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52 lines
1.6 KiB
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52 lines
1.6 KiB
ReStructuredText
Tips
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####
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Here are some tips about Pelican that you might find useful.
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Publishing to GitHub
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====================
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GitHub comes with an interesting "pages" feature: you can upload things there
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and it will be available directly from their servers. As Pelican is a static
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file generator, we can take advantage of this.
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User Pages
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----------
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GitHub allows you to create user pages in the form of ``username.github.com``.
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Whatever is created in the master branch will be published. For this purpose,
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just the output generated by Pelican needs to pushed to GitHub.
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So given a repository containing your articles, just run Pelican over the posts
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and deploy the master branch to GitHub::
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$ pelican -s pelican.conf.py ./path/to/posts -o /path/to/output
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Now add all the files in the output directory generated by Pelican::
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$ git add /path/to/output/*
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$ git commit -am "Your Message"
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$ git push origin master
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Project Pages
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-------------
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For creating Project pages, a branch called ``gh-pages`` is used for publishing.
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The excellent `ghp-import <https://github.com/davisp/ghp-import>`_ makes this
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really easy, which can be installed via::
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$ pip install ghp-import
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Then, given a repository containing your articles, you would simply run
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Pelican and upload the output to GitHub::
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$ pelican -s pelican.conf.py .
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$ ghp-import output
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$ git push origin gh-pages
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And that's it.
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If you want, you can put that directly into a post-commit hook, so each time you
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commit, your blog is up-to-date on GitHub!
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Put the following into ``.git/hooks/post-commit``::
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pelican -s pelican.conf.py . && ghp-import output && git push origin gh-pages
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