/installation/macos/)
* [Ubuntu Linux](/docs/installation/ubuntu/)
* [Other Linux distros](/docs/installation/other-linux)
* [Windows](/docs/installation/windows/)
We only cover macOS High Sierra 10.13 here, which comes with Ruby 2.3.3, older systems will need to [install a more recent Ruby version via Homebrew](#homebrew).
First, you need to install the command-line tools to be able to compile native extensions, open a terminal and run:
```sh
xcode-select --install
```
### Set up Ruby included with the OS
Check your Ruby version meet our requirements:
```sh
ruby -v
2.3.3
```
Great, let's install Jekyll. We also need [Bundler](https://bundler.io/) to help us handle [plugins](../plugins) and [themes](../themes):
```sh
gem install bundler jekyll
```
That's it, you're ready to go, either by installing our [default minimal blog theme](https://github.com/jekyll/minima) with `jekyll new jekyll-website` or by starting from scratch:
```sh
mkdir jekyll-website
cd jekyll-website
# Create a Gemfile
bundle init
# Add Jekyll
bundle add jekyll
# Install gems
bundle install
```
Great, from there you can now either use a [theme](../themes/) or [create your own layouts](../templates/).
### Install a newer Ruby version via Homebrew {#homebrew}
If you wish to install the latest version of Ruby and get faster builds, we recommend to do it via [Homebrew](https://brew.sh) a handy package manager for macOS.
```sh
/usr/bin/ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"
brew install ruby
ruby -v
ruby 2.5.1p57 (2018-03-29 revision 63029) [x86_64-darwin17]
```
Yay! Now you have a shiny Ruby on your system!
### Install multiple Ruby versions with rbenv {#rbenv}
Developers often use [rbenv](https://github.com/rbenv/rbenv) to manage multiple Ruby versions. This can be useful if you want to run the same Ruby version used by [GitHub Pages](https://pages.github.com/versions/) or [Netlify](https://www.netlify.com/docs/#ruby) for instance.
```sh
# Install rbenv and ruby-build
brew install rbenv
# Setup rbenv integration to your shell
rbenv init
# Check your install
curl -fsSL https://github.com/rbenv/rbenv-installer/raw/master/bin/rbenv-doctor | bash
```
Restart your terminal for changes to take effect.
Now we can install the Ruby version of our choice, let's go with Ruby 2.5.1 here:
```sh
rbenv install 2.5.1
rbenv global 2.5.1
ruby -v
ruby 2.5.1p57 (2018-03-29 revision 63029) [x86_64-darwin17]
```
That's it! Head over [rbenv command references](https://github.com/rbenv/rbenv#command-reference) to learn how to use different versions of Ruby in your projects.
<div class="note info" markdown="1">
##### Problems installing Jekyll?
Check out the [troubleshooting](../troubleshooting/) page or
[ask for help on our forum](https://talk.jekyllrb.com).
</div>
## Upgrade Jekyll
Before you start developing with Jekyll, you may want to check that you're up to date with the latest version. To find the currently installed version of Jekyll, run one of these commands:
```sh
jekyll --version
gem list jekyll
```
You can use RubyGems to find [the current version of Jekyll](https://rubygems.org/gems/jekyll). Another way to check if you have the latest version is to run the command `gem outdated`. This will provide a list of all the gems on your system that need to be updated. If you aren't running the latest version, run this command:
```sh
bundle update jekyll
```
Alternatively, if you don't have Bundler installed run:
```sh
gem update jekyll
```
To upgrade to latest Rubygems, run:
```
gem update --system
```
Refer to our [upgrading section](../upgrading/) to upgrade from Jekyll 2.x or 1.x.
## Pre-releases
In order to install a pre-release, make sure you have all the requirements
installed properly and run:
```sh
gem install jekyll --pre
```
This will install the latest pre-release. If you want a particular pre-release,
use the `-v` switch to indicate the version you'd like to install:
```sh
gem install jekyll -v '2.0.0.alpha.1'
```
If you'd like to install a development version of Jekyll, the process is a bit
more involved. This gives you the advantage of having the latest and greatest,
but may be unstable.
```sh
git clone git://github.com/jekyll/jekyll.git
cd jekyll
script/bootstrap
bundle exec rake build
ls pkg/*.gem | head -n 1 | xargs gem install -l
```
Now that youve got everything up-to-date and installed, lets get to work!

View File

@@ -1,135 +0,0 @@
---
title: Jekyll on macOS
permalink: /docs/installation/macos/
---
## Install Command Line Tools
First, you need to install the command-line tools to be able to compile native extensions, open a terminal and run:
```sh
xcode-select --install
```
## Install Ruby
Jekyll requires Ruby > {{ site.min_ruby_version }}.
As macOS Mojave 10.14 comes only with ruby 2.3.x, you'll have to install a newer version of Ruby.
### With Homebrew {#brew}
To run the latest Ruby version you need to install it through [Homebrew](https://brew.sh).
```sh
# Install Homebrew
/usr/bin/ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"
brew install ruby
```
Don't forget to add the brew ruby path to your shell config :
```
export PATH=/usr/local/opt/ruby/bin:$PATH
```
Then relaunch your terminal and check your updated Ruby setup:
```sh
which ruby
# /usr/local/opt/ruby/bin/ruby
ruby -v
# ruby 2.6.2p47 (2019-03-13 revision 67232) [x86_64-darwin18]
```
Yay, we are now running current stable Ruby!
### With rbenv {#rbenv}
People often use [rbenv](https://github.com/rbenv/rbenv) to manage multiple
Ruby versions. This is very useful when you need to be able to run a given Ruby version on a project.
```sh
# Install Homebrew
/usr/bin/ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"
# Install rbenv and ruby-build
brew install rbenv
# Setup rbenv integration to your shell
rbenv init
# Check your install
curl -fsSL https://github.com/rbenv/rbenv-installer/raw/master/bin/rbenv-doctor | bash
```
Restart your terminal for changes to take effect.
Now you can install the Ruby version of our choice, let's go with current latest stable Ruby:
```sh
rbenv install 2.6.2
rbenv global 2.6.2
ruby -v
# ruby 2.6.2p47 (2019-03-13 revision 67232) [x86_64-darwin18]
```
That's it! Head over [rbenv command references](https://github.com/rbenv/rbenv#command-reference) to learn how to use different versions of Ruby in your projects.
## Install Jekyll
Now all that is left is installing [Bundler](/docs/ruby-101/#bundler) and Jekyll.
### Local Install
```sh
gem install --user-install bundler jekyll
```
and then get your Ruby version using
```sh
ruby -v
# ruby 2.6.1p33 (2019-01-30 revision 66950) [x86_64-darwin18]
```
Then append your path file with the following, replacing the `X.X` with the first two digits of your Ruby version.
```
export PATH=$HOME/.gem/ruby/X.X.0/bin:$PATH
```
To check your that you gem paths point to your home directory run:
```sh
gem env
```
And check that `GEM PATHS:` points to a path in your home directory
{: .note }
Every time you update Ruby to a version with a different first two digits, you will need to update your path to match.
### Global Install
{: .note .warning}
We strongly recommend against installing Ruby gems globally to avoid file permissions problems and using `sudo`.
#### On Mojave (10.14)
Because of SIP Protections in Mojave, you must run:
```sh
sudo gem install bundler
sudo gem install -n /usr/local/bin/ jekyll
```
#### Before Mojave (<10.14)
You only have to run:
```sh
sudo gem install bundler jekyll
```
## Problems?
Check out the [troubleshooting](/docs/troubleshooting/) page or [ask for help on our forum](https://talk.jekyllrb.com).

View File

@@ -1,19 +0,0 @@
---
title: Jekyll on Linux
permalink: /docs/installation/other-linux/
---
Installation on other Linux distributions works similarly as on [Ubuntu](../ubuntu/).
On Fedora, the dependencies can be installed as follows:
```sh
sudo dnf install ruby ruby-devel @development-tools
```
On Debian:
```sh
sudo apt-get install ruby-full build-essential
```
The rest works the same as on [Ubuntu](../ubuntu/).

View File

@@ -1,30 +0,0 @@
---
title: Jekyll on Ubuntu
permalink: /docs/installation/ubuntu/
---
Before we install Jekyll, we need to make sure we have all the required
dependencies.
```sh
sudo apt-get install ruby-full build-essential zlib1g-dev
```
It is best to avoid installing Ruby Gems as the root user. Therefore, we need to
set up a gem installation directory for your user account. The following
commands will add environment variables to your `~/.bashrc` file to configure
the gem installation path. Run them now:
```sh
echo '# Install Ruby Gems to ~/gems' >> ~/.bashrc
echo 'export GEM_HOME="$HOME/gems"' >> ~/.bashrc
echo 'export PATH="$HOME/gems/bin:$PATH"' >> ~/.bashrc
source ~/.bashrc
```
Finally, install Jekyll:
```sh
gem install jekyll bundler
```
That's it! You're ready to start using Jekyll.

View File

@@ -1,149 +0,0 @@
---
title: Jekyll on Windows
permalink: /docs/installation/windows/
redirect_from:
- /docs/windows/
---
While Windows is not an officially-supported platform, it can be used to run Jekyll with the proper tweaks. This page aims to
collect some of the general knowledge and lessons that have been unearthed by Windows users.
## Installing Jekyll
### Installation via RubyInstaller
The easiest way to run Jekyll is by using the [RubyInstaller](https://rubyinstaller.org/) for Windows.
RubyInstaller is a self-contained Windows-based installer that includes the Ruby language, an execution environment,
important documentation, and more.
We only cover RubyInstaller-2.4 and newer here, older versions need to
[install the Devkit](https://github.com/oneclick/rubyinstaller/wiki/Development-Kit) manually.
1. Download and Install a **Ruby+Devkit** version from [RubyInstaller Downloads](https://rubyinstaller.org/downloads/).
Use default options for installation.
2. Run the `ridk install` step on the last stage of the installation wizard. This is needed for installing gems with native
extensions. You can find additional information regarding this in the
[RubyInstaller Documentation](https://github.com/oneclick/rubyinstaller2#using-the-installer-on-a-target-system)
3. Open a new command prompt window from the start menu, so that changes to the `PATH` environment variable becomes effective.
Install Jekyll and Bundler via: `gem install jekyll bundler`
4. Check if Jekyll installed properly: `jekyll -v`
That's it, you're ready to use Jekyll!
### Installation via Bash on Windows 10
If you are using Windows 10 version 1607 or later, another option to run Jekyll is by
[installing](https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/commandline/wsl/install_guide) the Windows Subsystem for Linux.
*Note:* You must have [Windows Subsystem for Linux](https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/commandline/wsl/about) enabled.
First let's make sure all our packages / repositories are up to date. Open a new Command Prompt instance, and type the following:
```sh
bash
```
Your Command Prompt instance should now be a Bash instance. Now we must update our repo lists and packages.
```sh
sudo apt-get update -y && sudo apt-get upgrade -y
```
Now we can install Ruby. To do this we will use a repository from [BrightBox](https://www.brightbox.com/docs/ruby/ubuntu/),
which hosts optimized versions of Ruby for Ubuntu.
```sh
sudo apt-add-repository ppa:brightbox/ruby-ng
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install ruby2.5 ruby2.5-dev build-essential dh-autoreconf
```
Next let's update our Ruby gems:
```sh
gem update
```
Now all that is left to do is install Jekyll.
```sh
gem install jekyll bundler
```
(*Note: no `sudo` here.*)
Check if Jekyll installed properly by running:
```sh
jekyll -v
```
**And that's it!**
You can make sure time management is working properly by inspecting your `_posts` folder. You should see a markdown file
with the current date in the filename.
<div class="note info">
<h5>Non-superuser account issues</h5>
<p>If the `jekyll new` command prints the error "Your user account isn't allowed to install to the system RubyGems", see
the "Running Jekyll as Non-Superuser" instructions in <a href="/docs/troubleshooting/#no-sudo">Troubleshooting</a>.</p>
</div>
**Note:** Bash on Ubuntu on Windows is still under development, so you may run into issues.
## Encoding
If you use UTF-8 encoding, make sure that no `BOM` header characters exist in your files or very, very bad things will happen to
Jekyll. This is especially relevant when you're running Jekyll on Windows.
Additionally, you might need to change the code page of the console window to UTF-8 in case you get a
`Liquid Exception: Incompatible character encoding` error during the site generation process. It can be done with the following
command:
```sh
chcp 65001
```
## Time-Zone Management
Since Windows doesn't have a native source of zoneinfo data, the Ruby Interpreter would not understand IANA Timezones and hence
using them had the `TZ` environment variable default to UTC/GMT 00:00.
Though Windows users could alternatively define their blog's timezone by setting the key to use POSIX format of defining
timezones, it wasn't as user-friendly when it came to having the clock altered to changing DST-rules.
Jekyll now uses a rubygem to internally configure Timezone based on established
[IANA Timezone Database](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tz_database_time_zones).
While 'new' blogs created with Jekyll v3.4 and greater, will have the following added to their `Gemfile` by default, existing
sites *will* have to update their `Gemfile` (and installed) to enable development on Windows:
```ruby
# Windows does not include zoneinfo files, so bundle the tzinfo-data gem
gem 'tzinfo-data', platforms: [:mingw, :mswin, :x64_mingw, :jruby]
```
<div class="note warning">
<h5>TZInfo 2.0 incompatibility</h5>
<p>
<code>v2.0</code> of the TZInfo library has introduced a change in how timezone offsets are calculated.
This will result in incorrect date and time for your posts when the site is built with Jekyll 3.x on Windows.
</p>
<p>
We therefore recommend that you lock the Timezone library to <code>v1.2</code> and above by listing
<code>gem 'tzinfo', '~> 1.2'</code> in your <code>Gemfile</code>.
</p>
</div>
## Auto Regeneration
Jekyll uses the `listen` gem to watch for changes when the `--watch` switch is specified during a build or serve.
While `listen` has built-in support for UNIX systems, it may require an extra gem for compatibility with Windows.
Add the following to the `Gemfile` for your site if you have issues with auto-regeneration on Windows alone:
```ruby
gem 'wdm', '~> 0.1.1', :install_if => Gem.win_platform?
```
You have to use a [Ruby+Devkit](https://rubyinstaller.org/downloads/) version of the RubyInstaller and install
the MSYS2 build tools to successfully install the `wdm` gem.

View File

@@ -1,145 +0,0 @@
---
title: Layouts
description: placeholder
permalink: /docs/layouts/
---
Layouts are templates that wrap around your content. They allow you to have the
source code for your template in one place so you don't have to repeat things
like your navigation and footer on every page.
Layouts live in the `_layouts` directory. The convention is to have a base
template called `default.html` and have other layouts [inherit](#inheritance)
from this as needed.
<div class="note">
<h5>Layouts Directory</h5>
<p>
Jekyll looks for the <code>_layouts</code> directory either at the root of
your site's <code>source</code> or at the root of your theme.
</p>
<p>
While you can configure the directory name in which your layouts can reside by
setting the <code>layouts_dir</code> key in your config file, the directory
itself should be located at the root of your site's <code>source</code> directory.
</p>
</div>
## Usage
The first step is to put the template source code in `default.html`. `content`
is a special variable, the value is the rendered content of the post or page
being wrapped.
{% raw %}
```
<!doctype html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<title>{{ page.title }}</title>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="/css/style.css">
</head>
<body>
<nav>
<a href="/">Home</a>
<a href="/blog/">Blog</a>
</nav>
<h1>{{ page.title }}</h1>
<section>
{{ content }}
</section>
<footer>
&copy; to me
</footer>
</body>
</html>
```
{% endraw %}
You have full access to the front matter of the origin. In the
example above, `page.title` comes from the page front matter.
Next you need to specify what layout you're using in your page's front matter.
You can also use
[front matter defaults](/docs/configuration/front-matter-defaults/) to save you
from having to set this on every page.
```
---
title: My First Page
layout: default
---
This is the content of my page
```
The rendered output of this page is:
```
<!doctype html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<title>My First Page</title>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="/css/style.css">
</head>
<body>
<nav>
<a href="/">Home</a>
<a href="/blog/">Blog</a>
</nav>
<h1>My First Page</h1>
<section>
This is the content of my page
</section>
<footer>
&copy; to me
</footer>
</body>
</html>
```
## Inheritance
Layout inheritance is useful when you want to add something to an existing
layout for a portion of documents on your site. A common example of this is
blog posts, you might want a post to display the date and author but otherwise
be identical to your base layout.
To achieve this you need to create another layout which specifies your original
layout in front matter. For example this layout will live at
`_layouts/post.html`:
{% raw %}
```
---
layout: default
---
<p>{{ page.date }} - Written by {{ page.author }}</p>
{{ content }}
```
{% endraw %}
Now posts can use this layout while the rest of the pages use the default.
## Variables
You can set front matter in layouts, the only difference is when you're
using in Liquid, you need to use the `layout` variable instead of `page`. For
example:
{% raw %}
```
---
city: San Francisco
---
<p>{{ layout.city }}</p>
{{ content }}
```
{% endraw %}

View File

@@ -1,19 +0,0 @@
---
title: Liquid
permalink: /docs/liquid/
redirect_from: "/docs/templates/"
---
Jekyll uses the [Liquid](https://shopify.github.io/liquid/) templating language
to process templates.
Generally in Liquid you output content using two curly braces e.g.
{% raw %}`{{ variable }}`{% endraw %} and perform logic statements by
surrounding them in a curly brace percentage sign e.g.
{% raw %}`{% if statement %}`{% endraw %}. To learn more about Liquid, check
out the [official Liquid Documentation](https://shopify.github.io/liquid/).
Jekyll provides a number of useful Liquid additions to help you build your site:
* [Filters](/docs/liquid/filters/)
* [Tags](/docs/liquid/tags/)

