github.com/shohhei1126/hugo@v0.42.2-0.20180623210752-3d5928889ad7/docs/content/en/hosting-and-deployment/hosting-on-github.md (about) 1 --- 2 title: Host on GitHub 3 linktitle: Host on GitHub 4 description: Deploy Hugo as a GitHub Pages project or personal/organizational site and automate the whole process with a simple shell script. 5 date: 2014-03-21 6 publishdate: 2014-03-21 7 lastmod: 2017-03-30 8 categories: [hosting and deployment] 9 keywords: [github,git,deployment,hosting] 10 authors: [Spencer Lyon, Gunnar Morling] 11 menu: 12 docs: 13 parent: "hosting-and-deployment" 14 weight: 30 15 weight: 30 16 sections_weight: 30 17 draft: false 18 toc: true 19 aliases: [/tutorials/github-pages-blog/] 20 --- 21 22 GitHub provides free and fast static hosting over SSL for personal, organization, or project pages directly from a GitHub repository via its [GitHub Pages service][]. 23 24 ## Assumptions 25 26 1. You have Git 2.8 or greater [installed on your machine][installgit]. 27 2. You have a GitHub account. [Signing up][ghsignup] for GitHub is free. 28 3. You have a ready-to-publish Hugo website or have at least completed the [Quick Start][]. 29 30 ## Types of GitHub Pages 31 32 There are 2 types of GitHub Pages: 33 34 - User/Organization Pages (`https://<USERNAME|ORGANIZATION>.github.io/`) 35 - Project Pages (`https://<USERNAME|ORGANIZATION>.github.io/<PROJECT>/`) 36 37 Please refer to the [GitHub Pages documentation][ghorgs] to decide which type of site you would like to create as it will determine which of the below methods to use. 38 39 To create a User/Organization Pages site, follow the single method in the *GitHub User and Organization Pages* section below. 40 41 To create a Project Pages site, choose a method from the *Project Pages* section below. 42 43 ## GitHub User or Organization Pages 44 45 As mentioned [the GitHub Pages documentation][ghorgs], you can host a user/organization page in addition to project pages. Here are the key differences in GitHub Pages websites for Users and Organizations: 46 47 1. You must use a `<USERNAME>.github.io` to host your **generated** content 48 2. Content from the `master` branch will be used to publish your GitHub Pages site 49 50 This is a much simpler setup as your Hugo files and generated content are published into two different repositories. 51 52 ### Step-by-step Instructions 53 54 1. Create a `<YOUR-PROJECT>` (e.g. `blog`) repository on GitHub. This repository will contain Hugo's content and other source files. 55 2. Create a `<USERNAME>.github.io` GitHub repository. This is the repository that will contain the fully rendered version of your Hugo website. 56 3. `git clone <YOUR-PROJECT-URL> && cd <YOUR-PROJECT>` 57 4. Make your website work locally (`hugo server` or `hugo server -t <YOURTHEME>`) and open your browser to <http://localhost:1313>. 58 5. Once you are happy with the results: 59 * Press <kbd>Ctrl</kbd>+<kbd>C</kbd> to kill the server 60 * `rm -rf public` to completely remove the `public` directory 61 6. `git submodule add -b master git@github.com:<USERNAME>/<USERNAME>.github.io.git public`. This creates a git [submodule][]. Now when you run the `hugo` command to build your site to `public`, the created `public` directory will have a different remote origin (i.e. hosted GitHub repository). You can automate some of these steps with the following script. 62 63 ### Put it Into a Script 64 65 You're almost done. You can also add a `deploy.sh` script to automate the preceding steps for you. You can also make it executable with `chmod +x deploy.sh`. 66 67 The following are the contents of the `deploy.sh` script: 68 69 ``` 70 #!/bin/bash 71 72 echo -e "\033[0;32mDeploying updates to GitHub...\033[0m" 73 74 # Build the project. 75 hugo # if using a theme, replace with `hugo -t <YOURTHEME>` 76 77 # Go To Public folder 78 cd public 79 # Add changes to git. 80 git add . 81 82 # Commit changes. 83 msg="rebuilding site `date`" 84 if [ $# -eq 1 ] 85 then msg="$1" 86 fi 87 git commit -m "$msg" 88 89 # Push source and build repos. 