Build
This chapters shows how to prepare your Hydejack site for a production build and deployment on 3rd party hosting providers.
Table of Contents
- Starter Kit
- Preparation
- Building locally
- Building locally with latent semantic analysis
- GitHub Pages
Starter Kit
If you’re using the starter kit, all you have to do is push your repository:
$ git add .
$ git commit "Update"
$ git push origin master
Preparation
Before building, make sure the following is part of your config file:
# file: _config.yml
compress_html:
comments: ["<!-- ", " -->"]
clippings: all
endings: all
sass:
style: compressed
You can check out jekyll-compress-html and https://jekyllrb.com/docs/assets/#sassscss for details.
Building locally
When building Hydejack it is important to set the environment variable JEKYLL_ENV
to production
.
Otherwise the output will not be minified. Building itself happens via Jekyll’s build
command.
$ JEKYLL_ENV=production bundle exec jekyll build
This will generate the finished static files in _site
,
which can be deployed using the methods outlined in the Jekyll Documentation.
Building locally with latent semantic analysis
By default, related posts are simply the most recent posts.
Hydejack modifies this a bit, by showing the most recent posts of the same category or tag.
However, the results are still pretty “unrelated”.
To provide better results, Jekyll supports latent semantic analysis via classifier-reborn
’s
Latent Semantic Indexer
To use the LSI, you first have to disable Hydejack’s default behavior,
by setting use_lsi: true
under the hydejack
key in your config file.
# file: _config.yml
hydejack:
use_lsi: true
Then, you have to run jekyll build
with the --lsi
flag:
$ JEKYLL_ENV=production bundle exec jekyll build --lsi
Note that this may take a long time.
Once it is finished, the generated static files will be located in the _site
directory,
which can be deployed using the methods outlined in the Jekyll Documentation.
GitHub Pages
To deploy to GitHub Pages, the steps are:
$ cd _site
$ git init # you only need to do this once
$ git remote add origin <github_remote_url> # you only need to do this once
$ git add .
$ git commit -m "Build"
$ git push origin master:<remote_branch>
$ cd ..
github_remote_url
- Find this on your repository’s GitHub page.
remote_branch
- Either
master
for “user or organization pages”, orgh-pages
for “project pages”
More on user, organization, and project pages.
Continue with Advanced