From dc6db80fa72286704849ef61ee0e5ccb5841cb09 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Bradley Taunt Date: Tue, 2 Jul 2024 14:28:49 -0400 Subject: Conversion to barf for testing purposes --- _posts/2022-07-29-berg.md | 73 ----------------------------------------------- 1 file changed, 73 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 _posts/2022-07-29-berg.md (limited to '_posts/2022-07-29-berg.md') diff --git a/_posts/2022-07-29-berg.md b/_posts/2022-07-29-berg.md deleted file mode 100644 index 6c89377..0000000 --- a/_posts/2022-07-29-berg.md +++ /dev/null @@ -1,73 +0,0 @@ ---- -layout: post -title: "Hosting with Codeberg Pages" -date: 2022-07-29 ---- - - -I recently switched the [pblog](https://pblog.bt.ht) project repo over from Sourcehut to Codeberg (mostly for UX reasons) and it got me looking into [Codeberg Pages](https://codeberg.page). It seemed like a cleaner approach to host my personal blog on the same platform I planned to also share the source code. - -I decided to share the setup process here since I couldn't find a straightforward guide explaining everything required to get going. So, let's dig in. - -## Create the Repos - -**Disclaimer**: My personal blog uses [pblog](https://pblog.bt.ht), so although these instructions will be catered towards that SSG the same concept *should* apply for any other generator (Jekyll, Hugo, Next, etc.). - -The first step is to create the main repo that would house the core files of `pblog`. Then we need to make a separate repo simply called `pages`. This second project is where all the generated "static" files get rendered. - -*Side note*: Be sure to at least include a `README` file in that `pages` repo. This will avoid any errors or warnings when setting up our submodules in the next steps. - -## Configuration Edits - -Once your two repos are created, you will need to make some minor edits to the `_config.sh` in the core `pblog` project to tell the build script where the generated files should go (in this case the `pages` repo): - - - OUTPUT="_output/pages/" - - -## The Submodule - -Using terminal, navigate to the `_output/` directory in your core `pblog` project. Run the following, remembering to replace the USERNAME parameter with your own: - - - git submodule add git@codeberg.org:USERNAME/pages.git - - -If everything worked correctly you should now have a `.gitmodules` file in your main `pblog` project. If you get any errors, you might need to include the name of the directory at the end of the command: - - - git submodule add git@codeberg.org:USERNAME/pages.git pages - - -## The Workflow - -Now you can make changes, add new posts and pages in the main `pblog` project and have those generated files render into your other `pages` repo. For this workflow, I simply push commits to both projects when I am happy with my changes but I'm sure you could look into automating this process (ie. a single push from the `pblog` repo forces a the `pages` repo to also update). - -Now you can navigate to the standard Codeberg Pages URL to see it in action: - - - USERNAME.codeberg.page - - -If you want to use your own custom domain (who doesn't?) then continue reading. - -## Custom Domains (Optional) - -The first thing you will need to do is add a `.domains` file to your `pages` root directory. In this file you will want to list your custom domain on the first line, followed by the standard Codeberg pages URL below it. Like so: - - - yourcustomdomain.com - USERNAME.codeberg.page - - -I'm keeping this very basic, but I suggest you look further into the [official documentation](https://docs.codeberg.org/codeberg-pages/#custom-domains) if there are any extra settings you'd like to tinker with. - -The final step is configuring a `CNAME` DNS setting through your registrar: - - - @ -> USERNAME.codeberg.page - - -Give the DNS settings a bit of time to take (24-48 hours) and you'll have your custom domain working just fine. - -Happy hosting! -- cgit v1.2.3-54-g00ecf