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author | bt <bt@web> | 2023-12-10 14:02:39 -0500 |
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committer | IkiWiki <ikiwiki.info> | 2023-12-10 14:02:39 -0500 |
commit | 512dcf1eac5097e2ec76d5b827059a51ac19f4fc (patch) | |
tree | 4dc65d6658f0241a2e02d8322b28ec9a17d16243 /posts | |
parent | dfc4e8aff7222396ce950d84e6892e05495a495f (diff) |
Diffstat (limited to 'posts')
-rw-r--r-- | posts/jekyll-sourcehut.md | 7 |
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/posts/jekyll-sourcehut.md b/posts/jekyll-sourcehut.md index 8485324..f11ca33 100644 --- a/posts/jekyll-sourcehut.md +++ b/posts/jekyll-sourcehut.md @@ -1,6 +1,5 @@ -# Hosting a Jekyll Site on Sourcehut - -2021-12-06 +[[!meta title="Hosting a Jekyll Site on Sourcehut"]] +[[!meta date="2021-12-06"]] I recently decided to switch my personal, static site's hosting from Netlify to [sourcehut pages](https://srht.site). The process went *fairly* smoothly with only a couple minor hiccups; nothing rage-inducing. After everything was up and running smoothly, I figured writing out a step-by-step tutorial might help others who are thinking of doing a similar switch (or looking to host their first static site). @@ -91,6 +90,4 @@ Hopefully this helps to streamline the process for others to host their static s Even low-effort support for open-source products (like where you host your static site or FOSS projects) can go a long way. Just some food for thought. -<hr data-content="footnotes"> - [^1]: Thanks to [McSinyx](https://cnx.srht.site/) for pointing out that the repo used for creating your website can be named anything (instead of defaulting to your sourcehut username) |