View File

@@ -1,128 +0,0 @@
---
title: Liquid Filters
permalink: "/docs/liquid/filters/"
shopify_filter_url: https://shopify.github.io/liquid/filters/
shopify_filters:
- abs
- append
- at_least
- at_most
- capitalize
- ceil
- compact
- concat
- date
- default
- divided_by
- downcase
- escape
- escape_once
- first
- floor
- join
- last
- lstrip
- map
- minus
- modulo
- newline_to_br
- plus
- prepend
- remove
- remove_first
- replace
- replace_first
- reverse
- round
- rstrip
- size
- slice
- sort
- sort_natural
- split
- strip
- strip_html
- strip_newlines
- times
- truncate
- truncatewords
- uniq
- upcase
- url_decode
- url_encode
---
All of the standard Liquid [filters](#standard-liquid-filters) are supported (see below).
To make common tasks easier, Jekyll even adds a few handy filters of its own,
all of which you can find on this page. You can also create your own filters
using [plugins](/docs/plugins/).
<div class="mobile-side-scroller">
<table>
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Description</th>
<th><span class="filter">Filter</span> and <span class="output">Output</span></th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
{% for filter in site.data.jekyll_filters %}
<tr>
<td>
<p class="name"><strong>{{ filter.name }}</strong></p>
<p>
{{- filter.description -}}
{%- if filter.version_badge %}
<span class="version-badge" title="This filter is available from version {{ filter.version_badge }}">
{{- filter.version_badge -}}
</span>
{% endif -%}
</p>
</td>
<td class="align-center">
{%- for example in filter.examples %}
<p><code class="filter">{{ example.input }}</code></p>
{% if example.output %}<p><code class="output">{{ example.output }}</code></p>{% endif %}
{% endfor -%}
</td>
</tr>
{% endfor %}
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
### Options for the `slugify` filter
The `slugify` filter accepts an option, each specifying what to filter.
The default is `default`. They are as follows (with what they filter):
- `none`: no characters
- `raw`: spaces
- `default`: spaces and non-alphanumeric characters
- `pretty`: spaces and non-alphanumeric characters except for `._~!$&'()+,;=@`
- `ascii`: spaces, non-alphanumeric, and non-ASCII characters
- `latin`: like `default`, except Latin characters are first transliterated (e.g. `àèïòü` to `aeiou`) {%- include docs_version_badge.html version="3.7.0" -%}.
### Detecting `nil` values with `where` filter {%- include docs_version_badge.html version="4.0.0" -%}
You can use the `where` filter to detect documents and pages with properties that are `nil` or `""`. For example,
```liquid
// Using `nil` to select posts that either do not have `my_prop` defined or `my_prop` has been set to `nil` explicitly.
{% raw %}{% assign filtered_posts = site.posts | where: 'my_prop', nil %}{% endraw %}
```
```liquid
// Using Liquid's special literal `empty` or `blank` to select posts that have `my_prop` set to an empty value.
{% raw %}{% assign filtered_posts = site.posts | where: 'my_prop', empty %}{% endraw %}
```
### Standard Liquid Filters
For your convenience, here is the list of all [Liquid filters]({{ page.shopify_filter_url }}) with links to examples in the official Liquid documentation.
{% for filter in page.shopify_filters %}
- [{{ filter }}]({{ filter | prepend: page.shopify_filter_url | append: '/' }})
{% endfor %}

View File

@@ -1,160 +0,0 @@
---
title: Tags Filters
permalink: "/docs/liquid/tags/"
---
All of the standard Liquid
[tags](https://shopify.github.io/liquid/tags/control-flow/) are supported.
Jekyll has a few built in tags to help you build your site. You can also create
your own tags using [plugins](/docs/plugins/).
## Includes
If you have page snippets that you use repeatedly across your site, an
[include](/docs/includes/) is the perfect way to make this more maintainable.
## Code snippet highlighting
Jekyll has built in support for syntax highlighting of over 100 languages
thanks to [Rouge](http://rouge.jneen.net). Rouge is the default highlighter
in Jekyll 3 and above. To use it in Jekyll 2, set `highlighter` to `rouge`
and ensure the `rouge` gem is installed properly.
Alternatively, you can use [Pygments](http://pygments.org) to highlight your
code snippets in Jekyll 3.x and below. To use Pygments, you must have Python
installed on your system, have the `pygments.rb` gem installed and set
`highlighter` to `pygments` in your site's configuration file. Pygments
supports [over 100 languages](http://pygments.org/languages/)
<div class="note info">
<p>Using Pygments has been deprecated and will not be officially supported in
Jekyll 4, meaning that the configuration setting <code>highlighter: pygments</code>
will automatically fall back to using <em>Rouge</em> which is written in Ruby
and 100% compatible with stylesheets for Pygments.</p>
</div>
To render a code block with syntax highlighting, surround your code as follows:
{% raw %}
```liquid
{% highlight ruby %}
def foo
puts 'foo'
end
{% endhighlight %}
```
{% endraw %}
The argument to the `highlight` tag (`ruby` in the example above) is the
language identifier. To find the appropriate identifier to use for the language
you want to highlight, look for the “short name” on the [Rouge
wiki](https://github.com/jayferd/rouge/wiki/List-of-supported-languages-and-lexers)
or the [Pygments' Lexers page](http://pygments.org/docs/lexers/).
<div class="note info">
<h5>Jekyll processes all Liquid filters in code blocks</h5>
<p>If you are using a language that contains curly braces, you
will likely need to place <code>{&#37; raw &#37;}</code> and
<code>{&#37; endraw &#37;}</code> tags around your code.</p>
</div>
### Line numbers
There is a second argument to `highlight` called `linenos` that is optional.
Including the `linenos` argument will force the highlighted code to include line
numbers. For instance, the following code block would include line numbers next
to each line:
{% raw %}
```liquid
{% highlight ruby linenos %}
def foo
puts 'foo'
end
{% endhighlight %}
```
{% endraw %}
### Stylesheets for syntax highlighting
In order for the highlighting to show up, youll need to include a highlighting
stylesheet. For Pygments or Rouge you can use a stylesheet for Pygments, you
can find an example gallery
[here](https://jwarby.github.io/jekyll-pygments-themes/languages/ruby.html)
or from [its repository](https://github.com/jwarby/jekyll-pygments-themes).
Copy the CSS file (`native.css` for example) into your css directory and import
the syntax highlighter styles into your `main.css`:
```css
@import "native.css";
```
## Links
### Linking to pages {#link}
To link to a post, a page, collection item, or file, the `link` tag will generate the correct permalink URL for the path you specify. For example, if you use the `link` tag to link to `mypage.html`, even if you change your permalink style to include the file extension or omit it, the URL formed by the `link` tag will always be valid.
You must include the file's original extension when using the `link` tag. Here are some examples:
{% raw %}
```liquid
{% link _collection/name-of-document.md %}
{% link _posts/2016-07-26-name-of-post.md %}
{% link news/index.html %}
{% link /assets/files/doc.pdf %}
```
{% endraw %}
You can also use the `link` tag to create a link in Markdown as follows:
{% raw %}
```liquid
[Link to a document]({% link _collection/name-of-document.md %})
[Link to a post]({% link _posts/2016-07-26-name-of-post.md %})
[Link to a page]({% link news/index.html %})
[Link to a file]({% link /assets/files/doc.pdf %})
```
{% endraw %}
{: .note }
Since {% include docs_version_badge.html version="v4.0"%} you don't need to prepend `link` tags with `site.baseurl`
The path to the post, page, or collection is defined as the path relative to the root directory (where your config file is) to the file, not the path from your existing page to the other page.
For example, suppose you're creating a link in `page_a.md` (stored in `pages/folder1/folder2`) to `page_b.md` (stored in `pages/folder1`). Your path in the link would not be `../page_b.html`. Instead, it would be `/pages/folder1/page_b.md`.
If you're unsure of the path, add `{% raw %}{{ page.path }}{% endraw %}` to the page and it will display the path.
One major benefit of using the `link` or `post_url` tag is link validation. If the link doesn't exist, Jekyll won't build your site. This is a good thing, as it will alert you to a broken link so you can fix it (rather than allowing you to build and deploy a site with broken links).
Note you cannot add filters to `link` tags. For example, you cannot append a string using Liquid filters, such as `{% raw %}{% link mypage.html | append: "#section1" %} {% endraw %}`. To link to sections on a page, you will need to use regular HTML or Markdown linking techniques.
### Linking to posts
If you want to include a link to a post on your site, the `post_url` tag will generate the correct permalink URL for the post you specify.
{% raw %}
```liquid
{{ site.baseurl }}{% post_url 2010-07-21-name-of-post %}
```
{% endraw %}
If you organize your posts in subdirectories, you need to include subdirectory path to the post:
{% raw %}
```liquid
{{ site.baseurl }}{% post_url /subdir/2010-07-21-name-of-post %}
```
{% endraw %}
There is no need to include the file extension when using the `post_url` tag.
You can also use this tag to create a link to a post in Markdown as follows:
{% raw %}
```liquid
[Name of Link]({{ site.baseurl }}{% post_url 2010-07-21-name-of-post %})
```
{% endraw %}

View File

@@ -17,11 +17,11 @@ Each affinity team has a few captains who manage the issues and pull requests fo
Just ask! Feel free to open an issue on `jekyll/jekyll` and add `/cc @jekyll/core`. We can add you. :smile:
Alternatively, you can email or otherwise reach out to [@oe](https://github.com/oe) directly if you prefer the more private route.
Alternatively, you can email or otherwise reach out to [@parkr](https://github.com/parkr) directly if you prefer the more private route.
## Ugh, I'm tired and don't have time to be a captain anymore. What now?
No sweat at all! Email [@oe](https://github.com/oe) and ask to be removed. Alternatively, you should be able to go to your team's page on GitHub.com (go to https://github.com/jekyll, click "Teams", click the link to your team) and change your status to either "member" or leave the team.
No sweat at all! Email [@parkr](https://github.com/parkr) and ask to be removed. Alternatively, you should be able to go to your team's page on GitHub.com (go to https://github.com/jekyll, click "Teams", click the link to your team) and change your status to either "member" or leave the team.
We realize that being a captain is no easy feat so we want to make it a great experience. As always, communicate as much as you can with us about what is working, and what isn't. Thanks for dedicating some time to Jekyll! :sparkles:

View File

@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ title: "Merging a Pull Request"
## Code Review
All pull requests should be subject to code review. Code review is a [foundational value](https://blog.fullstory.com/what-we-learned-from-google-code-reviews-arent-just-for-catching-bugs/) of good engineering teams. Besides providing validation of correctness, it promotes a sense of community and gives other maintainers understanding of all parts of the code base. In short, code review is crucial to a healthy open source project.
All pull requests should be subject to code review. Code review is a [foundational value](https://blog.fullstory.com/what-we-learned-from-google-code-reviews-arent-just-for-catching-bugs-b125a13aa292) of good engineering teams. Besides providing validation of correctness, it promotes a sense of community and gives other maintainers understanding of all parts of the code base. In short, code review is crucial to a healthy open source project.
**Read our guide for [Reviewing a pull request](../reviewing-a-pull-request) before merging.** Notably, the change must have tests if for code, and at least two maintainers must give it an OK.

View File

@@ -69,14 +69,6 @@ And then, you're done! :tada: Feel free to celebrate!
If you have access to the [@jekyllrb](https://twitter.com/jekyllrb) Twitter account, you should tweet the release post from there. If not, just ask another maintainer to do it or to give you access.
### Build the docs
We package our documentation as a :gem: Gem for offline use.
This is done with the
[**jekyll-docs**](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll-docs#building) repository,
and more detailed instructions are provided there.
## For non-core gems
If you're not a maintainer for `jekyll/jekyll`, the procedure is much simpler in a lot of cases. Generally, the procedure still looks like this:

View File

@@ -51,4 +51,4 @@ Is what they wanted to get something we want to happen? Sometimes a bug report i
### Staleness and automatic closure
@jekyllbot will automatically mark issues as `stale` if no activity occurs for at least one month. @jekyllbot leaves a comment asking for information about reproducibility in current versions. If no one responds after another month, the issue is automatically closed. This behavior can be suppressed by setting the [`pinned` label](/docs/maintaining/special-labels/#pinned).
@jekyllbot will automatically mark issues as `stale` if no activity occurs for at least one month. @jekyllbot leaves a comment asking for information about reproducibility in current versions. If no one responds after another month, the issue is automatically closed. This behaviour can be suppressed by setting the [`pinned` label](../maintaining/special-labels.md/#pinned).

View File

@@ -1,6 +0,0 @@
---
title: Markdown 101
permalink: /docs/markdown-101/
---
# TO WRITE

View File

@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
---
title: Blog Migrations
title: Blog migrations
permalink: /docs/migrations/
---

View File

@@ -1,27 +1,74 @@
---
title: Pages
title: Creating pages
permalink: /docs/pages/
---
Pages are the most basic building block for content. They're useful for standalone
content (content which is not date based or is not a group of content such as staff
members or recipes).
In addition to [writing posts](../posts/), you might also want to add static pages (content that isn't date-based) to your Jekyll site. By taking advantage of the way Jekyll copies files and directories, this is easy to do.
The simplest way of adding a page is to add an HTML file in the root
directory with a suitable filename. You can also write a page in Markdown using
a `.md` extension which converts to HTML on build. For a site with
## Homepage
Just about every web server configuration you come across will look for an HTML
file called `index.html` (by convention) in the site's root folder and display
that as the homepage. Unless the web server youre using is configured to look
for some different filename as the default, this file will turn into the
homepage of your Jekyll-generated site.
<div class="note">
<h5>ProTip™: Use layouts on your homepage</h5>
<p>
Any HTML file on your site can use layouts and/or includes, even the
homepage. Common content, like headers and footers, make excellent
candidates for extraction into a layout.
</p>
</div>
## Where additional pages live
Where you put HTML or [Markdown](https://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/)
files for pages depends on how you want the pages to work. There are two main ways of creating pages:
- Place named HTML or [Markdown](https://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/)
files for each page in your site's root folder.
- Place pages inside folders and subfolders named whatever you want.
Both methods work fine (and can be used in conjunction with each other),
with the only real difference being the resulting URLs. By default, pages retain the same folder structure in `_site` as they do in the source directory.
### Named HTML files
The simplest way of adding a page is just to add an HTML file in the root
directory with a suitable name for the page you want to create. For a site with
a homepage, an about page, and a contact page, heres what the root directory
and associated URLs might look like:
```sh
.
|-- about.md # => http://example.com/about.html
|-- _config.yml
|-- _includes/
|-- _layouts/
|-- _posts/
|-- _site/
|-- about.html # => http://example.com/about.html
|-- index.html # => http://example.com/
|-- other.md # => http://example.com/other.html
└── contact.html # => http://example.com/contact.html
```
If you have a lot of pages, you can organize them into subfolders. The same subfolders that are used to group your pages in our project's source will exist in the `_site` folder when your site builds.
If you have a lot of pages, you can organize those pages into subfolders. The same subfolders that are used to group your pages in our project's source will exist in the `_site` folder when your site builds.
## Changing the output URL
## Flattening pages from subfolders into the root directory
You might want to have a particular folder structure for your source files that changes for the built site. With [permalinks](/docs/permalinks) you have full control of the output URL.
If you have pages organized into subfolders in your source folder and want to flatten them in the root folder on build, you must add the [permalink]({% link _docs/permalinks.md %}) property directly in your page's front matter like this:
```yaml
---
title: My page
permalink: mypageurl.html
---
```
### Named folders containing index HTML files
If you don't want file extensions (`.html`) to appear in your page URLs (file extensions are the default), you can choose a [permalink style](../permalinks/#builtinpermalinkstyles) that has a trailing slash instead of a file extension.
Note if you want to view your site offline *without the Jekyll preview server*, your browser will need the file extension to display the page, and all assets will need to be relative links that function without the server baseurl.

View File

@@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ your `_config.yml` under `plugins`. For Jekyll 2, this is standard.
<div class="note info">
<h5>Pagination only works within HTML files</h5>
<p>
Pagination does not work from within Markdown files from
Pagination does not work from within Markdown or Textile files from
your Jekyll site. Pagination works when called from within the HTML
file, named <code>index.html</code>, which optionally may reside in and
produce pagination from within a subdirectory, via the
@@ -42,10 +42,10 @@ paginate_path: "/blog/page:num/"
This will read in `blog/index.html`, send it each pagination page in Liquid as
`paginator` and write the output to `blog/page:num/`, where `:num` is the
pagination page number, starting with `2`. <br/>
If a site has 12 posts and specifies `paginate: 5`, Jekyll will write `blog/index.html`
with the first 5 posts, `blog/page2/index.html` with the next 5 posts and
`blog/page3/index.html` with the last 2 posts into the destination directory.
pagination page number, starting with `2`. If a site has 12 posts and specifies
`paginate: 5`, Jekyll will write `blog/index.html` with the first 5 posts, `blog/page2/index.html` with the next 5 posts
and `blog/page3/index.html` with the last 2 posts into the destination
directory.
<div class="note warning">
<h5>Don't set a permalink</h5>
@@ -58,11 +58,8 @@ with the first 5 posts, `blog/page2/index.html` with the next 5 posts and
<div class="note info">
<h5>Pagination for categories, tags and collections</h5>
<p>
The more recent <a href="https://github.com/sverrirs/jekyll-paginate-v2">
jekyll-paginate-v2</a> plugin supports more features. See the
<a href="https://github.com/sverrirs/jekyll-paginate-v2/tree/master/examples">
pagination examples</a> in the repository. <strong>This plugin is not
supported by GitHub Pages</strong>.
The more recent <a href="https://github.com/sverrirs/jekyll-paginate-v2">jekyll-paginate-v2</a> plugin supports more features. See the <a href="https://github.com/sverrirs/jekyll-paginate-v2/tree/master/examples">pagination examples</a> in the repository.
<strong>This plugin is not supported by GitHub Pages</strong>.
</p>
</div>
@@ -71,12 +68,79 @@ with the first 5 posts, `blog/page2/index.html` with the next 5 posts and
The pagination plugin exposes the `paginator` liquid object with the following
attributes:
{% include docs_variables_table.html scope=site.data.jekyll_variables.paginator %}
<div class="mobile-side-scroller">
<table>
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Attribute</th>
<th>Description</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td><p><code>page</code></p></td>
<td><p>current page number</p></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><code>per_page</code></p></td>
<td><p>number of posts per page</p></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><code>posts</code></p></td>
<td><p>a list of posts for the current page</p></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><code>total_posts</code></p></td>
<td><p>total number of posts in the site</p></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><code>total_pages</code></p></td>
<td><p>number of pagination pages</p></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><code>previous_page</code></p></td>
<td>
<p>
page number of the previous pagination page,
or <code>nil</code> if no previous page exists
</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><code>previous_page_path</code></p></td>
<td>
<p>
path of previous pagination page,
or <code>nil</code> if no previous page exists
</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><code>next_page</code></p></td>
<td>
<p>
page number of the next pagination page,
or <code>nil</code> if no subsequent page exists
</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p><code>next_page_path</code></p></td>
<td>
<p>
path of next pagination page,
or <code>nil</code> if no subsequent page exists
</p>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
<div class="note info">
<h5>Pagination does not support tags or categories</h5>
<p>Pagination pages through every post in the <code>posts</code>
variable unless a post has <code>hidden: true</code> in its front matter.
variable unless a post has <code>hidden: true</code> in its YAML Front Matter.
It does not currently allow paging over groups of posts linked
by a common tag or category. It cannot include any collection of
documents because it is restricted to posts.</p>
@@ -110,15 +174,11 @@ title: My Blog
<!-- Pagination links -->
<div class="pagination">
{% if paginator.previous_page %}
<a href="{{ paginator.previous_page_path }}" class="previous">
Previous
</a>
<a href="{{ paginator.previous_page_path }}" class="previous">Previous</a>
{% else %}
<span class="previous">Previous</span>
{% endif %}
<span class="page_number ">
Page: {{ paginator.page }} of {{ paginator.total_pages }}
</span>
<span class="page_number ">Page: {{ paginator.page }} of {{ paginator.total_pages }}</span>
{% if paginator.next_page %}
<a href="{{ paginator.next_page_path }}" class="next">Next</a>
{% else %}
@@ -145,7 +205,7 @@ page with links to all but the current page.
{% if paginator.total_pages > 1 %}
<div class="pagination">
{% if paginator.previous_page %}
<a href="{{ paginator.previous_page_path | relative_url }}">&laquo; Prev</a>
<a href="{{ paginator.previous_page_path | prepend: site.baseurl | replace: '//', '/' }}">&laquo; Prev</a>
{% else %}
<span>&laquo; Prev</span>
{% endif %}
@@ -154,14 +214,14 @@ page with links to all but the current page.
{% if page == paginator.page %}
<em>{{ page }}</em>
{% elsif page == 1 %}
<a href="{{ paginator.previous_page_path | relative_url }}">{{ page }}</a>
<a href="{{ paginator.previous_page_path | prepend: site.baseurl | replace: '//', '/' }}">{{ page }}</a>
{% else %}
<a href="{{ site.paginate_path | relative_url | replace: ':num', page }}">{{ page }}</a>
<a href="{{ site.paginate_path | prepend: site.baseurl | replace: '//', '/' | replace: ':num', page }}">{{ page }}</a>
{% endif %}
{% endfor %}
{% if paginator.next_page %}
<a href="{{ paginator.next_page_path | relative_url }}">Next &raquo;</a>
<a href="{{ paginator.next_page_path | prepend: site.baseurl | replace: '//', '/' }}">Next &raquo;</a>
{% else %}
<span>Next &raquo;</span>
{% endif %}

