The Jekyll AsciiDoc Quickstart project provides a quick way to set up an AsciiDoc-based website using GitHub’s publishing infrastructure. This project combines the power of AsciiDoc with an elegant CSS foundation and a blog-ready template. Since it’s a repository template, all you need to do is create a new repository from this repository to create your website.
The project provides a GitHub Actions workflow that publishes your website whenever changes are pushed to the repository. The workflow watches for commits on the main (or master branch), automatically runs the Jekyll build with the AsciiDoc plugin enabled, and pushes the generated content to the gh-pages branch, from which it is hosted.
You can find a live website created from this repository at https://asciidoctor.github.io/jekyll-asciidoc-quickstart.
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Click the green Use this template button in the upper right corner of GitHub and select Create a new repository to create your own copy of this repository.
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After the process is complete, you’ll be directed to your own repository copy.
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Access the Settings tab, then the Pages menu on the left.
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In the Source field, select the Deploy from a branch button.
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In the Branch field, select the gh-pages branch to be the source of the website files.
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This branch is where the GitHub Actions workflow that runs the Jekyll build will place the generated files.
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Finally, click the Save button to apply the changes.
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You may also want to tick the Enforce HTTPS option to only serve the site over HTTPS.
After every push, the GitHub Action workflow is automatically started to build and publish your website. That takes a while. You can look for ✅ at the top of your repository home page.
If you can load the URL at https://github-username.github.io/name-of-repository
, then you have successfully completed the basic configuration.
Start writing blog posts and enjoy the AsciiDoc difference, regardless of what device you choose: computer, tablet, or mobile.
You must install some software to build and serve your website locally. The requirements on the Jekyll Installation page describe how to install both Ruby and RubyGems.
If you would like to work offline first, consider checking your Gemfile
for the versions of your gem sources.
If the jekyll serve
command fails, it likely means you don’t have the necessary gems installed
You can check whether the jekyll
gem is installed locally by running gem list --local | grep "jekyll"
.
GitHub Pages does not (yet) whitelist the jekyll-asciidoc plug-in, so you can not write .adoc
posts and have them instantly published like Markdown posts do.
However, the only additional thing we need is the publish.yml workflow which is already configured in this repository.
You don’t have to change it, unless you want to perform some customization in the build/publish process.
You can help change the lack of native AsciiDoc support by creating a support case through http://github.com/support. This way, we won’t need a GitHub Action workflow anymore to publish AsciiDoc websites.
Tell the GitHub team that you want the choice to write in AsciiDoc, and have it handled the same way Markdown is when pushed to your GitHub Page.
Your voice counts: make it heard!
The repository requires the following structure to work correctly:
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main or master (legacy), for markup sources and configuration. This branch can be named anything you choose, however main is a general standard used in Jekyll blogs.
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gh-pages, for the generated static content hosted on GitHub Pages. This branch is the username.github.io GitHub Pages domain, which is automatically created and updated for you when the GitHub Actions workflow runs.