diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/pages/getting_started_part_two.md')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/pages/getting_started_part_two.md | 153 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 152 deletions
diff --git a/doc/pages/getting_started_part_two.md b/doc/pages/getting_started_part_two.md index 07dd24122c4..a58affec73d 100644 --- a/doc/pages/getting_started_part_two.md +++ b/doc/pages/getting_started_part_two.md @@ -1,152 +1 @@ -# GitLab Pages from A to Z: Part 2 - -> Type: user guide -> -> Level: beginner - -- _[Part 1: Static Sites, Domains, DNS Records, and SSL/TLS Certificates](getting_started_part_one.md)_ -- **Part 2: Quick Start Guide - Setting Up GitLab Pages** -- _[Part 3: Creating and Tweaking `.gitlab-ci.yml` for GitLab Pages](getting_started_part_three.md)_ - ----- - -## Setting up GitLab Pages - -For a complete step-by-step tutorial, please read the -blog post [Hosting on GitLab.com with GitLab Pages](https://about.gitlab.com/2016/04/07/gitlab-pages-setup/). The following sections will explain -what do you need and why do you need them. - -## What you need to get started - -1. A project -1. A configuration file (`.gitlab-ci.yml`) to deploy your site -1. A specific `job` called `pages` in the configuration file -that will make GitLab aware that you are deploying a GitLab Pages website - -Optional Features: - -1. A custom domain or subdomain -1. A DNS pointing your (sub)domain to your Pages site - 1. **Optional**: an SSL/TLS certificate so your custom - domain is accessible under HTTPS. - -## Project - -Your GitLab Pages project is a regular project created the -same way you do for the other ones. To get started with GitLab Pages, you have two ways: - -- Fork one of the templates from Page Examples, or -- Create a new project from scratch - -Let's go over both options. - -### Fork a project to get started from - -To make things easy for you, we've created this -[group](https://gitlab.com/pages) of default projects -containing the most popular SSGs templates. - -Watch the [video tutorial](https://youtu.be/TWqh9MtT4Bg) we've -created for the steps below. - -1. Choose your SSG template -1. Fork a project from the [Pages group](https://gitlab.com/pages) -1. Remove the fork relationship by navigating to your **Project**'s **Settings** > **Edit Project** - - ![remove fork relashionship](img/remove_fork_relashionship.png) - -1. Enable Shared Runners for your fork: navigate to your **Project**'s **Settings** > **CI/CD Pipelines** -1. Trigger a build (push a change to any file) -1. As soon as the build passes, your website will have been deployed with GitLab Pages. Your website URL will be available under your **Project**'s **Settings** > **Pages** - -To turn a **project website** forked from the Pages group into a **user/group** website, you'll need to: - -- Rename it to `namespace.gitlab.io`: navigate to **Project**'s **Settings** > **Edit Project** > **Rename repository** -- Adjust your SSG's [base URL](#urls-and-baseurls) to from `"project-name"` to `""`. This setting will be at a different place for each SSG, as each of them have their own structure and file tree. Most likelly, it will be in the SSG's config file. - -> **Notes:** -> ->1. Why do I need to remove the fork relationship? -> -> Unless you want to contribute to the original project, -you won't need it connected to the upstream. A -[fork](https://about.gitlab.com/2016/12/01/how-to-keep-your-fork-up-to-date-with-its-origin/#fork) -is useful for submitting merge requests to the upstream. -> -> 2. Why do I need to enable Shared Runners? -> -> Shared Runners will run the script set by your GitLab CI -configuration file. They're enabled by default to new projects, -but not to forks. - -### Create a project from scratch - -1. From your **Project**'s **[Dashboard](https://gitlab.com/dashboard/projects)**, -click **New project**, and name it considering the -[practical examples](getting_started_part_one.md#practical-examples). -1. Clone it to your local computer, add your website -files to your project, add, commit and push to GitLab. -1. From the your **Project**'s page, click **Set up CI**: - - ![setup GitLab CI](img/setup_ci.png) - -1. Choose one of the templates from the dropbox menu. -Pick up the template corresponding to the SSG you're using (or plain HTML). - - ![gitlab-ci templates](img/choose_ci_template.png) - -Once you have both site files and `.gitlab-ci.yml` in your project's -root, GitLab CI will build your site and deploy it with Pages. -Once the first build passes, you see your site is live by -navigating to your **Project**'s **Settings** > **Pages**, -where you'll find its default URL. - -> **Notes:** -> -> - GitLab Pages [supports any SSG](https://about.gitlab.com/2016/06/17/ssg-overview-gitlab-pages-part-3-examples-ci/), but, -if you don't find yours among the templates, you'll need -to configure your own `.gitlab-ci.yml`. Do do that, please -read through the article [Creating and Tweaking `.gitlab-ci.yml` for GitLab Pages](getting_started_part_three.md). New SSGs are very welcome among -the [example projects](https://gitlab.com/pages). If you set -up a new one, please -[contribute](https://gitlab.com/pages/pages.gitlab.io/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md) -to our examples. -> -> - The second step _"Clone it to your local computer"_, can be done -differently, achieving the same results: instead of cloning the bare -repository to you local computer and moving your site files into it, -you can run `git init` in your local website directory, add the -remote URL: `git remote add origin git@gitlab.com:namespace/project-name.git`, -then add, commit, and push. - -### URLs and Baseurls - -Every Static Site Generator (SSG) default configuration expects -to find your website under a (sub)domain (`example.com`), not -in a subdirectory of that domain (`example.com/subdir`). Therefore, -whenever you publish a project website (`namespace.gitlab.io/project-name`), -you'll have to look for this configuration (base URL) on your SSG's -documentation and set it up to reflect this pattern. - -For example, for a Jekyll site, the `baseurl` is defined in the Jekyll -configuration file, `_config.yml`. If your website URL is -`https://john.gitlab.io/blog/`, you need to add this line to `_config.yml`: - -```yaml -baseurl: "/blog" -``` - -On the contrary, if you deploy your website after forking one of -our [default examples](https://gitlab.com/pages), the baseurl will -already be configured this way, as all examples there are project -websites. If you decide to make yours a user or group website, you'll -have to remove this configuration from your project. For the Jekyll -example we've just mentioned, you'd have to change Jekyll's `_config.yml` to: - -```yaml -baseurl: "" -``` - -||| -|:--|--:| -|[**← Part 1: Static sites, domains, DNS records, and SSL/TLS certificates**](getting_started_part_one.md)|[**Part 3: Creating and tweaking `.gitlab-ci.yml` for GitLab Pages →**](getting_started_part_three.md)| +This document was moved to [another location](../user/project/pages/getting_started_part_two.md). |