This looks good.

So do I understand any of the commiters editing the site would still
need to run Jekyll manually and push (how?), or is there a GitHub like
autobuild?

Is Jekyll still requiring various Ruby libraries to be installed in a
carefully selected version (with fun time on Windows for native
dependencies), or is docker images like jekyll/jekyll making things
easier?




On 3 August 2015 at 15:58, Owen O'Malley <omal...@apache.org> wrote:
> On Wed, Mar 4, 2015 at 11:56 PM, Ted Dunning <ted.dunn...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Several projects are using Jekyll to emulate the github style site
>> processing.  As an example: http://drill.apache.org/
>>
>> THis is still a bit inconvenient in that the gh-pages branch has to be
>> built using jekyll and then checked into SVN, but it does work pretty
>> easily.  The process pretty much has to be manual because of the access
>> required to check things into SVN, but there is nothing else that requires
>> manual intervention.
>>
>
> Actually, now infra has set it up so that you can have both in the same
> repository using the "asf-site" branch in git. Here is the generated html
> for ORC: https://github.com/apache/orc/tree/asf-site
>
> I really like the Jekyll engine for generating the HTML. ORC's jekyll
> source is at https://github.com/apache/orc/tree/master/site
>
> .. Owen



-- 
Stian Soiland-Reyes
Apache Taverna (incubating), Apache Commons RDF (incubating)
http://orcid.org/0000-0001-9842-9718

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