I have, in some unexplained way, managed to get my first Jekyll site with the "Agency" theme running locally.
However, there is something that is still not right. I extracted all the files from the biggest zip file of the theme, which seem to cover all files.
First I must point out that I'm not using GitHub at all for my site. Using only local resources on my Windows machine (afaik), and I'm developing by browsing http://localhost:4000.
I get this warning:
Jekyll Feed: Generating feed for posts
Conflict: The following destination is shared by multiple files.
The written file may end up with unexpected contents.
C:/web/_site/assets/css/agency.css
- assets/css/agency.scss
- C:/web/assets/css/agency.css
...done in 0.1660095 seconds.
This creates strange behaviour. I run these commands:
bundle update
bundle exec jekyll serve
... The site works perfectly until I make some changes that make the style of the page go bananas. I assume it has to do with the warning of the CSS file. It's like it reverts back to some default CSS and my latest changes won't show.
When running the serve command everything auto-updates anyway. The CSS warning conflict never goes away though.
In my _confg.yml file, I could run any of these lines (or comment them both out) and it will work:
theme: raviriley/agency-jekyll-theme
remote_theme: raviriley/agency-jekyll-theme
I'm still confused in general about how Jekyll works and what might have happened in my case. Hope someone can help me solve the conflict thing.
Not sure what you have changed in your CSS but I cannot reproduce your issues using the Agency theme locally on Windows (I have downloaded the theme here and copied all files).
By default, the _config.yml file contains this line for the theme: theme: jekyll-agency. After running bundle and starting the jekyll server, I can see the page. Any modification, such as * { color: red } shows fine, I don't get errors in the logs.
One difference to your version
There is no agency.css file but only the SCSS version of it. The SCSS file is localed in assets\css\agency.scss
This file imports all the other variables and styles. The styles are placed in scss files in these three folders:
base
components
variables
Of course, you can also add styles to the agency.scss file but I would not do it, the component/layout structure makes sense. Read about the Sass Basics here: https://sass-lang.com/guide
TLDR: GitHub Pages isn't working.
I have a little knowledge on GitHub and tried multiple fixes to no avail. One repository is only showing readme file contents.
Please explain in lamest terms.
New to web development, I finally was able to complete my first site, but I'm unable to actually deploy the files for some reason; please forgive me, I literally have no idea what any of the git terminologies are.
I purchased a pro subscription in order to keep the repository private and the site public.
Every file is present in what seems to be the main root directory, but nothing is being actually presented.
I've created two different repositories in an effort to fix this, as I've seen different methods are available.
The first repository includes a README file because I was originally instructed to do so, however, all the site link does is present that README file's contents;
I also attempted to add a permalink fix within the file, but all it did was add that text to the other text presented.
The second repository in question literally greets me with nothing but a 404 error.
The solution I tried for the second repository was to have the repository name share my username as well since that seems to be where the site's link originates, but no present changes have occurred.
Finally, the waiting game solution hasn't beared any fruit yet either aside from updating the README file's contents.
All help is very much appreciated.
Check first:
Your GitHub repository name, which depends on the type of GitHub Pages you are creating
If you're creating a user or organization site, your repository must be named <user>.github.io or <organization>.github.io.
your GitHub Pages Publishing source
If you use the default publishing source for your GitHub Pages site, your site will publish automatically. You can also choose to publish your site from a different branch or folder.
You can add more pages to your site by creating more new files.
Each file will be available on your site in the same directory structure as your publishing source.
For example, if the publishing source for your project site is the gh-pages branch, and you create a new file called /about/contact-us.md on the gh-pages branch, the file will be available at https://<user>.github.io/<repository>/about/contact-us.html.
Make sure you have GitHub Pages enabled for every repository and that it's set to the branch you want to publish by checking your Pages settings at github.com/<user>/<repo>/settings/pages. If enabled, there should be a link on that page that takes you to the site.
I'm trying to get a Jekyll site on GitHub without having to locally install Jekyll, so I just browsed this list until I found a couple themes I liked and then tried forking them (I intend to edit and customize the files in the browser, without having to clone a local repository). But I keep getting a different version from what I fork.
For instance, I forked https://github.com/codeasashu/hcz-jekyll-blog, and from the live demo I expect it to look like this:
However, right after forking (no changes made to files yet) I get this:
The same happened with other themes. What's wrong?
Do check if the empty base URL has any link to what you see: codeasashu/hcz-jekyll-blog/blob/master/_config.yml.
Note that, according to issues/15, the gh_pages branch of that repo acts as a demo, not the master branch. In gh_pages branch, there is a baseurl.
I have svn setup and wamp installed on my local machine. Im going to use this to test and then commit. My issue is that the /images directory is 25gb. I didnt add this directory to SVN and i dont want to have to keep this directory up to date all the time.
Is it possible to apply html base just to images.
<base href="http://website.net">
This way i can use the images from the live server, but clicking links and stuff wont redirect me to the live site.
I have code set up to determine whether it is being run on the live machine or test so it is possible for me to add some badly written code so long as it does the job as it wont effect the live machine.
On http://github.com developer keep the HTML, CSS, JavaScript and images files of the project. How can I see the HTML output in browser?
For example this: https://github.com/necolas/css3-social-signin-buttons/blob/master/index.html
When I open this it doesn't show the rendered HTML of the code of author. It shows the page as a source code.
Is it possible to see it as rendered HTML directly? Otherwise I always need to download the whole ZIP just to see the result.
