If you need to throw up a quick example of your addon in action, this is the addon for you!
This addon provides new command(s) to help manage a gh-pages branch for your addon. It's an addon for addons.
First you need to install ember-cli-github-pages:
ember install ember-cli-github-pages
Upon install, this addon will modify your 'tests/dummy/config/environment.js'. Commit these changes with the following command:
git add -A && git commit -m "Added ember-cli-github-pages addon"
Then you need to create the gh-pages
branch and remove the unnecessary files:
git checkout --orphan gh-pages && rm -rf `bash -c "ls -a | grep -vE '\.gitignore|\.git|node_modules|bower_components|(^[.]{1,2}/?$)'"` && touch .gitkeep && git add -A && git commit -m "initial gh-pages commit"
Once that's done, you can checkout the branch you want to create the gh-page from (likely master) and run the command to build and commit it.
Then run ember github-pages:commit --message "some commit message" in order to rebuild gh-pages branch.
git checkout master
ember github-pages:commit --message "Initial gh-pages release"
Once you've created a gh-pages branch, tell the world! Add a demoURL
key to the ember-addon
object in your package.json
. See the ember-cli
documention for details.
While in general, github repo pages will serve the content in the gh-pages
branch, org and user pages serve content in the master
branch. When using this addon to develop a Org or User page, edit your Ember Application on an alternate branch such as ember
. Once you are ready to build the application and send to GitHub you can either:
- add the
--branch master
option to theember github-pages:commit
command - make the
gh-pages
branch on your local machine track the master branch onorigin
via the command:
git branch --set-upstream gh-pages origin/master
- Create a new Ember CLI project
ember new myBlog
. ReplacemyBlog
with the name of your project. - Go to the newly created project and install this addon:
cd myBlog && ember install ember-cli-github-pages
. - Remove the changes made to
environment.js
, as they are not required for Org/User pages:git checkout -- tests/dummy/config/environment.js
- Commit the changes:
git add -A && git commit -m "Added ember-cli-github-pages addon https://github.com/poetic/ember-cli-github-pages"
- Create a new branch named
ember
which will store all the ember related code:git checkout -b ember
- Run the following command as mentioned above:
git checkout master && rm -rf `ls -a | grep -vE '\.gitignore|\.git|node_modules|bower_components|(^[.]{1,2}/?$)'` && git add -A && git commit -m "initialises gh-pages(in case of organisation master) commit"
- Switch back to ember branch:
git checkout ember
; - Build the site using ember-cli-github-pages:
ember github-pages:commit --branch master --message "adds base site"
- Create new Org/User repo on Github and add the origin:
git remote add origin https://github.com/knoxxs/knoxxs.github.io.git
. Hereknoxxs
is my username. - Push the master branch:
git push -u origin master
. - Open
http://knoxxs.github.io/
.
You may optionally specify an ember build environment and a branch name as parameters
git checkout master
ember github-pages:commit --message "Initial demo app release" \
--branch="my-demo-app" \
--environment=development
Optional Argument | Default Value | Description |
---|---|---|
environment | production |
Ember build environment (i.e., development , production ) |
branch | gh-pages |
Branch to commit your app to |
destination | . |
The directory into which the built application should be copied |
message | new gh-pages version |
The commit message to include with the build, must be wrapped in quotes |
You will still need to push the gh-pages branch up to github using git. Once you
do that you can access the repo at http://username.github.io/repo-name
. It may
take a few minutes after pushing the code to show up.
For ease of use you can add the following to your package.json
:
"scripts": {
"deploy": "ember build --environment production && ember github-pages:commit --message \"Deploy gh-pages from commit $(git rev-parse HEAD)\" && git push origin gh-pages:gh-pages"
}
And then you can execute npm run deploy
and it will deploy with a commit message that references the commit ID you deployed from, and push that branch to github.
This addon creates a production build, which fingerprints resources automatically. If you have dynamic resources in your templates, they will not be fingerprinted, so you need to ignore the fingerprinting for those resources in your ember-cli-build.js file. See the fingerprinting docs.