View File

@@ -3,48 +3,54 @@ title: Permalinks
permalink: /docs/permalinks/
---
Permalinks are the output path for your pages, posts, or collections. They
allow you to structure the directories of your source code different from the
directories in your output.
Permalinks refer to the URLs (excluding the domain name or directory folder) for your pages, posts, or collections.
Jekyll supports a flexible way to build permalinks, allowing you to leverage various template variables or choose built-in permalink styles (such as `date`) that automatically use a template-variable pattern.
## Front Matter
You construct permalinks by creating a template URL where dynamic elements are represented by colon-prefixed keywords. The default template permalink is `/:categories/:year/:month/:day/:title:output_ext`. Each of the colon-prefixed keywords is a template variable.
The simplest way to set a permalink is using front matter. You set the
`permalink` variable in front matter to the output path you'd like.
## Where to configure permalinks
For example, you might have a page on your site located at
`/my_pages/about-me.html` and you want the output url to be `/about/`. In
front matter of the page you would set:
You can configure your site's permalinks through the [Configuration]({% link _docs/configuration.md %}) file or in the [Front Matter]({% link _docs/frontmatter.md %}) for each post, page, or collection.
```
---
permalink: /about/
---
```
## Global
Setting a permalink in front matter for every page on your site is no fun.
Luckily, Jekyll lets you set the permalink structure globally in your `_config.yml`.
To set a global permalink, you use the `permalink` variable in `_config.yml`.
You can use placeholders to your desired output. For example:
Setting permalink styles in your configuration file applies the setting globally in your project. You configure permalinks in your `_config.yml` file like this:
```yaml
permalink: /:categories/:year/:month/:day/:title:output_ext
```
Note that pages and collections don't have time or categories, these aspects of
the permalink style are ignored for the output.
If you don't specify any permalink setting, Jekyll uses the above pattern as the default.
For example, a permalink style of
`/:categories/:year/:month/:day/:title:output_ext` for posts becomes
`/:title.html` for pages and collections.
The permalink can also be set using a built-in permalink style:
### Placeholders
```yaml
permalink: date
```
Here's the full list of placeholders available:
`date` is the same as `:categories/:year/:month/:day/:title:output_ext`, the default. See [Built-in Permalink Styles](#builtinpermalinkstyles) below for more options.
Setting the permalink in your post, page, or collection's front matter overrides any global settings. Here's an example:
```yaml
---
title: My page title
permalink: /mypageurl/
---
```
Even if your configuration file specifies the `date` style, the URL for this page would be `http://somedomain.com/mypageurl/`.
When you use permalinks that omit the `.html` file extension (called "pretty URLs") Jekyll builds the file as index.html placed inside a folder with the page's name. For example:
```
├── mypageurl
│   └── index.html
```
With a URL such as `/mypageurl/`, servers automatically load the index.html file inside the folder, so users can simply navigate to `http://somedomain.com/mypageurl/` to get to `mypageurl/index.html`.
## Template variables for permalinks {#template-variables}
The following table lists the template variables available for permalinks. You can use these variables in the `permalink` property in your config file.
<div class="mobile-side-scroller">
<table>
@@ -61,19 +67,8 @@ Here's the full list of placeholders available:
</td>
<td>
<p>
Year from the posts filename with four digits.
May be overridden via the documents <code>date</code> front matter.
</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>short_year</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
Year from the posts filename without the century. (00..99)
May be overridden via the documents <code>date</code> front matter.
Year from the post's filename. May be overridden via the documents
<code>date</code> YAML front matter
</p>
</td>
</tr>
@@ -83,8 +78,8 @@ Here's the full list of placeholders available:
</td>
<td>
<p>
Month from the posts filename. (01..12)
May be overridden via the documents <code>date</code> front matter.
Month from the post's filename. May be overridden via the documents
<code>date</code> YAML front matter
</p>
</td>
</tr>
@@ -94,36 +89,19 @@ Here's the full list of placeholders available:
</td>
<td>
<p>
Month without leading zeros from the posts filename. May be
overridden via the documents <code>date</code> front matter.
Month without leading zeros from the post's filename. May be
overridden via the documents <code>date</code> YAML front matter
</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>short_month</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>Three-letter month abbreviation, e.g. “Jan”.</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>long_month</code></p>
<small>{% include docs_version_badge.html version="4.0.0" %}</small>
</td>
<td>
<p>Full month name, e.g. “January”.</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>day</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
Day of the month from the posts filename. (01..31)
May be overridden via the documents <code>date</code> front matter.
Day from the post's filename. May be overridden via the documents
<code>date</code> YAML front matter
</p>
</td>
</tr>
@@ -133,62 +111,28 @@ Here's the full list of placeholders available:
</td>
<td>
<p>
Day of the month without leading zeros from the posts filename.
May be overridden via the documents <code>date</code> front matter.
Day without leading zeros from the post's filename. May be overridden
via the documents <code>date</code> YAML front matter
</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>y_day</code></p>
</td>
</td>_
<td>
<p>Ordinal day of the year from the posts filename, with leading zeros. (001..366)</p>
<p>Day of the year from the post's filename, with leading zeros.</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>w_year</code></p>
<small>{% include docs_version_badge.html version="4.0.0" %}</small>
<p><code>short_year</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>Week year which may differ from the month year for up to three days at the start of January and end of December</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>week</code></p>
<small>{% include docs_version_badge.html version="4.0.0" %}</small>
</td>
<td>
<p>Week number of the current year, starting with the first week having a majority of its days in January. (01..53)</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>w_day</code></p>
<small>{% include docs_version_badge.html version="4.0.0" %}</small>
</td>
<td>
<p>Day of the week, starting with Monday. (1..7)</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>short_day</code></p>
<small>{% include docs_version_badge.html version="4.0.0" %}</small>
</td>
<td>
<p>Three-letter weekday abbreviation, e.g. “Sun”.</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>long_day</code></p>
<small>{% include docs_version_badge.html version="4.0.0" %}</small>
</td>
<td>
<p>Weekday name, e.g. “Sunday”.</p>
<p>
Year without the century from the post's filename. May be overridden
via the documents <code>date</code> YAML front matter
</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
@@ -197,7 +141,7 @@ Here's the full list of placeholders available:
</td>
<td>
<p>
Hour of the day, 24-hour clock, zero-padded from the posts
Hour of the day, 24-hour clock, zero-padded from the post's
<code>date</code> front matter. (00..23)
</p>
</td>
@@ -208,7 +152,7 @@ Here's the full list of placeholders available:
</td>
<td>
<p>
Minute of the hour from the posts <code>date</code> front matter. (00..59)
Minute of the hour from the post's <code>date</code> front matter. (00..59)
</p>
</td>
</tr>
@@ -218,7 +162,7 @@ Here's the full list of placeholders available:
</td>
<td>
<p>
Second of the minute from the posts <code>date</code> front matter. (00..59)
Second of the minute from the post's <code>date</code> front matter. (00..59)
</p>
</td>
</tr>
@@ -229,7 +173,7 @@ Here's the full list of placeholders available:
<td>
<p>
Title from the documents filename. May be overridden via
the documents <code>slug</code> front matter.
the documents <code>slug</code> YAML front matter.
</p>
</td>
</tr>
@@ -241,7 +185,7 @@ Here's the full list of placeholders available:
<p>
Slugified title from the documents filename (any character
except numbers and letters is replaced as hyphen). May be
overridden via the documents <code>slug</code> front matter.
overridden via the documents <code>slug</code> YAML front matter.
</p>
</td>
</tr>
@@ -262,9 +206,11 @@ Here's the full list of placeholders available:
</table>
</div>
### Built-in formats
Note that all template variables relating to time or categories are available to posts only.
For posts, Jekyll also provides the following built-in styles for convenience:
## Built-in permalink styles {#builtinpermalinkstyles}
Although you can specify a custom permalink pattern using [template variables](#template-variables), Jekyll also provides the following built-in styles for convenience.
<div class="mobile-side-scroller">
<table>
@@ -299,15 +245,6 @@ For posts, Jekyll also provides the following built-in styles for convenience:
<p><code>/:categories/:year/:y_day/:title:output_ext</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>weekdate</code></p>
<small>{% include docs_version_badge.html version="4.0.0" %}</small>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>/:categories/:year/W:week/:short_day/:title:output_ext</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>none</code></p>
@@ -323,80 +260,135 @@ For posts, Jekyll also provides the following built-in styles for convenience:
Rather than typing `permalink: /:categories/:year/:month/:day/:title/`, you can just type `permalink: pretty`.
<div class="note info">
<h5>Specifying permalinks through the front matter</h5>
<p>Built-in permalink styles are not recognized in front matter. As a result, <code>permalink: pretty</code> will not work.</p>
<h5>Specifying permalinks through the YAML Front Matter</h5>
<p>Built-in permalink styles are not recognized in YAML Front Matter. As a result, <code>permalink: pretty</code> will not work.</p>
</div>
### Collections
## Permalink style examples with posts {#permalink-style-examples}
For collections, you have the option to override the global permalink in the
collection configuration in `_config.yml`:
Here are a few examples to clarify how permalink styles get applied with posts.
```yaml
collections:
my_collection:
output: true
permalink: /:collection/:name
```
Collections have the following placeholders available:
Given a post named: `/2009-04-29-slap-chop.md`
<div class="mobile-side-scroller">
<table>
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Variable</th>
<th>Description</th>
<th>URL Template</th>
<th>Resulting Permalink URL</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:collection</code></p>
<p>None specified, or <code>permalink: date</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>Label of the containing collection.</p>
<p><code>/2009/04/29/slap-chop.html</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:path</code></p>
<p><code>pretty</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>Path to the document relative to the collection's directory.</p>
<p><code>/2009/04/29/slap-chop/</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:name</code></p>
<p><code>/:month-:day-:year/:title:output_ext</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>The document's base filename, with every sequence of spaces
and non-alphanumeric characters replaced by a hyphen.</p>
<p><code>/04-29-2009/slap-chop.html</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:title</code></p>
<p><code>/blog/:year/:month/:day/:title/</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
The <code>:title</code> template variable will take the
<code>slug</code> <a href="/docs/front-matter/">front matter</a>
variable value if any is present in the document; if none is
defined then <code>:title</code> will be equivalent to
<code>:name</code>, aka the slug generated from the filename.
</p>
<p><code>/blog/2009/04/29/slap-chop/</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:output_ext</code></p>
<p><code>/:year/:month/:title</code></p>
<p>See <a href="#extensionless-permalinks">Extensionless permalinks with no trailing slashes</a> for details.</p>
</td>
<td>
<p>Extension of the output file. (Included by default and usually unnecessary.)</p>
<p><code>/2009/04/slap-chop</code></p>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
## Permalink settings for pages and collections {#pages-and-collections}
The permalink setting in your configuration file specifies the permalink style used for posts, pages, and collections. However, because pages and collections don't have time or categories, these aspects of the permalink style are ignored with pages and collections.
For example:
* A permalink style of `/:categories/:year/:month/:day/:title:output_ext` for posts becomes `/:title.html` for pages and collections.
* A permalink style of `pretty` (or `/:categories/:year/:month/:day/:title/`), which omits the file extension and contains a trailing slash, will update page and collection permalinks to also omit the file extension and contain a trailing slash: `/:title/`.
* A permalink style of `date`, which contains a trailing file extension, will update page permalinks to also contain a trailing file extension: `/:title.html`. But no time or category information will be included.
## Permalinks and default paths
The path to the post or page in the built site differs for posts, pages, and collections:
### Posts
The subfolders into which you may have organized your posts inside the `_posts` directory will not be part of the permalink.
If you use a permalink style that omits the `.html` file extension, each post is rendered as an `index.html` file inside a folder with the post's name (for example, `categoryname/2016/12/01/mypostname/index.html`).
### Pages
Unlike posts, pages by default mimic the source directory structure exactly. (The only exception is if your page has a `permalink` declared its front matter &mdash; in that case, the structure honors the permalink setting instead of the source folder structure.)
As with posts, if you use a permalink style that omits the `.html` file extension, each page is rendered as an `index.html` file inserted inside a folder with the page's name (for example, `mypage/index.html`).
### Collections
By default, collections follow a similar structure in the `_site` folder as pages, except that the path is prefaced by the collection name. For example: `collectionname/mypage.html`. For permalink settings that omit the file extension, the path would be `collection_name/mypage/index.html`.
Collections have their own way of setting permalinks. Additionally, collections have unique template variables available (such as `path` and `output_ext`). See the [Configuring permalinks for collections](../collections/#permalinks) in Collections for more information.
## Flattening pages in \_site on build
If you want to flatten your pages (pull them out of subfolders) in the `_site` directory when your site builds (similar to posts), add the `permalink` property to the front matter of each page, with no path specified:
```yaml
---
title: My page
permalink: mypageurl.html
---
```
## Extensionless permalinks with no trailing slashes {#extensionless-permalinks}
Jekyll supports permalinks that contain neither a trailing slash nor a file extension, but this requires additional support from the web server to properly serve. When using these types of permalinks, output files written to disk will still have the proper file extension (typically `.html`), so the web server must be able to map requests without file extensions to these files.
Both [GitHub Pages](../github-pages/) and the Jekyll's built-in WEBrick server handle these requests properly without any additional work.
### Apache
The Apache web server has extensive support for content negotiation and can handle extensionless URLs by setting the [multiviews](https://httpd.apache.org/docs/current/content-negotiation.html#multiviews) option in your `httpd.conf` or `.htaccess` file:
{% highlight apache %}
Options +MultiViews
{% endhighlight %}
### Nginx
The [try_files](http://nginx.org/en/docs/http/ngx_http_core_module.html#try_files) directive allows you to specify a list of files to search for to process a request. The following configuration will instruct nginx to search for a file with an `.html` extension if an exact match for the requested URI is not found.
{% highlight nginx %}
try_files $uri $uri.html $uri/ =404;
{% endhighlight %}
## Linking without regard to permalink styles
You can create links in your topics to other posts, pages, or collection items in a way that is valid no matter what permalink configuration you choose. By using the `link` tag, if you change your permalinks, your links won't break. See [Linking to pages](../templates#link) in Templates for more details.

