- Octopress sports a clean responsive theme written in semantic HTML5, focused on readability and friendliness toward mobile devices.
- Code blogging is easy and beautiful. Embed code (with Solarized styling) in your posts from gists or from your filesystem.
- Third party integration is simple with built-in support for Twitter, Pinboard, Delicious, Disqus Comments, and Google Analytics.
- It's easy to use. A collection of rake tasks simplifies development and makes deploying a cinch.
- Ships with great plugins some original and others from the Jekyll community — tested and improved.
Create a new repository for your website then
open up a terminal and follow along. If you plan to host your site on Github Pages for a user or organization, make sure the
repository is named your_username.github.com
or your_organization.github.com
.
mkdir my_octopress_site
cd my_octopress_site
git init
git remote add octopress git://github.com/imathis/octopress.git
git pull octopress master
git remote add origin (your repository url)
git push origin master
# If you're using Github user or organization pages,
# rename the master branch to source and then push
git branch -m master source
git push origin source
Next, setup an RVM and install dependencies.
rvm rvmrc trust
bundle install
# Install pygments (for syntax highlighing)
sudo easy_install pip
sudo pip install pygments
# Install the default Octopress theme
rake install
rake generate # Generates your blog into the public directory
rake watch # Watches files for changes and regenerates your blog
rake preview # Watches, regenerates, and mounts a webserver at http://localhost:4000
Jekyll's built in webbrick server is handy, but if you're a POW user, you can set it up to work with Octopress like this.
cd ~/.pow
ln -s /path/to/octopress
cd -
Now you'll just run rake watch
and load up http://octopress.dev
instead.
While running rake preview
or rake watch
, open a new terminal session and start a Hello World post.
rake post['hello world']
This will create a new post named something like 2011-06-17-hello-world.markdown
in the source/_posts
directory.
Open that file in your favorite text editor and you'll see a block of yaml front matter
which tells Jekyll how to processes posts and pages.
---
title: Hello World
date: 2011-06-17 14:34
layout: post
---
Now, go ahead and type up a sample post, or use some inspired filler. Save and refresh your browser, and you should see the new post show up in your blog index.
Octopress does more than this though. Check out Blogging with Octopress to learn about cool features which help make blogging easier and more beautiful.
I've tried to keep configuring Octopress fairly simple. Here's a list of files for configuring Octopress.
_config.yml # Main config (Jekyll blog settings)
Rakefile # Config for Rsync deployment
config.rb # Compass config
sass/custom/_colors.scss # change your blog's color scheme
sass/custom/_layout.scss # change your blog's layout
sass/custom/_styles.scss # override your blog's styles
Octopress keeps it's main configurations in two places, the Rakefile
and the _config.yml
. You probably won't have to change anything in the rakefile except the
deployment configurations (if you're going to deploy with Rsync over SSH).
Add your server configurations to the Rakefile
under Rsync deploy config. To deploy with Rsync, be sure your public key is listed in your server's ~/.ssh/authorized_keys
file.
ssh_user = "[email protected]"
document_root = "~/website.com/"
Now if you run rake deploy
in your terminal, your public
directory will be synced to your server's document root.
To setup deployment, you'll want to clone your target repository into the _deploy
directory in your Octopress project.
If you're using Github project pages, clone the repository for that project, eg [email protected]:username/project.git
.
If you're using Github user or organization pages, clone the repository [email protected]:usernem/username.github.com.git
.
# For Github project pages:
git clone [email protected]:username/project.git _deploy
rake init_deploy[gh-pages]
# For Github user/organization pages:
git clone [email protected]:username/username.github.com _deploy
rake init_deploy[master]
# Now to deploy, you'll run
rake push
The init_deploy
rake task takes a branch name as an argument and creates a new empty branch, adds an initial commit, and pushes it to the origin remote.
This prepares your branch for easy deployment. The rake push
task copies the generated blog from the public
directory to the _deploy
directory, adds new files, removes old files, sets a commit message, and pushes to Github.
Then Github will queue your site for publishing (which usually occurs within minutes).
(The MIT License)
Copyright © 2009 Brandon Mathis
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the ‘Software’), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED ‘AS IS’, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
- Proudly display the 'Powered by Octopress' credit in the footer.
- Add your site to the wiki so we can watch the community grow.