autopages
Automated compilation and deployment to gh-pages
About
This project is meant to be self hosted on Heroku or similar, so that you maintain control over
who has push access to your repositories.
In general it assumes convention over configuration to make the setup process as painless as possible.
There are two types of github pages repositories. For each of them it assumes that three branches exist:
- input branch
- tranformation branch
- output branch
input branch
This is dynamic content that is going to be displayed on your github pages. For example,
if your project is a blog, it would include blog posts. If it is a software library, it
would be the code and readme (you can choose to display -- perhaps just the readme -- in the tranformation branch).
transformation branch
This looks like a static client side website. It should follow this folder structure
$ tree
.
├── images
│ └── logo.png
├── js
│ └── app.js
├── stylesheets
│ └── app.scss
└── templates
└── index.jade
although can be significantly more complex than this. This is discussed later.
output branch
This is where the compiled static site go. Autopages will automatically commit and push this branch back to github
every time there is a new commit on the input branch or the transformation branch.
.github.io repos
For repos in the <username>.github.io
style, the following branch name conventions are enforced:
- input branch:
ap-content
- transformation branch:
autopages
- output branch:
master
all other repos
Any other repos will follow the convention of
- input branch:
master
- transformation branch:
autopages
- output branch:
gh-pages
Usage
Install the module with: npm install autopages
. You can create a new repo for this and in the main file write
var Autopages = require('autopages');
var autopages = new Autopages('GITHUB_API_KEY');
autopages.registerRepo('username/repo');
Thats it. Then, deploy it to heroku, and on heroku set the environmental variable URL
so that
it knows where to tell github to point a new webhook to.
Documentation
More documentation coming soon. In the meantime feel free to contact the author.
License
Copyright (c) 2014 Matthew Conlen. Licensed under the MIT license.