View File

@@ -7,11 +7,939 @@ Jekyll has a plugin system with hooks that allow you to create custom generated
content specific to your site. You can run custom code for your site without
having to modify the Jekyll source itself.
* [Installation](/docs/plugins/installation/) - How to install plugins
* [Your first plugin](/docs/plugins/your-first-plugin/) - How to write plugins
* [Generators](/docs/plugins/generators/) - Create additional content on your site
* [Converters](/docs/plugins/converters/) - Change a markup language into another format
* [Commands](/docs/plugins/commands/) - Extend the `jekyll` executable with subcommands
* [Tags](/docs/plugins/tags) - Create custom Liquid tags
* [Filters](/docs/plugins/filters/) - Create custom Liquid filters
* [Hooks](/docs/plugins/hooks/) - Fine-grained control to extend the build process
<div class="note info">
<h5>Plugins on GitHub Pages</h5>
<p>
<a href="https://pages.github.com/">GitHub Pages</a> is powered by Jekyll.
However, all Pages sites are generated using the <code>--safe</code> option
to disable custom plugins for security reasons. Unfortunately, this means
your plugins wont work if youre deploying to GitHub Pages.<br><br>
You can still use GitHub Pages to publish your site, but youll need to
convert the site locally and push the generated static files to your GitHub
repository instead of the Jekyll source files.
</p>
</div>
## Installing a plugin
You have 3 options for installing plugins:
1. In your site source root, make a `_plugins` directory. Place your plugins
here. Any file ending in `*.rb` inside this directory will be loaded before
Jekyll generates your site.
2. In your `_config.yml` file, add a new array with the key `plugins` (or `gems` for Jekyll < `3.5.0`) and the
values of the gem names of the plugins you'd like to use. An example:
```yaml
# This will require each of these plugins automatically.
plugins:
- jekyll-gist
- jekyll-coffeescript
- jekyll-assets
- another-jekyll-plugin
```
Then install your plugins using `gem install jekyll-gist jekyll-coffeescript jekyll-assets another-jekyll-plugin`
3. Add the relevant plugins to a Bundler group in your `Gemfile`. An
example:
```ruby
group :jekyll_plugins do
gem "jekyll-gist"
gem "jekyll-coffeescript"
gem "jekyll-assets"
gem "another-jekyll-plugin"
end
```
Now you need to install all plugins from your Bundler group by running single command `bundle install`.
<div class="note info">
<h5>
<code>_plugins</code>, <code>_config.yml</code> and <code>Gemfile</code>
can be used simultaneously
</h5>
<p>
You may use any of the aforementioned plugin options simultaneously in the
same site if you so choose. Use of one does not restrict the use of the
others.
</p>
</div>
### The jekyll_plugins group
Jekyll gives this particular group of gems in your `Gemfile` a different
treatment. Any gem included in this group is loaded before Jekyll starts
processing the rest of your source directory.
A gem included here will be activated even if its not explicitly listed under
the `plugins:` key in your site's config file.
<div class="note warning">
<p>
Gems included in the <code>:jekyll-plugins</code> group are activated
regardless of the <code>--safe</code> mode setting. Be aware of what
gems are included under this group!
</p>
</div>
In general, plugins you make will fall broadly into one of five categories:
1. [Generators](#generators)
2. [Converters](#converters)
3. [Commands](#commands)
4. [Tags](#tags)
5. [Hooks](#hooks)
See the bottom of the page for a [list of available plugins](#available-plugins).
For further information on how to develop your own plugins, check out the [Liquid documentation](https://github.com/Shopify/liquid/wiki/Liquid-for-Programmers) as well.
If you never developed a Jekyll plugin [check this useful wrap-up](https://ayastreb.me/writing-a-jekyll-plugin/) by @ayastreb to get started.
## Generators
You can create a generator when you need Jekyll to create additional content
based on your own rules.
A generator is a subclass of `Jekyll::Generator` that defines a `generate`
method, which receives an instance of
[`Jekyll::Site`]({{ site.repository }}/blob/master/lib/jekyll/site.rb). The
return value of `generate` is ignored.
Generators run after Jekyll has made an inventory of the existing content, and
before the site is generated. Pages with YAML Front Matters are stored as
instances of
[`Jekyll::Page`]({{ site.repository }}/blob/master/lib/jekyll/page.rb)
and are available via `site.pages`. Static files become instances of
[`Jekyll::StaticFile`]({{ site.repository }}/blob/master/lib/jekyll/static_file.rb)
and are available via `site.static_files`. See
[the Variables documentation page](/docs/variables/) and
[`Jekyll::Site`]({{ site.repository }}/blob/master/lib/jekyll/site.rb)
for more details.
For instance, a generator can inject values computed at build time for template
variables. In the following example the template `reading.html` has two
variables `ongoing` and `done` that we fill in the generator:
```ruby
module Reading
class Generator < Jekyll::Generator
def generate(site)
ongoing, done = Book.all.partition(&:ongoing?)
reading = site.pages.detect {|page| page.name == 'reading.html'}
reading.data['ongoing'] = ongoing
reading.data['done'] = done
end
end
end
```
This is a more complex generator that generates new pages:
```ruby
module Jekyll
class CategoryPage < Page
def initialize(site, base, dir, category)
@site = site
@base = base
@dir = dir
@name = 'index.html'
self.process(@name)
self.read_yaml(File.join(base, '_layouts'), 'category_index.html')
self.data['category'] = category
category_title_prefix = site.config['category_title_prefix'] || 'Category: '
self.data['title'] = "#{category_title_prefix}#{category}"
end
end
class CategoryPageGenerator < Generator
safe true
def generate(site)
if site.layouts.key? 'category_index'
dir = site.config['category_dir'] || 'categories'
site.categories.each_key do |category|
site.pages << CategoryPage.new(site, site.source, File.join(dir, category), category)
end
end
end
end
end
```
In this example, our generator will create a series of files under the
`categories` directory for each category, listing the posts in each category
using the `category_index.html` layout.
Generators are only required to implement one method:
<div class="mobile-side-scroller">
<table>
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Method</th>
<th>Description</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>generate</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>Generates content as a side-effect.</p>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
## Converters
If you have a new markup language youd like to use with your site, you can
include it by implementing your own converter. Both the Markdown and
[Textile](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll-textile-converter) markup
languages are implemented using this method.
<div class="note info">
<h5>Remember your YAML Front Matter</h5>
<p>
Jekyll will only convert files that have a YAML header at the top, even for
converters you add using a plugin.
</p>
</div>
Below is a converter that will take all posts ending in `.upcase` and process
them using the `UpcaseConverter`:
```ruby
module Jekyll
class UpcaseConverter < Converter
safe true
priority :low
def matches(ext)
ext =~ /^\.upcase$/i
end
def output_ext(ext)
".html"
end
def convert(content)
content.upcase
end
end
end
```
Converters should implement at a minimum 3 methods:
<div class="mobile-side-scroller">
<table>
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Method</th>
<th>Description</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>matches</code></p>
</td>
<td><p>
Does the given extension match this converters list of acceptable
extensions? Takes one argument: the files extension (including the
dot). Must return <code>true</code> if it matches, <code>false</code>
otherwise.
</p></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>output_ext</code></p>
</td>
<td><p>
The extension to be given to the output file (including the dot).
Usually this will be <code>".html"</code>.
</p></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>convert</code></p>
</td>
<td><p>
Logic to do the content conversion. Takes one argument: the raw content
of the file (without YAML Front Matter). Must return a String.
</p></td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
In our example, `UpcaseConverter#matches` checks if our filename extension is
`.upcase`, and will render using the converter if it is. It will call
`UpcaseConverter#convert` to process the content. In our simple converter were
simply uppercasing the entire content string. Finally, when it saves the page,
it will do so with a `.html` extension.
## Commands
As of version 2.5.0, Jekyll can be extended with plugins which provide
subcommands for the `jekyll` executable. This is possible by including the
relevant plugins in a `Gemfile` group called `:jekyll_plugins`:
```ruby
group :jekyll_plugins do
gem "my_fancy_jekyll_plugin"
end
```
Each `Command` must be a subclass of the `Jekyll::Command` class and must
contain one class method: `init_with_program`. An example:
```ruby
class MyNewCommand < Jekyll::Command
class << self
def init_with_program(prog)
prog.command(:new) do |c|
c.syntax "new [options]"
c.description 'Create a new Jekyll site.'
c.option 'dest', '-d DEST', 'Where the site should go.'
c.action do |args, options|
Jekyll::Site.new_site_at(options['dest'])
end
end
end
end
end
```
Commands should implement this single class method:
<div class="mobile-side-scroller">
<table>
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Method</th>
<th>Description</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>init_with_program</code></p>
</td>
<td><p>
This method accepts one parameter, the
<code><a href="https://github.com/jekyll/mercenary#readme">Mercenary::Program</a></code>
instance, which is the Jekyll program itself. Upon the program,
commands may be created using the above syntax. For more details,
visit the Mercenary repository on GitHub.com.
</p></td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
## Tags
If youd like to include custom liquid tags in your site, you can do so by
hooking into the tagging system. Built-in examples added by Jekyll include the
`highlight` and `include` tags. Below is an example of a custom liquid tag that
will output the time the page was rendered:
```ruby
module Jekyll
class RenderTimeTag < Liquid::Tag
def initialize(tag_name, text, tokens)
super
@text = text
end
def render(context)
"#{@text} #{Time.now}"
end
end
end
Liquid::Template.register_tag('render_time', Jekyll::RenderTimeTag)
```
At a minimum, liquid tags must implement:
<div class="mobile-side-scroller">
<table>
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Method</th>
<th>Description</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>render</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>Outputs the content of the tag.</p>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
You must also register the custom tag with the Liquid template engine as
follows:
```ruby
Liquid::Template.register_tag('render_time', Jekyll::RenderTimeTag)
```
In the example above, we can place the following tag anywhere in one of our
pages:
{% raw %}
```ruby
<p>{% render_time page rendered at: %}</p>
```
{% endraw %}
And we would get something like this on the page:
```html
<p>page rendered at: Tue June 22 23:38:47 0500 2010</p>
```
### Liquid filters
You can add your own filters to the Liquid template system much like you can
add tags above. Filters are simply modules that export their methods to liquid.
All methods will have to take at least one parameter which represents the input
of the filter. The return value will be the output of the filter.
```ruby
module Jekyll
module AssetFilter
def asset_url(input)
"http://www.example.com/#{input}?#{Time.now.to_i}"
end
end
end
Liquid::Template.register_filter(Jekyll::AssetFilter)
```
<div class="note">
<h5>ProTip™: Access the site object using Liquid</h5>
<p>
Jekyll lets you access the <code>site</code> object through the
<code>context.registers</code> feature of Liquid at <code>context.registers[:site]</code>. For example, you can
access the global configuration file <code>_config.yml</code> using
<code>context.registers[:site].config</code>.
</p>
</div>
### Flags
There are two flags to be aware of when writing a plugin:
<div class="mobile-side-scroller">
<table>
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Flag</th>
<th>Description</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>safe</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
A boolean flag that informs Jekyll whether this plugin may be safely
executed in an environment where arbitrary code execution is not
allowed. This is used by GitHub Pages to determine which core plugins
may be used, and which are unsafe to run. If your plugin does not
allow for arbitrary code execution, set this to <code>true</code>.
GitHub Pages still wont load your plugin, but if you submit it for
inclusion in core, its best for this to be correct!
</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>priority</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
This flag determines what order the plugin is loaded in. Valid values
are: <code>:lowest</code>, <code>:low</code>, <code>:normal</code>,
<code>:high</code>, and <code>:highest</code>. Highest priority
matches are applied first, lowest priority are applied last.
</p>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
To use one of the example plugins above as an illustration, here is how youd
specify these two flags:
```ruby
module Jekyll
class UpcaseConverter < Converter
safe true
priority :low
...
end
end
```
## Hooks
Using hooks, your plugin can exercise fine-grained control over various aspects
of the build process. If your plugin defines any hooks, Jekyll will call them
at pre-defined points.
Hooks are registered to a container and an event name. To register one, you
call Jekyll::Hooks.register, and pass the container, event name, and code to
call whenever the hook is triggered. For example, if you want to execute some
custom functionality every time Jekyll renders a post, you could register a
hook like this:
```ruby
Jekyll::Hooks.register :posts, :post_render do |post|
# code to call after Jekyll renders a post
end
```
Jekyll provides hooks for <code>:site</code>, <code>:pages</code>,
<code>:posts</code>, and <code>:documents</code>. In all cases, Jekyll calls
your hooks with the container object as the first callback parameter. However,
all `:pre_render` hooks and the`:site, :post_render` hook will also provide a
payload hash as a second parameter. In the case of `:pre_render`, the payload
gives you full control over the variables that are available while rendering.
In the case of `:site, :post_render`, the payload contains final values after
rendering all the site (useful for sitemaps, feeds, etc).
The complete list of available hooks is below:
<div class="mobile-side-scroller">
<table>
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Container</th>
<th>Event</th>
<th>Called</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:site</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:after_init</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>Just after the site initializes, but before setup & render. Good
for modifying the configuration of the site.</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:site</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:after_reset</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>Just after site reset</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:site</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:post_read</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>After site data has been read and loaded from disk</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:site</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:pre_render</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>Just before rendering the whole site</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:site</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:post_render</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>After rendering the whole site, but before writing any files</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:site</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:post_write</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>After writing the whole site to disk</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:pages</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:post_init</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>Whenever a page is initialized</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:pages</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:pre_render</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>Just before rendering a page</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:pages</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:post_render</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>After rendering a page, but before writing it to disk</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:pages</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:post_write</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>After writing a page to disk</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:posts</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:post_init</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>Whenever a post is initialized</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:posts</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:pre_render</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>Just before rendering a post</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:posts</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:post_render</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>After rendering a post, but before writing it to disk</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:posts</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:post_write</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>After writing a post to disk</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:documents</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:post_init</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>Whenever a document is initialized</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:documents</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:pre_render</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>Just before rendering a document</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:documents</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:post_render</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>After rendering a document, but before writing it to disk</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:documents</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:post_write</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>After writing a document to disk</p>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
## Available Plugins
You can find a few useful plugins at the following locations:
#### Generators
- [Sitemap.xml Generator by Michael Levin](https://github.com/kinnetica/jekyll-plugins): Generates a sitemap.xml file by traversing all of the available posts and pages.
- [Full-text search by Pascal Widdershoven](https://github.com/PascalW/jekyll_indextank): Adds full-text search to your Jekyll site with a plugin and a bit of JavaScript.
- [AliasGenerator by Thomas Mango](https://github.com/tsmango/jekyll_alias_generator): Generates redirect pages for posts when an alias is specified in the YAML Front Matter.
- [Pageless Redirect Generator by Nick Quinlan](https://github.com/nquinlan/jekyll-pageless-redirects): Generates redirects based on files in the Jekyll root, with support for htaccess style redirects.
- [RssGenerator by Assaf Gelber](https://github.com/agelber/jekyll-rss): Automatically creates an RSS 2.0 feed from your posts.
- [Monthly archive generator by Shigeya Suzuki](https://github.com/shigeya/jekyll-monthly-archive-plugin): Generator and template which renders monthly archive like MovableType style, based on the work by Ilkka Laukkanen and others above.
- [Category archive generator by Shigeya Suzuki](https://github.com/shigeya/jekyll-category-archive-plugin): Generator and template which renders category archive like MovableType style, based on Monthly archive generator.
- [Emoji for Jekyll](https://github.com/yihangho/emoji-for-jekyll): Seamlessly enable emoji for all posts and pages.
- [Compass integration for Jekyll](https://github.com/mscharley/jekyll-compass): Easily integrate Compass and Sass with your Jekyll website.
- [Pages Directory by Ben Baker-Smith](https://github.com/bbakersmith/jekyll-pages-directory): Defines a `_pages` directory for page files which routes its output relative to the project root.
- [Page Collections by Jeff Kolesky](https://github.com/jeffkole/jekyll-page-collections): Generates collections of pages with functionality that resembles posts.
- [Windows 8.1 Live Tile Generation by Matt Sheehan](https://github.com/sheehamj13/jekyll-live-tiles): Generates Internet Explorer 11 config.xml file and Tile Templates for pinning your site to Windows 8.1.
- [Typescript Generator by Matt Sheehan](https://github.com/sheehamj13/jekyll_ts): Generate Javascript on build from your Typescript.
- [Jekyll::AutolinkEmail by Ivan Tse](https://github.com/ivantsepp/jekyll-autolink_email): Autolink your emails.
- [Jekyll::GitMetadata by Ivan Tse](https://github.com/ivantsepp/jekyll-git_metadata): Expose Git metadata for your templates.
- [Jekyll Auto Image by Merlos](https://github.com/merlos/jekyll-auto-image): Gets the first image of a post. Useful to list your posts with images or to add [twitter cards](https://dev.twitter.com/cards/overview) to your site.
- [Jekyll Portfolio Generator by Shannon Babincsak](https://github.com/codeinpink/jekyll-portfolio-generator): Generates project pages and computes related projects out of project data files.
- [Jekyll-Umlauts by Arne Gockeln](https://github.com/webchef/jekyll-umlauts): This generator replaces all german umlauts (äöüß) case sensitive with html.
- [Jekyll Flickr Plugin](https://github.com/lawmurray/indii-jekyll-flickr) by [Lawrence Murray](http://www.indii.org): Generates posts for photos uploaded to a Flickr photostream.
- [Jekyll::Paginate::Category](https://github.com/midnightSuyama/jekyll-paginate-category): Pagination Generator for Jekyll Category.
- [AMP-Jekyll by Juuso Mikkonen](https://github.com/juusaw/amp-jekyll): Generate [Accelerated Mobile Pages](https://www.ampproject.org) of Jekyll posts.
- [Jekyll Art Gallery plugin](https://github.com/alexivkin/Jekyll-Art-Gallery-Plugin): An advanced art/photo gallery generation plugin for creating galleries from a set of image folders. Supports image tagging, thumbnails, sorting, image rotation, post-processing (remove EXIF, add watermark), multiple collections and much more.
- [jekyll-ga](https://github.com/developmentseed/jekyll-ga): A Jekyll plugin that downloads Google Analytics data and adds it to posts. Useful for making a site that lists "most popular" content. [Read the introduction](https://developmentseed.org/blog/google-analytics-jekyll-plugin/) post on the developmentSEED blog.
- [jekyll-multi-paginate](https://github.com/fadhilnapis/jekyll-multi-paginate): Simple Jekyll paginator for multiple page. Ease you to make pagination on multiple page especially like multiple language.