The most comfortable way to preview HTML files on GitHub is to go to https://htmlpreview.github.io/ or just prepend it to the original URL, i.e.: https://htmlpreview.github.io/?https://github.com/bartaz/impress.js/blob/master/index.html
If you don't want to download an archive you can use GitHub Pages to render this.
Fork the repository to your account.
Clone it locally on your machine
Create a gh-pages branch (if one already exists, remove it and create a new one based off master).
Push the branch back to GitHub.
View the pages at http://username.github.io/repo`
In code:
git clone git#github.com:username/repo.git
cd repo
git branch gh-pages
# Might need to do this first: git branch -D gh-pages
git push -u origin gh-pages # Push the new branch back to github
Go to http://username.github.io/repo
🚩 Message from RawGit's creator and owner on https://rawgit.com:
RawGit has reached the end of its useful life
October 8, 2018
RawGit is now in a sunset phase and will soon shut down. It's been a fun five years, but all things must end.
GitHub repositories that served content through RawGit within the last month will continue to be served until at least October of 2019. URLs for other repositories are no longer being served.
If you're currently using RawGit, please stop using it as soon as you can.
When I tried to use it, I got:
403 Forbidden
RawGit will soon shut down and is no longer serving new repos. >> Please visit https://rawgit.com for more details.
You can use RawGit:
https://rawgit.com/necolas/css3-social-signin-buttons/master/index.html
It works better (at the time of this writing) than http://htmlpreview.github.com/, serving files with proper Content-Type headers.
Additionally, it also provides CDN URL for use in production.
It's really easy to do with github pages, it's just a bit weird the first time you do it. Sorta like the first time you had to juggle 3 kittens while learning to knit. (OK, it's not all that bad)
You need a gh-pages branch:
Basically github.com looks for a gh-pages branch of the repository. It will serve all HTML pages it finds in here as normal HTML directly to the browser.
How do I get this gh-pages branch?
Easy. Just create a branch of your github repo called gh-pages.
Specify --orphan when you create this branch, as you don't actually want to merge this branch back into your github branch, you just want a branch that contains your HTML resources.
$ git checkout --orphan gh-pages
What about all the other gunk in my repo, how does that fit in to it?
Nah, you can just go ahead and delete it. And it's safe to do now, because you've been paying attention and created an orphan branch which can't be merged back into your main branch and remove all your code.
I've created the branch, now what?
You need to push this branch up to github.com, so that their automation can kick in and start hosting these pages for you.
git push -u origin gh-pages
But.. My HTML is still not being served!
It takes a few minutes for github to index these branches and fire up the required infrastructure to serve up the content. Up to 10 minutes according to github.
The steps layed out by github.com
https://help.github.com/articles/creating-project-pages-manually
I read all the comments and thought that GitHub made it too difficult for normal user to create GitHub pages until I visited GitHub theme Page where its clearly mentioned that there is a section of "GitHub Pages" under settings Page of the concerned repo where you can choose the option "use the master branch for GitHub Pages." and voilà!!...checkout that particular repo on https://username.github.io/reponame
Also, if you use Tampermonkey, you can add a script that will add preview with http://htmlpreview.github.com/ button into actions menu beside 'raw', 'blame' and 'history' buttons.
Script like this one:
https://gist.github.com/vanyakosmos/83ba165b288af32cf85e2cac8f02ce6d
I have found another way:
Click on the "Raw" button if you haven't already
Ctrl+A, Ctrl+C
Open "Developer Tools" with F12
In the "Inspector" right-click on the tag and choose "Edit HTML"
Ctrl+A, Ctrl+V
Ctr+Return
Tested on Firefox but it should work in other browsers too
If you have configured GitHub Pages you can get your public url like as:
https://<username>.github.io/<repository>/index.html
where <username> & <repository> will be the placeholder for username & repo name respectively
So, the result will be like this:
http://necolas.github.io/css3-social-signin-buttons/index.html
If it is an organization with GithubPages enabled in all the repositories it will be something like:
https://<org>.github.io/<repository>/
Two approaches (for public repositories) worked well for me: both VERY SIMPLE and ABLE TO RENDER COMPLEX HTML PAGES with links to local CSS files and local JAVASCRIPT/VUE files.
METHOD 1 - With GitHub pages
To set up, go to: https://github.com/YOUR_ACCT_NAME/YOUR_REPO_NAME/settings/pages (see screen shot below)
Example of my original HTML page on the repo: https://github.com/BrainAnnex/life123/blob/main/experiments/life_1D/diffusion/diffusion_1.htm
How it looks rendered: https://brainannex.github.io/life123/experiments/life_1D/diffusion/diffusion_1.htm Notice how all the styling, graphics and interactive controls are all good :)
METHOD 2 - With free service raw.githack.com
Go to https://raw.githack.com/ and enter the full URL of yourpage (including the "/blob" part); e.g. https://github.com/BrainAnnex/life123/blob/main/experiments/life_1D/diffusion/diffusion_1.htm
Then the site generates 2 links that work quite well :)
A good alternative if GitHub pages were to become unavailable!
This isn't a direct answer, but I think it is a pretty sweet alternative.
http://www.s3auth.com/
It allows you to host your pages behind basic auth. Great for things like api docs in your private github repo. just ad a s3 put as part of your api build.
If you are using an enterprise Github, you might not want to have a public facing github pages. One thing that worked for us is to:
For a HTML file in: https://github.private-repo.com/team/project/blob/master/order.html
Following is the URL that opens in a browser and retrieves the latest file as HTML:
https://github.private-repo.com/pages/team/project/order.html