90 git push origin master 91 92 # Come Back up to the Project Root 93 cd .. 94 ``` 95 96 97 You can then run `./deploy.sh "Your optional commit message"` to send changes to `<USERNAME>.github.io`. Note that you likely will want to commit changes to your `<YOUR-PROJECT>` repository as well. 98 99 That's it! Your personal page should be up and running at `https://<USERNAME>.github.io` within a couple minutes. 100 101 ## GitHub Project Pages 102 103 {{% note %}} 104 Make sure your `baseURL` key-value in your [site configuration](/getting-started/configuration/) reflects the full URL of your GitHub pages repository if you're using the default GH Pages URL (e.g., `<USERNAME>.github.io/<PROJECT>/`) and not a custom domain. 105 {{% /note %}} 106 107 ### Deployment of Project Pages from `/docs` folder on `master` branch 108 109 [As described in the GitHub Pages documentation][ghpfromdocs], you can deploy from a folder called `docs/` on your master branch. To effectively use this feature with Hugo, you need to change the Hugo publish directory in your [site's][config] `config.toml` and `config.yaml`, respectively: 110 111 ``` 112 publishDir = "docs" 113 ``` 114 ``` 115 publishDir: docs 116 ``` 117 118 After running `hugo`, push your master branch to the remote repository and choose the `docs/` folder as the website source of your repo. Do the following from within your GitHub project: 119 120 1. Go to **Settings** → **GitHub Pages** 121 2. From **Source**, select "master branch /docs folder". If the option isn't enabled, you likely do not have a `docs/` folder in the root of your project. 122 123 {{% note %}} 124 The `docs/` option is the simplest approach but requires you set a publish directory in your site configuration. You cannot currently configure GitHub pages to publish from another directory on master, and not everyone prefers the output site live concomitantly with source files in version control. 125 {{% /note %}} 126 127 ### Deployment of Project Pages From Your `gh-pages` branch 128 129 You can also tell GitHub pages to treat your `master` branch as the published site or point to a separate `gh-pages` branch. The latter approach is a bit more complex but has some advantages: 130 131 * It keeps your source and generated website in different branches and therefore maintains version control history for both. 132 * Unlike the preceding `docs/` option, it uses the default `public` folder. 133 134 #### Preparations for `gh-pages` Branch 135 136 These steps only need to be done once. Replace `upstream` with the name of your remote; e.g., `origin`: 137 138 ##### Add the `public` Folder 139 140 First, add the `public` folder to your `.gitignore` file at the project root so that the directory is ignored on the master branch: 141 142 ``` 143 echo "public" >> .gitignore 144 ``` 145 146 ##### Initialize Your `gh-pages` Branch 147 148 You can now initialize your `gh-pages` branch as an empty [orphan branch][]: 149 150 ``` 151 git checkout --orphan gh-pages 152 git reset --hard 153 git commit --allow-empty -m "Initializing gh-pages branch" 154 git push upstream gh-pages 155 git checkout master 156 ``` 157 158 #### Build and Deployment 159 160 Now check out the `gh-pages` branch into your `public` folder using git's [worktree feature][]. Essentially, the worktree allows you to have multiple branches of the same local repository to be checked out in different directories: 161 162 ``` 163 rm -rf public 164 git worktree add -B gh-pages public upstream/gh-pages 165 ``` 166 167 Regenerate the site using the `hugo` command and commit the generated files on the `gh-pages` branch: 168 169 {{< code file="commit-gh-pages-files.sh">}} 170 hugo 171 cd public && git add --all && git commit -m "Publishing to gh-pages" && cd .. 