- [jekyll-category-pages](https://github.com/field-theory/jekyll-category-pages): Easy-to-use category index pages with and without pagination. Supports non-URL-safe category keywords and has extensive documentation and test coverage.
- [Tweetsert](https://github.com/ibrado/jekyll-tweetsert): Imports tweets (Twitter statuses) as new posts. Features multiple timeline support, hashtag import, filtering, automatic category and/or tags, optional retweets and replies.
- [Stickyposts](https://github.com/ibrado/jekyll-stickyposts): Moves or copies (pins) posts marked `sticky: true` to the top of the list. Perfect for keeping important announcements on the home page, or giving collections a descriptive entry. Paginator friendly.
- [Jekyll::Paginate::Content](https://github.com/ibrado/jekyll-paginate-content): Content paginator in the style of jekyll-paginator-v2 that splits pages, posts, and collection entries into several pages. Specify a separator or use HTML &lt;h1&gt; etc. headers. Automatic splitting, single-page view, pager/trail, self-adjusting links, multipage TOC, SEO support.
- [Premonition](https://github.com/amedia/premonition): Adds block-styled side content to your page. For example summary, notes, hints or warning boxes.
- [jekyll-fontello](https://github.com/ericcornelissen/jekyll-fontello): A Jekyll plugin that automatically downloads your webfont from Fontello.
#### Converters
- [Pug plugin by Doug Beney](http://jekyll-pug.dougie.io): Use the popular Pug (previously Jade) templating language in Jekyll. Complete with caching, includes support, and much more.
- [Textile converter](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll-textile-converter): Convert `.textile` files into HTML. Also includes the `textilize` Liquid filter.
- [Slim plugin](https://github.com/slim-template/jekyll-slim): Slim converter and includes for Jekyll with support for Liquid tags.
- [Markdown References by Olov Lassus](https://github.com/olov/jekyll-references): Keep all your markdown reference-style link definitions in one \_references.md file.
- [ReStructuredText Converter](https://github.com/xdissent/jekyll-rst): Converts ReST documents to HTML with Pygments syntax highlighting.
- [Jekyll-pandoc-multiple-formats](https://github.com/fauno/jekyll-pandoc-multiple-formats) by [edsl](https://github.com/edsl): Use pandoc to generate your site in multiple formats. Supports pandocs markdown extensions.
- [Customized Kramdown Converter](https://github.com/mvdbos/kramdown-with-pygments): Enable Pygments syntax highlighting for Kramdown-parsed fenced code blocks.
- [Bigfootnotes Plugin](https://github.com/TheFox/jekyll-bigfootnotes): Enables big footnotes for Kramdown.
- [AsciiDoc Plugin](https://github.com/asciidoctor/jekyll-asciidoc): AsciiDoc convertor for Jekyll using [Asciidoctor](http://asciidoctor.org/).
- [Lazy Tweet Embedding](https://github.com/takuti/jekyll-lazy-tweet-embedding): Automatically convert tweet urls into twitter cards.
- [jekyll-commonmark](https://github.com/pathawks/jekyll-commonmark): Markdown converter that uses [libcmark](https://github.com/jgm/CommonMark), the reference parser for CommonMark.
#### Filters
- [Truncate HTML](https://github.com/MattHall/truncatehtml) by [Matt Hall](https://codebeef.com/): A Jekyll filter that truncates HTML while preserving markup structure.
- [Domain Name Filter by Lawrence Woodman](https://github.com/LawrenceWoodman/domain_name-liquid_filter): Filters the input text so that just the domain name is left.
- [Smilify](https://github.com/SaswatPadhi/jekyll_smilify) by [SaswatPadhi](https://github.com/SaswatPadhi): Convert text emoticons in your content to themeable smiley pics.
- [Jekyll-timeago](https://github.com/markets/jekyll-timeago): Converts a time value to the time ago in words.
- [pluralize](https://github.com/bdesham/pluralize): Easily combine a number and a word into a grammatically-correct amount like “1 minute” or “2 minute**s**”.
- [reading_time](https://github.com/bdesham/reading_time): Count words and estimate reading time for a piece of text, ignoring HTML elements that are unlikely to contain running text.
- [Table of Content Generator](https://github.com/dafi/jekyll-toc-generator): Generate the HTML code containing a table of content (TOC), the TOC can be customized in many way, for example you can decide which pages can be without TOC.
- [jekyll-toc](https://github.com/toshimaru/jekyll-toc): A liquid filter plugin for Jekyll which generates a table of contents.
- [jekyll-humanize](https://github.com/23maverick23/jekyll-humanize): This is a port of the Django app humanize which adds a "human touch" to data. Each method represents a Fluid type filter that can be used in your Jekyll site templates. Given that Jekyll produces static sites, some of the original methods do not make logical sense to port (e.g. naturaltime).
- [Jekyll-Ordinal](https://github.com/PatrickC8t/Jekyll-Ordinal): Jekyll liquid filter to output a date ordinal such as "st", "nd", "rd", or "th".
- [Deprecated articles keeper](https://github.com/kzykbys/JekyllPlugins) by [Kazuya Kobayashi](http://blog.kazuya.co/): A simple Jekyll filter which monitor how old an article is.
- [Jekyll-jalali](https://github.com/mehdisadeghi/jekyll-jalali) by [Mehdi Sadeghi](http://mehdix.ir): A simple Gregorian to Jalali date converter filter.
- [Jekyll Thumbnail Filter](https://github.com/matallo/jekyll-thumbnail-filter): Related posts thumbnail filter.
- [liquid-md5](https://github.com/pathawks/liquid-md5): Returns an MD5 hash. Helpful for generating Gravatars in templates.
- [jekyll-roman](https://github.com/paulrobertlloyd/jekyll-roman): A liquid filter for Jekyll that converts numbers into Roman numerals.
- [jekyll-typogrify](https://github.com/myles/jekyll-typogrify): A Jekyll plugin that brings the functions of [typogruby](http://avdgaag.github.io/typogruby/).
- [Jekyll Email Protect](https://github.com/vwochnik/jekyll-email-protect): Email protection liquid filter for Jekyll
- [Jekyll Uglify Filter](https://github.com/mattg/jekyll-uglify-filter): A Liquid filter that runs your JavaScript through UglifyJS.
- [match_regex](https://github.com/sparanoid/match_regex): A Liquid filter to perform regex match.
- [replace_regex](https://github.com/sparanoid/replace_regex): A Liquid filter to perform regex replace.
- [Jekyll Money](https://rubygems.org/gems/jekyll-money): A Jekyll plugin for dealing with money. Because we all have to at some point.
- [jekyll-random](https://github.com/codecalm/jekyll-random) by [codecalm](https://nodecalm.net): A Jekyll plugin that generates pseudo-random data. Very useful when you want to generate a large amount of random data.
#### Tags
You can find a few useful plugins at the following locations:
- [Jekyll-gist](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll-gist): Use the `gist` tag to easily embed a GitHub Gist onto your site. This works with public or secret gists.
- [Asset Path Tag](https://github.com/samrayner/jekyll-asset-path-plugin) by [Sam Rayner](http://www.samrayner.com/): Allows organisation of assets into subdirectories by outputting a path for a given file relative to the current post or page.
- [Delicious Plugin by Christian Hellsten](https://github.com/christianhellsten/jekyll-plugins): Fetches and renders bookmarks from delicious.com.
- [Embed.ly client by Robert Böhnke](https://github.com/robb/jekyll-embedly-client): Autogenerate embeds from URLs using oEmbed.
- [FlickrSetTag by Thomas Mango](https://github.com/tsmango/jekyll_flickr_set_tag): Generates image galleries from Flickr sets.
- [Tweet Tag by Scott W. Bradley](https://github.com/scottwb/jekyll-tweet-tag): Liquid tag for [Embedded Tweets](https://dev.twitter.com/docs/embedded-tweets) using Twitters shortcodes.
- [Jekyll Twitter Plugin](https://github.com/rob-murray/jekyll-twitter-plugin): A Liquid tag plugin that renders Tweets from Twitter API. Currently supports the [oEmbed](https://dev.twitter.com/rest/reference/get/statuses/oembed) API.
- [Jekyll-contentblocks](https://github.com/rustygeldmacher/jekyll-contentblocks): Lets you use Rails-like content_for tags in your templates, for passing content from your posts up to your layouts.
- [Jekyll-beastiepress](https://github.com/okeeblow/jekyll-beastiepress): FreeBSD utility tags for Jekyll sites.
- [Bibjekyll](https://github.com/pablooliveira/bibjekyll): Render BibTeX-formatted bibliographies/citations included in posts and pages using bibtex2html.
- [Jekyll-citation](https://github.com/archome/jekyll-citation): Render BibTeX-formatted bibliographies/citations included in posts and pages (pure Ruby).
- [Jekyll Dribbble Set Tag](https://github.com/ericdfields/Jekyll-Dribbble-Set-Tag): Builds Dribbble image galleries from any user.
- [JekyllGalleryTag](https://github.com/redwallhp/JekyllGalleryTag) by [redwallhp](https://github.com/redwallhp): Generates thumbnails from a directory of images and displays them in a grid.
- [Jekyll-swfobject](https://github.com/sectore/jekyll-swfobject): Liquid plugin for embedding Adobe Flash files (.swf) using [SWFObject](https://github.com/swfobject/swfobject).
- [Jekyll Picture Tag](https://github.com/robwierzbowski/jekyll-picture-tag): Easy responsive images for Jekyll. Based on the proposed [`<picture>`](https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/embedded-content.html#the-picture-element) element, polyfilled with Scott Jehls [Picturefill](https://github.com/scottjehl/picturefill).
- [Jekyll Image Tag](https://github.com/robwierzbowski/jekyll-image-tag): Better images for Jekyll. Save image presets, generate resized images, and add classes, alt text, and other attributes.
- [Jekyll Responsive Image](https://github.com/wildlyinaccurate/jekyll-responsive-image): Responsive images for Jekyll. Automatically resizes images, supports all responsive methods (`<picture>`, `srcset`, Imager.js, etc), super-flexible configuration.
- [Ditaa Tag](https://github.com/matze/jekyll-ditaa) by [matze](https://github.com/matze): Renders ASCII diagram art into PNG images and inserts a figure tag.
- [Jekyll Suggested Tweet](https://github.com/davidensinger/jekyll-suggested-tweet) by [David Ensinger](https://github.com/davidensinger/): A Liquid tag for Jekyll that allows for the embedding of suggested tweets via Twitters Web Intents API.
- [Jekyll Date Chart](https://github.com/GSI/jekyll_date_chart) by [GSI](https://github.com/GSI): Block that renders date line charts based on textile-formatted tables.
- [Jekyll Image Encode](https://github.com/GSI/jekyll_image_encode) by [GSI](https://github.com/GSI): Tag that renders base64 codes of images fetched from the web.
- [Jekyll Quick Man](https://github.com/GSI/jekyll_quick_man) by [GSI](https://github.com/GSI): Tag that renders pretty links to man page sources on the internet.
- [Image Set/Gallery Tag](https://github.com/callmeed/jekyll-image-set) by [callmeed](https://github.com/callmeed): Renders HTML for an image gallery from a folder in your Jekyll site. Just pass it a folder name and class/tag options.
- [jekyll_figure](https://github.com/lmullen/jekyll_figure): Generate figures and captions with links to the figure in a variety of formats
- [Jekyll GitHub Sample Tag](https://github.com/bwillis/jekyll-github-sample): A liquid tag to include a sample of a github repo file in your Jekyll site.
- [Jekyll Project Version Tag](https://github.com/rob-murray/jekyll-version-plugin): A Liquid tag plugin that renders a version identifier for your Jekyll site sourced from the git repository containing your code.
- [Piwigo Gallery](https://github.com/AlessandroLorenzi/piwigo_gallery) by [Alessandro Lorenzi](http://blog.alorenzi.eu/): Jekyll plugin to generate thumbnails from a Piwigo gallery and display them with a Liquid tag
- [mathml.rb](https://github.com/tmthrgd/jekyll-plugins) by Tom Thorogood: A plugin to convert TeX mathematics into MathML for display.
- [webmention_io.rb](https://github.com/aarongustafson/jekyll-webmention_io) by [Aaron Gustafson](http://aaron-gustafson.com/): A plugin to enable [webmention](https://indieweb.org/webmention) integration using [Webmention.io](https://webmention.io/). Includes an optional JavaScript for updating webmentions automatically between publishes and, if available, in realtime using WebSockets.
- [Jekyll 500px Embed](https://github.com/lkorth/jekyll-500px-embed) by Luke Korth. A Liquid tag plugin that embeds [500px](https://500px.com/) photos.
- [inline\_highlight](https://github.com/bdesham/inline_highlight): A tag for inline syntax highlighting.
- [jekyll-mermaid](https://github.com/jasonbellamy/jekyll-mermaid): Simplify the creation of mermaid diagrams and flowcharts in your posts and pages.
- [twa](https://github.com/Ezmyrelda/twa): Twemoji Awesome plugin for Jekyll. Liquid tag allowing you to use twitter emoji in your jekyll pages.
- [Fetch remote file content](https://github.com/dimitri-koenig/jekyll-plugins) by [Dimitri König](https://www.dimitrikoenig.net/): Using `remote_file_content` tag you can fetch the content of a remote file and include it as if you would put the content right into your markdown file yourself. Very useful for including code from github repo's to always have a current repo version.
- [jekyll-asciinema](https://github.com/mnuessler/jekyll-asciinema): A tag for embedding asciicasts recorded with [asciinema](https://asciinema.org) in your Jekyll pages.
- [Jekyll-Youtube](https://github.com/dommmel/jekyll-youtube) A Liquid tag that embeds Youtube videos. The default emded markup is responsive but you can also specify your own by using an include/partial.
- [Jekyll Flickr Plugin](https://github.com/lawmurray/indii-jekyll-flickr) by [Lawrence Murray](http://www.indii.org): Embeds Flickr photosets (albums) as a gallery of thumbnails, with lightbox links to larger images.
- [jekyll-figure](https://github.com/paulrobertlloyd/jekyll-figure): A liquid tag for Jekyll that generates `<figure>` elements.
- [Jekyll Video Embed](https://github.com/eug/jekyll-video-embed): It provides several tags to easily embed videos (e.g. Youtube, Vimeo, UStream and Ted Talks)
- [jekyll-i18n_tags](https://github.com/KrzysiekJ/jekyll-i18n_tags): Translate your templates.
- [Jekyll Ideal Image Slider](https://github.com/jekylltools/jekyll-ideal-image-slider): Liquid tag plugin to create image sliders using [Ideal Image Slider](https://github.com/gilbitron/Ideal-Image-Slider).
- [Jekyll Tags List Plugin](https://github.com/crispgm/jekyll-tags-list-plugin): A Liquid tag plugin that creates tags list in specific order.
- [Jekyll Maps](https://github.com/ayastreb/jekyll-maps) by [Anatoliy Yastreb](https://github.com/ayastreb): A Jekyll plugin to easily embed maps with filterable locations.
- [Jekyll Cloudinary](https://nhoizey.github.io/jekyll-cloudinary/) by [Nicolas Hoizey](https://nicolas-hoizey.com/): a Jekyll plugin adding a Liquid tag to ease the use of Cloudinary for responsive images in your Markdown/Kramdown posts.
- [jekyll-include-absolute-plugin](https://github.com/tnhu/jekyll-include-absolute-plugin) by [Tan Nhu](https://github.com/tnhu): A Jekyll plugin to include a file from its path relative to Jekyll's source folder.
- [Jekyll Download Tag](https://github.com/mattg/jekyll-download-tag): A Liquid tag that acts like `include`, but for external resources.
- [Jekyll Brand Social Wall](https://github.com/MediaComem/jekyll-brand-social-wall): A jekyll plugin to generate a social wall with your favorite social networks
- [Jekyll If File Exists](https://github.com/k-funk/jekyll-if-file-exists): A Jekyll Plugin that checks if a file exists with an if/else block.
- [BibSonomy](https://github.com/rjoberon/bibsonomy-jekyll): Jekyll
plugin to generate publication lists from [BibSonomy](https://www.bibsonomy.org/).
- [github-cards](https://github.com/edward-shen/github-cards): Creates styleable Github cards for your Github projects.
- [disqus-for-jekyll](https://github.com/kacperduras/disqus-for-jekyll): A Jekyll plugin to view the comments powered by Disqus.
- [jekyll-html](https://github.com/kacperduras/jekyll-html): A Jekyll plugin to use HTML tags in Jekyll pages, posts and collections.
- [jekyll-onebox](https://github.com/rriemann/jekyll-onebox): Liquid tag for displaying HTML previews (embeds) for links to popular domains. Plugin is based on [Onebox](https://github.com/discourse/onebox) that powers link previews in [Discourse](http://github.com/discourse/discourse) forums.
- [jekyll-w2m](https://github.com/kacperduras/jekyll-w2m): A Jekyll plugin to liberate content from Microsoft Word documents (powered by [word-to-markdown](https://github.com/benbalter/word-to-markdown)).
#### Collections
- [Jekyll Plugins by Recursive Design](https://github.com/recurser/jekyll-plugins): Plugins to generate Project pages from GitHub readmes, a Category page, and a Sitemap generator.
- [Company website and blog plugins](https://github.com/flatterline/jekyll-plugins) by Flatterline, a Ruby on Rails development company: Portfolio/project page generator, team/individual page generator, an author bio liquid tag for use on posts, and a few other smaller plugins.
- [Jekyll plugins by Aucor](https://github.com/aucor/jekyll-plugins): Plugins for trimming unwanted newlines/whitespace and sorting pages by weight attribute.
#### Other
- [Analytics for Jekyll](https://github.com/hendrikschneider/jekyll-analytics) by Hendrik Schneider: An effortless way to add various trackers like Google Analytics, Matomo (formerly Piwik), mPulse, etc. to your site.
- [ditaa-ditaa](https://github.com/tmthrgd/ditaa-ditaa) by Tom Thorogood: a drastic revision of jekyll-ditaa that renders diagrams drawn using ASCII art into PNG images.
- [Pygments Cache Path by Raimonds Simanovskis](https://github.com/rsim/blog.rayapps.com/blob/master/_plugins/pygments_cache_patch.rb): Plugin to cache syntax-highlighted code from Pygments.
- [Related Posts by Lawrence Woodman](https://github.com/LawrenceWoodman/related_posts-jekyll_plugin): Overrides `site.related_posts` to use categories to assess relationship.
- [jekyll-tagging-related_posts](https://github.com/toshimaru/jekyll-tagging-related_posts): Jekyll related_posts function based on tags (works on Jekyll3).
- [Jekyll-localization](https://github.com/blackwinter/jekyll-localization): Jekyll plugin that adds localization features to the rendering engine.
- [Jekyll-rendering](https://github.com/blackwinter/jekyll-rendering): Jekyll plugin to provide alternative rendering engines.
- [Jekyll-pagination](https://github.com/blackwinter/jekyll-pagination): Jekyll plugin to extend the pagination generator.
- [Jekyll-tagging](https://github.com/pattex/jekyll-tagging): Jekyll plugin to automatically generate a tag cloud and tag pages.
- [Jekyll-scholar](https://github.com/inukshuk/jekyll-scholar): Jekyll extensions for the blogging scholar.
- [Jekyll-assets](http://jekyll.github.io/jekyll-assets/) by [ixti](https://github.com/ixti): Rails-alike assets pipeline (write assets in CoffeeScript, Sass, LESS etc; specify dependencies for automatic bundling using simple declarative comments in assets; minify and compress; use JST templates; cache bust; and many-many more).
- [JAPR](https://github.com/kitsched/japr): Jekyll Asset Pipeline Reborn - Powerful asset pipeline for Jekyll that collects, converts and compresses JavaScript and CSS assets.
- [Jekyll-minibundle](https://github.com/tkareine/jekyll-minibundle): Asset bundling and cache busting using external minification tool of your choice. No gem dependencies.
- [Singlepage-jekyll](https://github.com/JCB-K/singlepage-jekyll) by [JCB-K](https://github.com/JCB-K): Turns Jekyll into a dynamic one-page website.
- [generator-jekyllrb](https://github.com/robwierzbowski/generator-jekyllrb): A generator that wraps Jekyll in [Yeoman](http://yeoman.io/), a tool collection and workflow for building modern web apps.
- [grunt-jekyll](https://github.com/dannygarcia/grunt-jekyll): A straightforward [Grunt](http://gruntjs.com/) plugin for Jekyll.
- [jekyll-postfiles](https://github.com/indirect/jekyll-postfiles): Add `_postfiles` directory and {% raw %}`{{ postfile }}`{% endraw %} tag so the files a post refers to will always be right there inside your repo.
- [A layout that compresses HTML](http://jch.penibelst.de/): GitHub Pages compatible, configurable way to compress HTML files on site build.
- [Jekyll CO₂](https://github.com/wdenton/jekyll-co2): Generates HTML showing the monthly change in atmospheric CO₂ at the Mauna Loa observatory in Hawaii.
- [remote-include](http://www.northfieldx.co.uk/remote-include/): Includes files using remote URLs
- [jekyll-minifier](https://github.com/digitalsparky/jekyll-minifier): Minifies HTML, XML, CSS, and Javascript both inline and as separate files utilising yui-compressor and htmlcompressor.
- [Jekyll views router](https://bitbucket.org/nyufac/jekyll-views-router): Simple router between generator plugins and templates.
- [Jekyll Language Plugin](https://github.com/vwochnik/jekyll-language-plugin): Jekyll 3.0-compatible multi-language plugin for posts, pages and includes.
- [Jekyll Deploy](https://github.com/vwochnik/jekyll-deploy): Adds a `deploy` sub-command to Jekyll.
- [Official Contentful Jekyll Plugin](https://github.com/contentful/jekyll-contentful-data-import): Adds a `contentful` sub-command to Jekyll to import data from Contentful.
- [jekyll-paspagon](https://github.com/KrzysiekJ/jekyll-paspagon): Sell your posts in various formats for cryptocurrencies.
- [Hawkins](https://github.com/awood/hawkins): Adds a `liveserve` sub-command to Jekyll that incorporates [LiveReload](http://livereload.com/) into your pages while you preview them. No more hitting the refresh button in your browser!
- [Jekyll Autoprefixer](https://github.com/vwochnik/jekyll-autoprefixer): Autoprefixer integration for Jekyll
- [Jekyll-breadcrumbs](https://github.com/git-no/jekyll-breadcrumbs): Creates breadcrumbs for Jekyll 3.x, includes features like SEO optimization, optional breadcrumb item translation and more.
- [generator-jekyllized](https://github.com/sondr3/generator-jekyllized): A Yeoman generator for rapidly developing sites with Gulp. Live reload your site, automatically minify and optimize your assets and much more.
- [Jekyll-Spotify](https://github.com/MertcanGokgoz/Jekyll-Spotify): Easily output Spotify Embed Player for jekyll
- [jekyll-menus](https://github.com/forestryio/jekyll-menus): Hugo style menus for your Jekyll site... recursive menus included.
- [jekyll-data](https://github.com/ashmaroli/jekyll-data): Read data files within Jekyll Theme Gems.
- [jekyll-pinboard](https://github.com/snaptortoise/jekyll-pinboard-plugin): Access your Pinboard bookmarks within your Jekyll theme.
- [jekyll-migrate-permalink](https://github.com/mpchadwick/jekyll-migrate-permalink): Adds a `migrate-permalink` sub-command to help deal with side effects of changing your permalink.
- [Jekyll-Post](https://github.com/robcrocombe/jekyll-post): A CLI tool to easily draft, edit, and publish Jekyll posts.
- [jekyll-numbered-headings](https://github.com/muratayusuke/jekyll-numbered-headings): Adds ordered number to headings.
- [jekyll-pre-commit](https://github.com/mpchadwick/jekyll-pre-commit): A framework for running checks against your posts using a git pre-commit hook before you publish them.
- [jekyll-pwa-plugin](https://github.com/lavas-project/jekyll-pwa): A plugin provides PWA support for Jekyll. It generates a service worker in Jekyll build process and makes precache and runtime cache available in the runtime with Google Workbox.
- [jekyll-algolia](https://community.algolia.com/jekyll-algolia/): Add fast and relevant search to your Jekyll site through the Algolia API.
<div class="note info">
<h5>Submit your gem plugins</h5>
<p>
You're encouraged to add your Jekyll gem plugins to this list, <a href="../contributing/">read the contributing page</a> to find
out how to make that happen.
</p>
</div>

