Disclaimer: this project is totally unrelated to servant-app/JAWS (which is a cool project that you should definitely check out if you're interested in static sites and AWS). This project is also unmaintained and unused by me now.
Awesome Jekyll deployment scripts for AWS (S3 and CloudFront). Works with any other static site too.
_jaws:
- minifies HTML, JavaScript and CSS
- gzips assets and includes appropriate headers
- allows images, CSS, and JS to be served from a different domain name
- syncs your site to an S3 bucket
- invalidates changed files in CloudFront
all with a single command.
_jaws probably only works on Mac OS X at the moment (and maybe BSD variants) due to some of the shell commands used. This is a high priorty issue to fix.
The only hard dependencies are s3cmd and Java (and some other things that you're almost guaranteed to have like gzip and bash).
You can install zopfli
for better compression. _jaws uses gzip
by default.
_jaws is configured to use Pygments by default for syntax highlighting, but you can easily configure it not to use this.
From your Jekyll project's root directory:
git clone git@github.com:pauljz/_jaws.git
cp _jaws/config.sample.sh _jaws/config.sh
Then edit your config.sh
. By default the only things you need to change are JAWS_BUCKET
, JAWS_STATICCDN
, and JAWS_IMAGECDN
.
Additional configuration options are documented in config.sh
.
You'll also need to set up S3 and CloudFront correctly. I will have a walkthrough for setting up S3 and CloudFront for Jekyll correctly on my blog shortly.
If this is your first time using s3cmd, you'll need to run s3cmd --configure
to get started.
There are 3 scripts to use directly:
_jaws/publish.sh
|
Normal use. |
_jaws/publish-invalidate.sh
|
Same as publish.sh , except it also invalidates your cache in CloudFront. Worth using if you've made substantial changes and/or need things to go live quickly. |
_jaws/publish-delete.sh
|
Same as publish-invalidate.sh , except it also deletes files not in your local copy of the site. Use if you have removed blog posts, compromising photos, etc. |
There's nothing that requires _jaws to be used with Jekyll. Any static site can be published to AWS using these scripts with some basic configuration.
Change the JAWS_GENERATE
configuration option to whatever generates your static site. If it's literally just flat files, your configuration should look something like:
JAWS_GENERATE="rm -rf _site && cp -R yourSite _site"
Copyright © 2013 Paul Zumbrun, http://www.paulzumbrun.com/
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the “Software”), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
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