172 {{< /code >}} 173 174 If the changes in your local `gh-pages` branch look alright, push them to the remote repo: 175 176 ``` 177 git push upstream gh-pages 178 ``` 179 180 ##### Set `gh-pages` as Your Publish Branch 181 182 In order to use your `gh-pages` branch as your publishing branch, you'll need to configure the repository within the GitHub UI. This will likely happen automatically once GitHub realizes you've created this branch. You can also set the branch manually from within your GitHub project: 183 184 1. Go to **Settings** → **GitHub Pages** 185 2. From **Source**, select "gh-pages branch" and then **Save**. If the option isn't enabled, you likely have not created the branch yet OR you have not pushed the branch from your local machine to the hosted repository on GitHub. 186 187 After a short while, you'll see the updated contents on your GitHub Pages site. 188 189 #### Put it Into a Script 190 191 To automate these steps, you can create a script with the following contents: 192 193 {{< code file="publish_to_ghpages.sh" >}} 194 #!/bin/sh 195 196 DIR=$(dirname "$0") 197 198 cd $DIR/.. 199 200 if [[ $(git status -s) ]] 201 then 202 echo "The working directory is dirty. Please commit any pending changes." 203 exit 1; 204 fi 205 206 echo "Deleting old publication" 207 rm -rf public 208 mkdir public 209 git worktree prune 210 rm -rf .git/worktrees/public/ 211 212 echo "Checking out gh-pages branch into public" 213 git worktree add -B gh-pages public upstream/gh-pages 214 215 echo "Removing existing files" 216 rm -rf public/* 217 218 echo "Generating site" 219 hugo 220 221 echo "Updating gh-pages branch" 222 cd public && git add --all && git commit -m "Publishing to gh-pages (publish.sh)" 223 {{< /code >}} 224 225 This will abort if there are pending changes in the working directory and also makes sure that all previously existing output files are removed. Adjust the script to taste, e.g. to include the final push to the remote repository if you don't need to take a look at the gh-pages branch before pushing. Or adding `echo yourdomainname.com >> CNAME` if you set up for your gh-pages to use customize domain. 226 227 ### Deployment of Project Pages from Your `master` Branch 228 229 To use `master` as your publishing branch, you'll need your rendered website to live at the root of the GitHub repository. Steps should be similar to that of the `gh-pages` branch, with the exception that you will create your GitHub repository with the `public` directory as the root. Note that this does not provide the same benefits of the `gh-pages` branch in keeping your source and output in separate, but version controlled, branches within the same repo. 230 231 You will also need to set `master` as your publishable branch from within the GitHub UI: 232 233 1. Go to **Settings** → **GitHub Pages** 234 2. From **Source**, select "master branch" and then **Save**. 235 236 ## Use a Custom Domain 237 238 If you'd like to use a custom domain for your GitHub Pages site, create a file `static/CNAME`. Your custom domain name should be the only contents inside `CNAME`. Since it's inside `static`, the published site will contain the CNAME file at the root of the published site, which is a requirements of GitHub Pages. 239 240 Refer to the [official documentation for custom domains][domains] for further information. 241 242 [config]: /getting-started/configuration/ 243 [domains]: https://help.github.com/articles/using-a-custom-domain-with-github-pages/ 244 [ghorgs]: https://help.github.com/articles/user-organization-and-project-pages/#user--organization-pages 245 [ghpfromdocs]: https://help.github.com/articles/configuring-a-publishing-source-for-github-pages/#publishing-your-github-pages-site-from-a-docs-folder-on-your-master-branch 246 [ghsignup]: https://github.com/join 247 [GitHub Pages service]: https://help.github.com/articles/what-is-github-pages/ 248 [installgit]: https://git-scm.com/downloads 249 [orphan branch]: https://git-scm.com/docs/git-checkout/#git-checkout---orphanltnewbranchgt 250 [Quick Start]: /getting-started/quick-start/ 251 [submodule]: https://github.com/blog/2104-working-with-submodules 252 [worktree feature]: https://git-scm.com/docs/git-worktree