View File

@@ -1,62 +0,0 @@
---
title: Commands
permalink: /docs/plugins/commands/
---
As of version 2.5.0, Jekyll can be extended with plugins which provide
subcommands for the `jekyll` executable. This is possible by including the
relevant plugins in a `Gemfile` group called `:jekyll_plugins`:
```ruby
group :jekyll_plugins do
gem "my_fancy_jekyll_plugin"
end
```
Each `Command` must be a subclass of the `Jekyll::Command` class and must
contain one class method: `init_with_program`. An example:
```ruby
class MyNewCommand < Jekyll::Command
class << self
def init_with_program(prog)
prog.command(:new) do |c|
c.syntax "new [options]"
c.description 'Create a new Jekyll site.'
c.option 'dest', '-d DEST', 'Where the site should go.'
c.action do |args, options|
Jekyll::Site.new_site_at(options['dest'])
end
end
end
end
end
```
Commands should implement this single class method:
<div class="mobile-side-scroller">
<table>
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Method</th>
<th>Description</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>init_with_program</code></p>
</td>
<td><p>
This method accepts one parameter, the
<code><a href="https://github.com/jekyll/mercenary#readme">Mercenary::Program</a></code>
instance, which is the Jekyll program itself. Upon the program,
commands may be created using the above syntax. For more details,
visit the Mercenary repository on GitHub.com.
</p></td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
</div>

View File

@@ -1,91 +0,0 @@
---
title: Converters
permalink: /docs/plugins/converters/
---
If you have a new markup language youd like to use with your site, you can
include it by implementing your own converter. Both the Markdown and
[Textile](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll-textile-converter) markup
languages are implemented using this method.
<div class="note info">
<h5>Remember your Front Matter</h5>
<p>
Jekyll will only convert files that have a YAML header at the top, even for
converters you add using a plugin.
</p>
</div>
Below is a converter that will take all posts ending in `.upcase` and process
them using the `UpcaseConverter`:
```ruby
module Jekyll
class UpcaseConverter < Converter
safe true
priority :low
def matches(ext)
ext =~ /^\.upcase$/i
end
def output_ext(ext)
".html"
end
def convert(content)
content.upcase
end
end
end
```
Converters should implement at a minimum 3 methods:
<div class="mobile-side-scroller">
<table>
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Method</th>
<th>Description</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>matches</code></p>
</td>
<td><p>
Does the given extension match this converters list of acceptable
extensions? Takes one argument: the files extension (including the
dot). Must return <code>true</code> if it matches, <code>false</code>
otherwise.
</p></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>output_ext</code></p>
</td>
<td><p>
The extension to be given to the output file (including the dot).
Usually this will be <code>".html"</code>.
</p></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>convert</code></p>
</td>
<td><p>
Logic to do the content conversion. Takes one argument: the raw content
of the file (without front matter). Must return a String.
</p></td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
In our example, `UpcaseConverter#matches` checks if our filename extension is
`.upcase`, and will render using the converter if it is. It will call
`UpcaseConverter#convert` to process the content. In our simple converter were
simply uppercasing the entire content string. Finally, when it saves the page,
it will do so with a `.html` extension.

View File

@@ -1,30 +0,0 @@
---
title: Filters
permalink: /docs/plugins/filters/
---
Filters are modules that export their methods to liquid.
All methods will have to take at least one parameter which represents the input
of the filter. The return value will be the output of the filter.
```ruby
module Jekyll
module AssetFilter
def asset_url(input)
"http://www.example.com/#{input}?#{Time.now.to_i}"
end
end
end
Liquid::Template.register_filter(Jekyll::AssetFilter)
```
<div class="note">
<h5>ProTip™: Access the site object using Liquid</h5>
<p>
Jekyll lets you access the <code>site</code> object through the
<code>context.registers</code> feature of Liquid at <code>context.registers[:site]</code>. For example, you can
access the global configuration file <code>_config.yml</code> using
<code>context.registers[:site].config</code>.
</p>
</div>

View File

@@ -1,104 +0,0 @@
---
title: Generators
permalink: /docs/plugins/generators/
---
You can create a generator when you need Jekyll to create additional content
based on your own rules.
A generator is a subclass of `Jekyll::Generator` that defines a `generate`
method, which receives an instance of
[`Jekyll::Site`]({{ site.repository }}/blob/master/lib/jekyll/site.rb). The
return value of `generate` is ignored.
Generators run after Jekyll has made an inventory of the existing content, and
before the site is generated. Pages with front matter are stored as
instances of
[`Jekyll::Page`]({{ site.repository }}/blob/master/lib/jekyll/page.rb)
and are available via `site.pages`. Static files become instances of
[`Jekyll::StaticFile`]({{ site.repository }}/blob/master/lib/jekyll/static_file.rb)
and are available via `site.static_files`. See
[the Variables documentation page](/docs/variables/) and
[`Jekyll::Site`]({{ site.repository }}/blob/master/lib/jekyll/site.rb)
for more details.
For instance, a generator can inject values computed at build time for template
variables. In the following example the template `reading.html` has two
variables `ongoing` and `done` that we fill in the generator:
```ruby
module Reading
class Generator < Jekyll::Generator
def generate(site)
ongoing, done = Book.all.partition(&:ongoing?)
reading = site.pages.detect {|page| page.name == 'reading.html'}
reading.data['ongoing'] = ongoing
reading.data['done'] = done
end
end
end
```
This is a more complex generator that generates new pages:
```ruby
module Jekyll
class CategoryPageGenerator < Generator
safe true
def generate(site)
if site.layouts.key? 'category_index'
dir = site.config['category_dir'] || 'categories'
site.categories.each_key do |category|
site.pages << CategoryPage.new(site, site.source, File.join(dir, category), category)
end
end
end
end
# A Page subclass used in the `CategoryPageGenerator`
class CategoryPage < Page
def initialize(site, base, dir, category)
@site = site
@base = base
@dir = dir
@name = 'index.html'
self.process(@name)
self.read_yaml(File.join(base, '_layouts'), 'category_index.html')
self.data['category'] = category
category_title_prefix = site.config['category_title_prefix'] || 'Category: '
self.data['title'] = "#{category_title_prefix}#{category}"
end
end
end
```
In this example, our generator will create a series of files under the
`categories` directory for each category, listing the posts in each category
using the `category_index.html` layout.
Generators are only required to implement one method:
<div class="mobile-side-scroller">
<table>
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Method</th>
<th>Description</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>generate</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>Generates content as a side-effect.</p>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
</div>

View File

@@ -1,244 +0,0 @@
---
title: Hooks
permalink: /docs/plugins/hooks/
---
Using hooks, your plugin can exercise fine-grained control over various aspects
of the build process. If your plugin defines any hooks, Jekyll will call them
at pre-defined points.
Hooks are registered to a container and an event name. To register one, you
call Jekyll::Hooks.register, and pass the container, event name, and code to
call whenever the hook is triggered. For example, if you want to execute some
custom functionality every time Jekyll renders a post, you could register a
hook like this:
```ruby
Jekyll::Hooks.register :posts, :post_render do |post|
# code to call after Jekyll renders a post
end
```
Jekyll provides hooks for <code>:site</code>, <code>:pages</code>,
<code>:posts</code>, and <code>:documents</code>. In all cases, Jekyll calls
your hooks with the container object as the first callback parameter.
All `:pre_render` hooks and the`:site, :post_render` hook will also provide a
payload hash as a second parameter. In the case of `:pre_render`, the payload
gives you full control over the variables that are available while rendering.
In the case of `:site, :post_render`, the payload contains final values after
rendering all the site (useful for sitemaps, feeds, etc).
The complete list of available hooks is below:
<div class="mobile-side-scroller">
<table>
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Container</th>
<th>Event</th>
<th>Called</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:site</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:after_init</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>Just after the site initializes, but before setup & render. Good
for modifying the configuration of the site.</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:site</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:after_reset</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>Just after site reset</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:site</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:post_read</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>After site data has been read and loaded from disk</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:site</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:pre_render</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>Just before rendering the whole site</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:site</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:post_render</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>After rendering the whole site, but before writing any files</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:site</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:post_write</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>After writing the whole site to disk</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:pages</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:post_init</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>Whenever a page is initialized</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:pages</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:pre_render</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>Just before rendering a page</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:pages</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:post_render</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>After rendering a page, but before writing it to disk</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:pages</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:post_write</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>After writing a page to disk</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:posts</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:post_init</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>Whenever a post is initialized</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:posts</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:pre_render</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>Just before rendering a post</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:posts</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:post_render</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>After rendering a post, but before writing it to disk</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:posts</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:post_write</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>After writing a post to disk</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:documents</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:post_init</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>Whenever a document is initialized</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:documents</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:pre_render</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>Just before rendering a document</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:documents</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:post_render</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>After rendering a document, but before writing it to disk</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>:documents</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p><code>:post_write</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>After writing a document to disk</p>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
</div>

View File

@@ -1,82 +0,0 @@
---
title: Plugins
permalink: /docs/plugins/installation/
---
You have 3 options for installing plugins:
1. In your site source root, make a `_plugins` directory. Place your plugins
here. Any file ending in `*.rb` inside this directory will be loaded before
Jekyll generates your site.
2. In your `_config.yml` file, add a new array with the key `plugins` (or `gems` for Jekyll < `3.5.0`) and the
values of the gem names of the plugins you'd like to use. An example:
```yaml
# This will require each of these plugins automatically.
plugins:
- jekyll-gist
- jekyll-coffeescript
- jekyll-assets
- another-jekyll-plugin
```
Then install your plugins using `gem install jekyll-gist jekyll-coffeescript jekyll-assets another-jekyll-plugin`
3. Add the relevant plugins to a Bundler group in your `Gemfile`. An
example:
```ruby
group :jekyll_plugins do
gem "jekyll-gist"
gem "jekyll-coffeescript"
gem "jekyll-assets"
gem "another-jekyll-plugin"
end
```
Now you need to install all plugins from your Bundler group by running single command `bundle install`.
<div class="note info">
<h5>Plugins on GitHub Pages</h5>
<p>
<a href="https://pages.github.com/">GitHub Pages</a> is powered by Jekyll.
All Pages sites are generated using the <code>--safe</code> option
to disable plugins (with the exception of some
<a href="https://pages.github.com/versions">whitelisted plugins</a>) for
security reasons. Unfortunately, this means
your plugins wont work if youre deploying to GitHub Pages.<br><br>
You can still use GitHub Pages to publish your site, but youll need to
convert the site locally and push the generated static files to your GitHub
repository instead of the Jekyll source files.
</p>
</div>
<div class="note info">
<h5>
<code>_plugins</code>, <code>_config.yml</code> and <code>Gemfile</code>
can be used simultaneously
</h5>
<p>
You may use any of the aforementioned plugin options simultaneously in the
same site if you so choose. Use of one does not restrict the use of the
others.
</p>
</div>
### The jekyll_plugins group
Jekyll gives this particular group of gems in your `Gemfile` a different
treatment. Any gem included in this group is loaded before Jekyll starts
processing the rest of your source directory.
A gem included here will be activated even if its not explicitly listed under
the `plugins:` key in your site's config file.
<div class="note warning">
<p>
Gems included in the <code>:jekyll-plugins</code> group are activated
regardless of the <code>--safe</code> mode setting. Be aware of what
gems are included under this group!
</p>
</div>

View File

@@ -1,115 +0,0 @@
---
title: Tags
permalink: /docs/plugins/tags/
---
If youd like to include custom liquid tags in your site, you can do so by
hooking into the tagging system. Built-in examples added by Jekyll include the
`highlight` and `include` tags. Below is an example of a custom liquid tag that
will output the time the page was rendered:
```ruby
module Jekyll
class RenderTimeTag < Liquid::Tag
def initialize(tag_name, text, tokens)
super
@text = text
end
def render(context)
"#{@text} #{Time.now}"
end
end
end
Liquid::Template.register_tag('render_time', Jekyll::RenderTimeTag)
```
At a minimum, liquid tags must implement:
<div class="mobile-side-scroller">
<table>
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Method</th>
<th>Description</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>render</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>Outputs the content of the tag.</p>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
You must also register the custom tag with the Liquid template engine as
follows:
```ruby
Liquid::Template.register_tag('render_time', Jekyll::RenderTimeTag)
```
In the example above, we can place the following tag anywhere in one of our
pages:
{% raw %}
```ruby
<p>{% render_time page rendered at: %}</p>
```
{% endraw %}
And we would get something like this on the page:
```html
<p>page rendered at: Tue June 22 23:38:47 0500 2010</p>
```
## Tag Blocks
The `render_time` tag seen above can also be rewritten as a tag block by
inheriting the `Liquid::Block` class. Look at the example below:
```ruby
module Jekyll
class RenderTimeTagBlock < Liquid::Block
def render(context)
text = super
"<p>#{text} #{Time.now}</p>"
end
end
end
Liquid::Template.register_tag('render_time', Jekyll::RenderTimeTagBlock)
```
We can now use the tag block anywhere:
{% raw %}
```liquid
{% render_time %}
page rendered at:
{% endrender_time %}
```
{% endraw %}
And we would still get the same output as above on the page:
```html
<p>page rendered at: Tue June 22 23:38:47 0500 2010</p>
```
<div class="note info">
<p>In the above example, the tag block and the tag are both registered with
the name <code>render_time</code> but to register a tag and a tag block using
the same name in the same project is not recommended as this may lead to
conflicts.</p>
</div>

