# Octopress Octopress is an obsessively designed toolkit for writing and deploying Jekyll blogs. Pretty sweet, huh? [![Gem Version](https://badge.fury.io/rb/octopress.png)](http://badge.fury.io/rb/octopress) [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/octopress/octopress.png?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/octopress/octopress) ## Installation Add this line to your application's Gemfile: gem 'octopress', '~> 3.0' And then execute: $ bundle Or install it yourself as: $ gem install octopress ## Octopress Commands Here are the subcommands for Octopress. ``` init # Adds Octopress scaffolding to your site new # Like `jekyll new` + `octopress init` new post # Add a new post to your site new page <PATH> # Add a new page to your site new draft <TITLE> # Add a new draft post to your site publish <POST> # Publish a draft from _drafts to _posts unpublish <POST> # Search for a post and convert it into a draft isolate [POST] # Stash all posts but the one you're working on for a faster build integrate # Restores all posts, doing the opposite of the isolate command ``` Run `octopress --help` to list sub commands and `octopress <subcommand> --help` to learn more about any subcommand and see its options. ### Init ```sh $ octopress init <PATH> [options] ``` This will copy Octopress's scaffolding into the specified directory. Use the `--force` option to overwrite existing files. The scaffolding is pretty simple: ``` _templates/ draft post page ``` ### New Post This automates the creation of a new post. ```sh $ octopress new post "My Title" ``` This will create a new file at `_posts/YYYY-MM-DD-my-title.markdown` with the following YAML front-matter already added. ``` layout: post title: "My Title" date: YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM:SS-00:00 ``` #### Command options | Option | Description | |:---------------------|:----------------------------------------| | `--template PATH` | Use a template from <path> | | `--date DATE` | The date for the post. Should be parseable by [Time#parse](http://ruby-doc.org/stdlib-2.1.0/libdoc/time/rdoc/Time.html#method-i-parse) | | `--slug SLUG` | Slug for the new post. | | `--dir DIR` | Create post at _posts/DIR/. | | `--force` | Overwrite existing file. | ### New Page Creating a new page is easy, you can use the default file name extension (.html), pass a specific extension, or end with a `/` to create an index.html document. ``` $ octopress new page some-page # ./some-page.html $ octopress new page about.md # ./about.md $ octopress new page docs/ # ./docs/index.html ``` If you are working with collections, you might add a page like this: ``` $ octopress new page _legal/terms # ./_legal/terms.html ``` After the page is created, Octopress will tell you how to configure this new collection. #### Command options | Option | Description | |:---------------------|:----------------------------------------| | `--template PATH` | Use a template from <path> | | `--title TITLE` | The title of the new page | | `--date DATE` | The date for the page. Should be parseable by [Time#parse](http://ruby-doc.org/stdlib-2.1.0/libdoc/time/rdoc/Time.html#method-i-parse) | | `--force` | Overwrite existing file. | Note: The default page template doesn't expect a date. If you want to add dates to your pages, consider adding `date: {{ date }}` to the default template `_templates/page`, or create a new template to use for dated pages. Otherwise, you will have the `--date` option to add a date to a page. ### New Draft This will create a new post in your `_drafts` directory. ```sh $ octopress new draft "My Title" ``` | Option | Description | |:-------------------|:------------------------------------------| | `--template PATH` | Use a template from <path> | | `--date DATE` | The date for the draft. Should be parseable by [Time#parse](http://ruby-doc.org/stdlib-2.1.0/libdoc/time/rdoc/Time.html#method-i-parse) (defaults to Time.now) | | `--slug SLUG` | The slug for the new post. | | `--force` | Overwrite existing file. | ### Publish a draft Use the `publish` command to publish a draft to the `_posts` folder. This will also rename the file with the proper date format. ```sh $ octopress publish _drafts/some-cool-post.md $ octopress publish cool ``` In the first example, a draft is published using the path. The publish command can also search for a post by filename. The second command would work the same as the first. If other drafts match your search, you will be prompted to select them from a menu. This is often much faster than typing out the full path. | Option | Description | |:-------------------|:------------------------------------------| | `--date DATE` | The date for the post. Should be parseable by [Time#parse](http://ruby-doc.org/stdlib-2.1.0/libdoc/time/rdoc/Time.html#method-i-parse) | | `--slug SLUG` | Change the slug for the new post. | | `--dir DIR` | Create post at _posts/DIR/. | | `--force` | Overwrite existing file. | When publishing a draft, the new post will use the draft's date. Pass the option `--date now` to the publish command to set the new post date from your system clock. As usual, you can pass any compatible date string as well. ### Unpublish a post Use the `unpublish` command to move a post to the `_drafts` directory, renaming the file according to the drafts convention. ```sh $ octopress unpublish _posts/2015-01-10-some-post.md $ octopress unpublish some post ``` Just like the publish command, you can either pass a path or a search string to match the file name. If more than one match is found, you will be prompted to select from a menu of posts. ### Templates for Posts and pages Octopress post and page templates look like this. ``` --- layout: {{ layout }} title: {{ title }} --- ``` Dates get automatically added to a template for posts, and for pages if a --date option is set. You can add to the YAML front matter, add content below and even even use liquid tags and filters from your site's plugins. There are a handful of local variables you can use when working with templates. | Variable | Description | |:-------------------|:------------------------------------------| | `date` | The date (if set) or Time.now.iso8601 | | `title` | The title of the page (if set) | | `slug` | The title in slug form | | `ymd` | The date string, YYYY/MM/DD format | | `year` | The date's year | | `month` | The date's month, MM | | `day` | The date's day, DD | By default Octopress has templates for pages, posts and drafts. You can change them or create new ones for different types of content. To create linkposts template, add a file at `_templates/linkpost`, such as: ``` --- title: {{ title }} external-url: {{ url }} --- ``` Then you can use it with a new post like this: ```sh $ octopress new post "Some title" --template linkpost $ octopress new post "Some title" -tm _templates/linkpost ``` In the second example, I'm passing the full template file path. This way I can use my shell's tab to auto-complete feature. When creating templates, file name extensions are unnecessary since the files are just plain text anyway. ## Isolate The `isolate` command will allow you to stash posts in `_posts/_exile` where they will be ignored by Jekyll during the build process. Run `octopress integrate` to restore all exiled posts. This can be helpful if you have a very large site and you want to quickly preview a build for a single post or page. ```sh $ octopress isolate # Move all posts $ octopress isolate _posts/2014-10-11-kittens.md # Move post at path $ octopress isolate kittens # Move post matching search ``` In the third example, if multiple posts match the search a prompt will ask you to select a post from a menu. ## Configuration Octopress reads its configurations from `_config.yml`. Here's what the configuration looks like by default. ```yaml # Default extension for new posts and pages post_ext: markdown page_ext: html # Default templates for posts and pages # Found in _templates/ post_layout: post page_layout: page # Format titles with titlecase? titlecase: true # Change default template file (in _templates/) post_template: post page_template: page draft_template: draft ``` ## Contributing 1. Fork it ( https://github.com/octopress/octopress/fork ) 2. Create your feature branch (`git checkout -b my-new-feature`) 3. Commit your changes (`git commit -am 'Add some feature'`) 4. Push to the branch (`git push origin my-new-feature`) 5. Create new Pull Request