View File

@@ -1,137 +0,0 @@
---
title: Your first plugin
permalink: /docs/plugins/your-first-plugin/
---
Plugins allow you to extend Jekyll's behavior to fit your needs. There are six
types of plugins in Jekyll.
## Generators
[Generators](/docs/plugins/generators/) create content on your site.
For example:
* [jekyll-feed](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll-feed) creates an Atom feed of
blog posts.
* [jekyll-archives](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll-archives) creates archive
pages for blog categories and tags.
* [jekyll-sitemap](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll-sitemap) creates a sitemap.
## Converters
[Converters](/docs/plugins/converters/) change a markup language into another
format. For example:
* [jekyll-textile-converter](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll-textile-converter)
converts textile to HTML.
* [jekyll-coffeescript](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll-coffeescript) converts
Coffeescript to JavaScript.
* [jekyll-opal](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll-opal) converts Ruby to
JavaScript.
## Commands
[Commands](/docs/plugins/commands/) extend the `jekyll` executable with
subcommands. For example:
* [jekyll-compose](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll-compose) adds subcommands
for creating a post, page or draft.
## Tags
[Tags](/docs/plugins/tags/) create custom Liquid tags. For example:
* [jekyll-youtube](https://github.com/dommmel/jekyll-youtube) embeds a YouTube
video.
* [jekyll-asset-path-plugin](https://github.com/samrayner/jekyll-asset-path-plugin)
outputs a relative URL for assets.
* [jekyll-swfobject](https://github.com/sectore/jekyll-swfobject) embeds a SWF
object.
## Filters
[Filters](/docs/plugins/filters/) create custom Liquid filters. For example:
* [jekyll-time-ago](https://github.com/markets/jekyll-timeago) - The distance
between two dates in words.
* [jekyll-toc](https://github.com/toshimaru/jekyll-toc) - Generates a table of
content.
* [jekyll-email-protect](https://github.com/vwochnik/jekyll-email-protect) -
Obfuscates emails to protect them from spam bots.
## Hooks
[Hooks](/docs/plugins/hooks/) give fine-grained control to extend the build
process.
## Flags
There are two flags to be aware of when writing a plugin:
<div class="mobile-side-scroller">
<table>
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Flag</th>
<th>Description</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>safe</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
A boolean flag that informs Jekyll whether this plugin may be safely
executed in an environment where arbitrary code execution is not
allowed. This is used by GitHub Pages to determine which core plugins
may be used, and which are unsafe to run. If your plugin does not
allow for arbitrary code execution, set this to <code>true</code>.
GitHub Pages still wont load your plugin, but if you submit it for
inclusion in core, its best for this to be correct!
</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
<p><code>priority</code></p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
This flag determines what order the plugin is loaded in. Valid values
are: <code>:lowest</code>, <code>:low</code>, <code>:normal</code>,
<code>:high</code>, and <code>:highest</code>. Highest priority
matches are applied first, lowest priority are applied last.
</p>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
To use one of the example plugins above as an illustration, here is how youd
specify these two flags:
```ruby
module Jekyll
class UpcaseConverter < Converter
safe true
priority :low
...
end
end
```
## Best Practices
The guides help you with the specifics of creating plugins. We also have some
recommended best practices to help structure your plugin.
We recommend using a [gem](/docs/ruby-101/#gems) for your plugin. This will
help you manage dependencies, keep separation from your site source code and
allow you to share functionality across multiple projects. For tips on creating
a gem take a look a the
[Ruby gems guide](https://guides.rubygems.org/make-your-own-gem/) or look
through the source code of an existing plugin such as
[jekyll-feed](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll-feed).

View File

@@ -1,23 +1,30 @@
---
title: Posts
title: Writing posts
permalink: /docs/posts/
redirect_from:
- /docs/drafts/
---
Blogging is baked into Jekyll. You write blog posts as text files and Jekyll
provides everything you need to turn it into a blog.
One of Jekylls best aspects is that it is “blog aware”. What does this mean,
exactly? Well, simply put, it means that blogging is baked into Jekylls
functionality. If you write articles and publish them online, you can publish
and maintain a blog simply by managing a folder of text-files on your computer.
Compared to the hassle of configuring and maintaining databases and web-based
CMS systems, this will be a welcome change!
## The Posts Folder
The `_posts` folder is where your blog posts live. You typically write posts
in [Markdown](https://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/), HTML is
also supported.
As explained on the [directory structure](../structure/) page, the `_posts`
folder is where your blog posts will live. These files are generally
[Markdown](https://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/) or HTML, but can
be other formats with the proper converter installed.
All posts must have [YAML Front Matter](../frontmatter/), and they will be
converted from their source format into an HTML page that is part of your
static site.
## Creating Posts
### Creating Post Files
To create a post, add a file to your `_posts` directory with the following
format:
To create a new post, all you need to do is create a file in the `_posts`
directory. How you name files in this folder is important. Jekyll requires blog
post files to be named according to the following format:
```
YEAR-MONTH-DAY-title.MARKUP
@@ -32,33 +39,25 @@ file. For example, the following are examples of valid post filenames:
2012-09-12-how-to-write-a-blog.md
```
All blog post files must begin with [front matter](/docs/front-matter/) which is
typically used to set a [layout](/docs/layouts/) or other meta data. For a simple
example this can just be empty:
```markdown
---
layout: post
title: "Welcome to Jekyll!"
---
# Welcome
**Hello world**, this is my first Jekyll blog post.
I hope you like it!
```
<div class="note">
<h5>ProTip™: Link to other posts</h5>
<p>
Use the <a href="/docs/liquid/tags/#linking-to-posts"><code>post_url</code></a>
Use the <a href="../templates/#linking-to-posts"><code>post_url</code></a>
tag to link to other posts without having to worry about the URLs
breaking when the site permalink style changes.
</p>
</div>
### Content Formats
All blog post files must begin with [YAML Front Matter](../frontmatter/). After
that, it's simply a matter of deciding which format you prefer. Jekyll supports
[Markdown](https://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/) out of the box,
and has [myriad extensions for other formats as well](/docs/plugins/#converters-1),
including the popular [Textile](http://redcloth.org/textile) format. These
formats each have their own way of marking up different types of content
within a post, so you should familiarize yourself with these formats and
decide which one best suits your needs.
<div class="note info">
<h5>Be aware of character sets</h5>
@@ -74,32 +73,67 @@ I hope you like it!
## Including images and resources
At some point, you'll want to include images, downloads, or other
digital assets along with your text content. One common solution is to create
a folder in the root of the project directory called something like `assets`,
into which any images, files or other resources are placed. Then, from within
any post, they can be linked to using the sites root as the path for the asset
to include. The best way to do this depends on the way your sites (sub)domain
and path are configured, but here are some simple examples in Markdown:
Chances are, at some point, you'll want to include images, downloads, or other
digital assets along with your text content. While the syntax for linking to
these resources differs between Markdown and Textile, the problem of working
out where to store these files in your site is something everyone will face.
There are a number of ways to include digital assets in Jekyll.
One common solution is to create a folder in the root of the project directory
called something like `assets`, into which any images, files
or other resources are placed. Then, from within any post, they can be linked
to using the sites root as the path for the asset to include. Again, this will
depend on the way your sites (sub)domain and path are configured, but here are
some examples in Markdown of how you could do this using the `absolute_url`
filter in a post.
Including an image asset in a post:
{% raw %}
```markdown
... which is shown in the screenshot below:
![My helpful screenshot](/assets/screenshot.jpg)
![My helpful screenshot]({{ "/assets/screenshot.jpg" | absolute_url }})
```
{% endraw %}
Linking to a PDF for readers to download:
{% raw %}
```markdown
... you can [get the PDF](/assets/mydoc.pdf) directly.
... you can [get the PDF]({{ "/assets/mydoc.pdf" | absolute_url }}) directly.
```
{% endraw %}
<div class="info">
</div>
## A typical post
Jekyll can handle many different iterations of the idea you might associate with a "post," however a standard blog style post, including a Title, Layout, Publishing Date, and Categories might look like this:
```markdown
---
layout: post
title: "Welcome to Jekyll!"
date: 2015-11-17 16:16:01 -0600
categories: jekyll update
---
Youll find this post in your `_posts` directory. Go ahead and edit it and re-build the site to see your changes. You can rebuild the site in many different ways, but the most common way is to run `bundle exec jekyll serve`, which launches a web server and auto-regenerates your site when a file is updated.
To add new posts, simply add a file in the `_posts` directory that follows the convention `YYYY-MM-DD-name-of-post.ext` and includes the necessary front matter. Take a look at the source for this post to get an idea about how it works.
```
Everything in between the first and second `---` are part of the YAML Front Matter, and everything after the second `---` will be rendered with Markdown and show up as "Content".
## Displaying an index of posts
Creating an index of posts on another page should be easy thanks to
[Liquid](https://docs.shopify.com/themes/liquid/basics) and its tags. Heres a
simple example of how to create a list of links to your blog posts:
Its all well and good to have posts in a folder, but a blog is no use unless
you have a list of posts somewhere. Creating an index of posts on another page
(or in a [template](../templates/)) is easy, thanks to the [Liquid template
language](https://docs.shopify.com/themes/liquid/basics) and its tags. Heres a
basic example of how to create a list of links to your blog posts:
{% raw %}
```html
@@ -113,72 +147,95 @@ simple example of how to create a list of links to your blog posts:
```
{% endraw %}
You have full control over how (and where) you display your posts,
Of course, you have full control over how (and where) you display your posts,
and how you structure your site. You should read more about [how templates
work](/docs/templates/) with Jekyll if you want to know more.
work](../templates/) with Jekyll if you want to know more.
Note that the `post` variable only exists inside the `for` loop above. If
you wish to access the currently-rendering page/posts's variables (the
variables of the post/page that has the `for` loop in it), use the `page`
variable instead.
## Categories and Tags
## Displaying post categories or tags
Jekyll has first class support for categories and tags in blog posts. The difference
between categories and tags is a category can be part of the URL for a post
whereas a tag cannot.
Hey, that's pretty neat, but what about showing just some of your posts that are
related to each other? For that you can use any of the [variables definable in
Front Matter](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/frontmatter/). In the "typical post"
section you can see how to define categories. Simply add the categories to your
Front Matter as a [yaml
list](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/YAML#Basic_components).
To use these, first set your categories and tags in front matter:
Now that your posts have a category or multiple categories, you can make a page
or a template displaying just the posts in those categories you specify. Here's
a basic example of how to create a list of posts from a specific category.
```yaml
---
layout: post
title: A Trip
categories: [blog, travel]
tags: [hot, summer]
---
```
Jekyll makes the categories available to us at `site.categories`. Iterating over
`site.categories` on a page gives us another array with two items, the first
item is the name of the category and the second item is an array of posts in that
category.
First, in the `_layouts` directory create a new file called `category.html` - in
that file put (at least) the following:
{% raw %}
```liquid
{% for category in site.categories %}
<h3>{{ category[0] }}</h3>
<ul>
{% for post in category[1] %}
<li><a href="{{ post.url }}">{{ post.title }}</a></li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
---
layout: page
---
{% for post in site.categories[page.category] %}
<a href="{{ post.url | absolute_url }}">
{{ post.title }}
</a>
{% endfor %}
```
{% endraw %}
For tags it's exactly the same except the variable is `site.tags`.
## Post excerpts
You can access a snippet of a posts's content by using `excerpt` variable on a
post. By default this is the first paragraph of content in the post, however it
can be customized by setting a `excerpt_separator` variable in front matter or
`_config.yml`.
Next, in the root directory of your Jekyll install, create a new directory
called `category` and then create a file for each category you want to list. For
example, if you have a category `blog` then create a file in the new directory
called `blog.html` with at least
```yaml
---
excerpt_separator: <!--more-->
layout: category
title: Blog
category: blog
---
Excerpt with multiple paragraphs
Here's another paragraph in the excerpt.
<!--more-->
Out-of-excerpt
```
Here's an example of outputting a list of blog posts with an excerpt:
In this case, the listing pages will be accessible at `{baseurl}/category/blog.html`
Although categories and tags are very similar, they are used to group posts,
there are a few differences between them. Categories and sub-categories create
hierarchies that, by default, are reflected in the directory structure of your
site. A post with the following header
```yaml
---
layout: post
title: A Trip
category: [ blog, travel ]
---
```
will be accessible at `{baseurl}/blog/travel/year/month/day/A-Trip.html`. On
the other hand, a tagged post
```yaml
---
layout: post
title: A Trip
tags: [ blog, travel ]
---
```
will be saved as `{baseurl}/year/month/day/A-Trip.html`. It is up to you to
create `{baseurl}/tag/blog.html` and `{baseurl}/tag/travel.html` the same way as
described above for categories.
While this example is done with tags and categories, you can easily extend your
lists to filter by any other variable created with extensions.
## Post excerpts
Each post automatically takes the first block of text, from the beginning of
the content to the first occurrence of `excerpt_separator`, and sets it in the
post's data hash.
Take the above example of an index of posts. Perhaps you want to include
a little hint about the post's content by adding the first paragraph of each of
your posts:
{% raw %}
```liquid
@@ -193,18 +250,85 @@ Here's an example of outputting a list of blog posts with an excerpt:
```
{% endraw %}
## Drafts
Because Jekyll grabs the first paragraph you will not need to wrap the excerpt
in `p` tags, which is already done for you. These tags can be removed with the
following if you'd prefer:
Drafts are posts without a date in the filename. They're posts you're still
working on and don't want to publish yet. To get up and running with drafts,
create a `_drafts` folder in your site's root and create your first draft:
{% raw %}
```liquid
{{ post.excerpt | remove: '<p>' | remove: '</p>' }}
```
{% endraw %}
```text
|-- _drafts/
| |-- a-draft-post.md
If you don't like the automatically-generated post excerpt, it can be
explicitly overridden by adding an `excerpt` value to your post's YAML
Front Matter. Alternatively, you can choose to define a custom
`excerpt_separator` in the post's YAML front matter:
```yaml
---
excerpt_separator: <!--more-->
---
Excerpt
<!--more-->
Out-of-excerpt
```
To preview your site with drafts, run `jekyll serve` or `jekyll build`
with the `--drafts` switch. Each will be assigned the value modification time
of the draft file for its date, and thus you will see currently edited drafts
as the latest posts.
You can also set the `excerpt_separator` globally in your `_config.yml`
configuration file.
Completely disable excerpts by setting your `excerpt_separator` to `""`.
Also, as with any output generated by Liquid tags, you can pass the
`| strip_html` filter to remove any html tags in the output. This is
particularly helpful if you wish to output a post excerpt as a
`meta="description"` tag within the post `head`, or anywhere else having
html tags along with the content is not desirable.
## Highlighting code snippets
Jekyll also has built-in support for syntax highlighting of code snippets using
either Pygments or Rouge, and including a code snippet in any post is easy.
Just use the dedicated Liquid tag as follows:
{% raw %}
```liquid
{% highlight ruby %}
def show
@widget = Widget(params[:id])
respond_to do |format|
format.html # show.html.erb
format.json { render json: @widget }
end
end
{% endhighlight %}
```
{% endraw %}
And the output will look like this:
```ruby
def show
@widget = Widget(params[:id])
respond_to do |format|
format.html # show.html.erb
format.json { render json: @widget }
end
end
```
<div class="note">
<h5>ProTip™: Show line numbers</h5>
<p>
You can make code snippets include line-numbers by adding the word
<code>linenos</code> to the end of the opening highlight tag like this:
<code>{% raw %}{% highlight ruby linenos %}{% endraw %}</code>.
</p>
</div>
These basics should be enough to get you started writing your first posts. When
youre ready to dig into what else is possible, you might be interested in
doing things like [customizing post permalinks](../permalinks/) or
using [custom variables](../variables/) in your posts and elsewhere on your
site.

51
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View File

@@ -0,0 +1,51 @@
---
title: Quick-start guide
permalink: /docs/quickstart/
---
If you already have a full [Ruby](https://www.ruby-lang.org/en/downloads/) development environment with all headers and [RubyGems](https://rubygems.org/pages/download) installed (see Jekyll's [requirements](/docs/installation/#requirements)), you can create a new Jekyll site by doing the following:
```sh
# Install Jekyll and Bundler gems through RubyGems
gem install jekyll bundler
# Create a new Jekyll site at ./myblog
jekyll new myblog
# Change into your new directory
cd myblog
# Build the site on the preview server
bundle exec jekyll serve
# Now browse to http://localhost:4000
```
If you encounter any unexpected errors during the above, please refer to the [troubleshooting](/docs/troubleshooting/#configuration-problems) page or the already-mentioned [requirements](/docs/installation/#requirements) page, as you might be missing development headers or other prerequisites.
## About Bundler
`gem install jekyll bundler` installs the [jekyll](https://rubygems.org/gems/jekyll/) and [bundler](https://rubygems.org/gems/bundler) gems through [RubyGems](https://rubygems.org/). You need only to install the gems one time &mdash; not every time you create a new Jekyll project. Here are some additional details:
* `bundler` is a gem that manages other Ruby gems. It makes sure your gems and gem versions are compatible, and that you have all necessary dependencies each gem requires.
* The `Gemfile` and `Gemfile.lock` files inform Bundler about the gem requirements in your site. If your site doesn't have these Gemfiles, you can omit `bundle exec` and just run `jekyll serve`.
* When you run `bundle exec jekyll serve`, Bundler uses the gems and versions as specified in `Gemfile.lock` to ensure your Jekyll site builds with no compatibility or dependency conflicts.
## Options for creating a new site with Jekyll
`jekyll new <PATH>` installs a new Jekyll site at the path specified (relative to current directory). In this case, Jekyll will be installed in a directory called `myblog`. Here are some additional details:
* To install the Jekyll site into the directory you're currently in, run `jekyll new .` If the existing directory isn't empty, you can pass the `--force` option with `jekyll new . --force`.
* `jekyll new` automatically initiates `bundle install` to install the dependencies required. (If you don't want Bundler to install the gems, use `jekyll new myblog --skip-bundle`.)
* By default, the Jekyll site installed by `jekyll new` uses a gem-based theme called [Minima](https://github.com/jekyll/minima). With [gem-based themes](../themes), some of the directories and files are stored in the theme-gem, hidden from your immediate view.
* We recommend setting up Jekyll with a gem-based theme but if you want to start with a blank slate, use `jekyll new myblog --blank`
* To learn about other parameters you can include with `jekyll new`, type `jekyll new --help`.
When in doubt, use the <code>help</code> command to remind you of all available options and usage, it also works with the <code>new</code>, <code>build</code> and <code>serve</code> subcommands, e.g. <code>jekyll help new</code> or <code>jekyll help build</code>.
{: .note .info }
## Next steps
Building a Jekyll site with the default theme is just the first step. The real magic happens when you start creating blog posts, using the front matter to control templates and layouts, and taking advantage of all the awesome configuration options Jekyll makes available.

View File

@@ -1,21 +1,9 @@
---
layout: page
title: Resources
permalink: /resources/
redirect_from:
- /docs/resources/
permalink: /docs/resources/
---
Jekyll's growing community produces wide variety of themes, plugins, tutorials
and other resources that can be helpful. Below is a collection of links to
some of the most popular Jekyll resources.
## Themes
- [jekyllthemes.org](http://jekyllthemes.org/)
- [jekyllthemes.io](https://jekyllthemes.io/)
## Plugins
- [jekyll-plugin topic on GitHub](https://github.com/topics/jekyll-plugin)
- [Planet Jekyll](https://github.com/planetjekyll/awesome-jekyll-plugins)
Jekyll's growing use is producing a wide variety of tutorials, frameworks, extensions, examples, and other resources that can be very helpful. Below is a collection of links to some of the most popular Jekyll resources.
## Editors
@@ -27,7 +15,6 @@ some of the most popular Jekyll resources.
## Useful Guides
- [Official tutorials](/tutorials/home/)
- [CloudCannon Academy](https://learn.cloudcannon.com/) is a set of resources created by [CloudCannon](https://cloudcannon.com/) to help folks get up and running with Jekyll. They cover all skill levels, and even include some great video tutorials.
- [Jekyll Cheatsheet](https://learn.cloudcannon.com/jekyll-cheat-sheet/) is a single-page resource for Jekyll filters, variables, and the like.
- ["Creating and Hosting a Personal Site on GitHub"](http://jmcglone.com/guides/github-pages/)
@@ -38,43 +25,29 @@ some of the most popular Jekyll resources.
## Integrations
Use a SaaS service as a backend for functionality on your Jekyll site
- Use a saas service as a backend for forms (contact forms, hiring forms, etc.)
### Comments
- [Staticman](https://staticman.net): Add user-generated content to a Jekyll site (free and open source)
- [Talkyard](https://www.talkyard.io/blog-comments): Embedded comments for Jekyll and others (free and open source, or hosted serverless)
### Content Management
- [CloudCannon](https://cloudcannon.com/): The Cloud CMS for Jekyll
- [Contentful](https://github.com/contentful/jekyll-contentful-data-import) Content infrastructure for digital teams
- [Forestry.io](https://forestry.io/): A static CMS that commits
- [Netlify CMS](https://www.netlifycms.org/): Open source content management for your Git workflow
- [Siteleaf](https://www.siteleaf.com/): Built for developers, Loved by everyone
- [Statictastic](https://www.statictastic.com/): Static site hosting, publishing and content management for teams
### E-commerce
- [Snipcart](https://snipcart.com/blog/static-site-e-commerce-part-2-integrating-snipcart-with-jekyll): Add a shopping cart to a Jekyll site
### Forms
- [Getform](https://getform.io)
- [99Inbound](https://www.99inbound.com)
- [Formingo](https://www.formingo.co/guides/jekyll?utm_source=github&utm_medium=jekyll-docs&utm_campaign=Jekyll%20Documentation)
- [FormKeep](https://formkeep.com/guides/contact-form-jekyll?utm_source=github&utm_medium=jekyll-docs&utm_campaign=contact-form-jekyll)
- [Formspark](https://formspark.io/)
- [Formspree (open source)](https://formspree.io/)
- [formX](https://formx.stream)
- [FormKeep](https://formkeep.com/guides/contact-form-jekyll?utm_source=github&utm_medium=jekyll-docs&utm_campaign=contact-form-jekyll)
- [Simple Form](https://getsimpleform.com/)
### Search
- [Formingo](https://www.formingo.co/guides/jekyll?utm_source=github&utm_medium=jekyll-docs&utm_campaign=Jekyll%20Documentation)
- [Formester](http://www.formester.com)
- [Talkyard](https://www.talkyard.io/blog-comments): Embedded comments for Jekyll and others (free and open source, or hosted serverless)
- [Staticman](https://staticman.net): Add user-generated content to a Jekyll site (free and open source)
- [Snipcart](https://snipcart.com/blog/static-site-e-commerce-part-2-integrating-snipcart-with-jekyll): Add a shopping cart to a Jekyll site
- [Contentful](https://www.contentful.com/ecosystem/jekyll/): use Jekyll together with the API-driven Contentful CMS.
- [Algolia](https://blog.algolia.com/instant-search-blog-documentation-jekyll-plugin/): Add a powerful instant search to your Jekyll site
- [CloudSh](https://cloudsh.com/generators/How-to-setup-search-on-Jekyll/): Website search with a few lines of JavaScript
## Other commentary
- [How I'm using Jekyll in 2016](https://mademistakes.com/articles/using-jekyll-2016/)
- [Talkyard comments instructions for Jekyll](https://jekyll-demo.talkyard.io/2018/01/09/installation-instructions.html)
- [Static Comments with Jekyll & Staticman](https://mademistakes.com/articles/improving-jekyll-static-comments/)
- [Adding Ajax pagination to Jekyll](https://eduardoboucas.com/blog/2014/11/05/adding-ajax-pagination-to-jekyll.html)
- ['My Jekyll Fork', by Mike West](https://mikewest.org/2009/11/my-jekyll-fork)
> "Jekyll is a well-architected throwback to a time before WordPress, when men were men, and HTML was static. I like the ideas it espouses, and have made a few improvements to it's core. Here, I'll point out some highlights of my fork in the hopes that they see usage beyond this site."
@@ -83,6 +56,7 @@ Use a SaaS service as a backend for functionality on your Jekyll site
> "Jekyll is everything that I ever wanted in a blogging engine. Really. It isn't perfect, but what's excellent about it is that if there's something wrong, I know exactly how it works and how to fix it. It runs on the your machine only, and is essentially an added"build" step between you and the browser. I coded this entire site in TextMate using standard HTML5 and CSS3, and then at the end I added just a few little variables to the markup. Presto-chango, my site is built and I am at peace with the world."
- [Generating a Tag Cloud in Jekyll](http://www.justkez.com/generating-a-tag-cloud-in-jekyll/) A guide to implementing a tag cloud and per-tag content pages using Jekyll.
- A way to [extend Jekyll](https://github.com/rfelix/jekyll_ext) without forking and modifying the Jekyll gem codebase and some [portable Jekyll extensions](https://wiki.github.com/rfelix/jekyll_ext/extensions) that can be reused and shared.
- [Using your Rails layouts in Jekyll](http://numbers.brighterplanet.com/2010/08/09/sharing-rails-views-with-jekyll)
- [Jekpack](https://github.com/yfxie/jekpack/) an integration of Jekyll and Webpack to make them work together.

View File

@@ -1,45 +0,0 @@
---
title: Ruby 101
permalink: /docs/ruby-101/
---
Jekyll is written in Ruby. If you're new to Ruby, this page is to help you get
up to speed with some of the terminology.
## Gems
A gem is code you can include in Ruby projects. It allows you to package up functionality and share it across other projects or with other people. Gems can perform functionality such as:
* Converting a Ruby object to JSON
* Pagination
* Interacting with APIs such as GitHub
* Jekyll itself is a gem as well as many Jekyll plugins including
[jekyll-feed](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll-feed),
[jekyll-seo-tag](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll-seo-tag) and
[jekyll-archives](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll-archives).
## Gemfile
A `Gemfile` is a list of gems required for your site. For a simple Jekyll site it might look something like this:
```ruby
source 'https://rubygems.org'
gem 'jekyll'
group :jekyll_plugins do
gem 'jekyll-feed'
gem 'jekyll-seo-tag'
end
```
## Bundler
Bundler installs the gems in your `Gemfile`. It's not a requirement for you to use a `Gemfile` and `bundler` however it's highly recommended as it ensures you're running the same version of Jekyll and Jekyll plugins across different environments.
`gem install bundler` installs [Bundler](https://rubygems.org/gems/bundler). You only need to install it once &mdash; not every time you create a new Jekyll project. Here are some additional details:
If you're using a `Gemfile` you would first run `bundle install` to install the gems, then `bundle exec jekyll serve` to build your site. This guarantees you're using the gem versions set in the `Gemfile`. If you're not using a `Gemfile` you can just run `jekyll serve`.
For more information about how to use Bundler in your Jekyll project, this [tutorial](/tutorials/using-jekyll-with-bundler/) should provide answers to the most common questions and explain how to get up and running quickly.

22
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View File

@@ -0,0 +1,22 @@
---
title: Sites using Jekyll
permalink: /docs/sites/
---
Its interesting to see what designs and features others have come up
with. Below are some Jekyll-powered blogs which were hand-picked for
learning purposes.
- [Tom Preston-Werner](http://tom.preston-werner.com/)
([source](https://github.com/mojombo/mojombo.github.io))
- [GitHub Official Teaching Materials](https://services.github.com/training/)
([source](https://github.com/github/training-kit))
- [Rasmus Andersson](https://rsms.me/)
([source](https://github.com/rsms/rsms.github.com))
- [MvvmCross](https://mvvmcross.github.io/MvvmCross/)
([source](https://github.com/MvvmCross/MvvmCross/tree/master/docs))
If you would like to explore more examples, you can find a list of sites
and their sources on the ["Sites" page in the Jekyll wiki][jekyll-sites].
[jekyll-sites]: {{ site.repository }}/wiki/Sites

View File

@@ -2,7 +2,11 @@
title: Static Files
permalink: /docs/static-files/
---
A static file is a file that does not contain any front matter. These
In addition to renderable and convertible content, we also have **static
files**.
A static file is a file that does not contain any YAML front matter. These
include images, PDFs, and other un-rendered content.
They're accessible in Liquid via `site.static_files` and contain the
@@ -62,11 +66,11 @@ following metadata:
</table>
</div>
Note that in the above table, `file` can be anything. It's an arbitrarily set variable used in your own logic (such as in a for loop). It isn't a global site or page variable.
Note that in the above table, `file` can be anything. It's simply an arbitrarily set variable used in your own logic (such as in a for loop). It isn't a global site or page variable.
## Add front matter to static files
Although you can't directly add front matter values to static files, you can set front matter values through the [defaults property](/docs/configuration/front-matter-defaults/) in your configuration file. When Jekyll builds the site, it will use the front matter values you set.
Although you can't directly add front matter values to static files, you can set front matter values through the [defaults property](../configuration/#front-matter-defaults) in your configuration file. When Jekyll builds the site, it will use the front matter values you set.
Here's an example:

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@@ -1,91 +0,0 @@
---
layout: step
title: Setup
menu_name: Step by Step Tutorial
position: 1
---
Welcome to Jekyll's step-by-step tutorial. The goal of this tutorial is to take
you from having some front end web development experience to building your
first Jekyll site from scratch — not relying on the default gem-based theme.
Let's get into it!
## Installation
Jekyll is a Ruby program so you need to install Ruby on your machine to begin
with. Head over to the [install guide](/docs/installation/) and follow the
instructions for your operating system.
With Ruby setup you can install Jekyll by running the following in your
terminal:
```
gem install jekyll bundler
```
To create a new `Gemfile` to list your project's dependencies run:
```
bundle init
```
Now edit the `Gemfile`and add jekyll as a dependency:
```
gem "jekyll"
```
Finally run `bundle` to install jekyll for your project.
You can now prefix all jekyll commands listed in this tutorial with `bundle exec`
to make sure you use the jekyll version defined in your `Gemfile`.
## Create a site
It's time to create a site! Create a new directory for your site, you can name
it whatever you'd like. Through the rest of this tutorial we'll refer to this
directory as “root”.
If you're feeling adventurous, you can also initialize a Git repository here.
One of the great things about Jekyll is there's no database. All content and
site structure are files which a Git repository can version. Using a repository
is completely optional but it's a great habit to get into. You can learn more
about using Git by reading through the
[Git Handbook](https://guides.github.com/introduction/git-handbook/).
Let's add your first file. Create `index.html` in the root with the following
content:
```html
<!doctype html>
<html>
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<title>Home</title>
</head>
<body>
<h1>Hello World!</h1>
</body>
</html>
```
## Build
Jekyll is a static site generator so we need Jekyll to build the site
before we can view it. There are two commands you can run in the root of your site
to build it:
* `jekyll build` - Builds the site and outputs a static site to a directory
called `_site`.
* `jekyll serve` - Does the same thing except it rebuilds any time you make
a change and runs a local web server at `http://localhost:4000`.
When you're developing a site you'll use `jekyll serve` as it updates with any
changes you make.
Run `jekyll serve` and go to
<a href="http://localhost:4000" target="_blank" data-proofer-ignore>http://localhost:4000</a> in
your browser. You should see "Hello World!".
Well, you might be thinking what's the point in this? Jekyll just copied an
HTML file from one place to another. Well patience young grasshopper, there's
still much to learn!

View File

@@ -1,84 +0,0 @@
---
layout: step
title: Liquid
position: 2
---
Liquid is where Jekyll starts to get more interesting. Liquid is a templating
language which has three main parts: [objects](#objects), [tags](#tags) and
[filters](#filters).
## Objects
Objects tell Liquid where to output content. They're denoted by double curly
braces: {% raw %}`{{`{% endraw %} and {% raw %}`}}`{% endraw %}. For example:
{% raw %}
```liquid
{{ page.title }}
```
{% endraw %}
Outputs a variable called `page.title` on the page.
## Tags
Tags create the logic and control flow for templates. They are denoted by curly
braces and percent signs: {% raw %}`{%`{% endraw %} and
{% raw %}`%}`{% endraw %}. For example:
{% raw %}
```liquid
{% if page.show_sidebar %}
<div class="sidebar">
sidebar content
</div>
{% endif %}
```
{% endraw %}
Outputs the sidebar if `page.show_sidebar` is true. You can learn more about the
tags available to Jekyll [here](/docs/liquid/tags/).
## Filters
Filters change the output of a Liquid object. They are used within an output
and are separated by a `|`. For example:
{% raw %}
```liquid
{{ "hi" | capitalize }}
```
{% endraw %}
Outputs `Hi`. You can learn more about the filters available to Jekyll
[here](/docs/liquid/filters/).
## Use Liquid
Now it's your turn, change the Hello World! on your page to output as lowercase:
{% raw %}
```liquid
...
<h1>{{ "Hello World!" | downcase }}</h1>
...
```
{% endraw %}
To get our changes processed by Jekyll we need to add [front matter](03-front-matter/) to the top of the page:
```markdown
---
# front matter tells Jekyll to process Liquid
---
```
Our "Hello World!" will now be downcased on render.
It may not seem like it now, but much of Jekyll's power comes from combining
Liquid with other features.
In order to see the changes from `downcase` Liquid filter, we will need to add front matter.
That's next. Let's keep going.

View File

@@ -1,49 +0,0 @@
---
layout: step
title: Front Matter
position: 3
---
Front matter is a snippet of [YAML](http://yaml.org/) which sits between two
triple-dashed lines at the top of a file. Front matter is used to set variables
for the page, for example:
```liquid
---
my_number: 5
---
```
Front matter variables are available in Liquid under the `page` variable. For
example to output the variable above you would use:
{% raw %}
```liquid
{{ page.my_number }}
```
{% endraw %}
## Use front matter
Let's change the `<title>` on your site to populate using front matter:
{% raw %}
```html
---
title: Home
---
<!doctype html>
<html>
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<title>{{ page.title }}</title>
</head>
<body>
<h1>{{ "Hello World!" | downcase }}</h1>
</body>
</html>
```
{% endraw %}
You may still be wondering why you'd output it this way as it takes
more source code than raw HTML. In this next step, you'll see why we've
been doing this.

View File

@@ -1,89 +0,0 @@
---
layout: step
title: Layouts
position: 4
---
Websites typically have more than one page and this website is no different.
Jekyll supports [Markdown](https://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax)
as well as HTML for pages. Markdown is a great choice for pages with a simple
content structure (just paragraphs, headings and images), as it's less verbose
than raw HTML. Let's try it out on the next page.
Create `about.md` in the root.
For the structure you could copy `index.html` and modify it for the about page.
The problem with doing this is duplicate code. Let's say you wanted to add a
stylesheet to your site, you would have to go to each page and add it to the
`<head>`. It might not sound so bad for a two page site, imagine doing it
for 100 pages. Even simple changes will take a long time to make.
## Creating a layout
Using a layout is a much better choice. Layouts are templates that wrap around
your content. They live in a directory called `_layouts`.
Create your first layout at `_layouts/default.html` with the following content:
{% raw %}
```liquid
<!doctype html>
<html>
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<title>{{ page.title }}</title>
</head>
<body>
{{ content }}
</body>
</html>
```
{% endraw %}
You'll notice this is almost identical to `index.html` except there's
no front matter and the content of the page is replaced with a `content`
variable. `content` is a special variable which has the value of the rendered
content of the page it's called on.
To have `index.html` use this layout, you can set a `layout` variable in front
matter. The layout wraps around the content of the page so all you need in
`index.html` is:
{% raw %}
```html
---
layout: default
title: Home
---
<h1>{{ "Hello World!" | downcase }}</h1>
```
{% endraw %}
After doing this, the output will be exactly the same as before. Note that you
can access the `page` front matter from the layout. In this case `title` is
set in the index page's front matter but is output in the layout.
## About page
Back to the about page, instead of copying from `index.html`, you can use the
layout.
Add the following to `about.md`:
{% raw %}
```html
---
layout: default
title: About
---
# About page
This page tells you a little bit about me.
```
{% endraw %}
Open <a href="http://localhost:4000/about.html" target="_blank" data-proofer-ignore>http://localhost:4000/about.html</a>
in your browser and view your new page.
Congratulations, you now have a two page website! But how do you
navigate from one page to another? Keep reading to find out.

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