This is an example of a very basic Jekyll site. It lays down the basic folder structure, uses very basic CSS to make it look presentable and leaves everything else up to you.
This is a perfect starting point for building your own Jekyll site.
Development time dependencies:
- Ruby
- Gems
- Jekyll
- Rdiscount (optional - comment out in
_confing.yamlto use Maroku) - Node.js & Grunt.js (optional - only if you wish to use GruntJS)
Run-time dependencies:
- A web server (any will do)
To use this template:
- Clone to some directory
- Modify
_config.yamlwith your name, blog title, description and etc... - Tweak
style.cssand HTML files in_layoutsto personalize - Create blog entries in
_posts/- work off the sample posts there - Run
jekyll --serverto generate site locally - View it by going to
http://localhost:4000and make sure it looks good - If all is well, upload contents of
_siteto your server - Repeat steps 4-7 to update blog
Following features are available:
- Automatically generate a valid RSS feed (see feed.xml in root directory).
- Automatically generate a valid Google Sitemap (see sitemap.xml in root directory).
- Organize your posts into categories and automatically generate category index pages.
- Can be deployed in a subdirectory
To use the category feature simply add category tag at the top of your post:
category: some_category_name
You can specify multiple categories using a comma separated list.
You can deploy to a subdirectory. For example instead of running your site at http://foo.tld/ you can instead put it in http://foo.tld/blog/. To do this use the url and baseurl settings in _config.yaml. The former is used for absolute links (like in the RSS feed) while the latter is used for relative links (like everywhere on the front page). For example if you set it to:
baseurl: /blog
url: http://foo.tld/blog
Then the html files will still be generated in _site but all the links will be generated either relative to /blog or using the absolute url of http://foo.tld/blog.
Note: when you run the built-in Jekyll server you will need to access your site by going to http://localhost:4000/blog.
You can use Grunt.js to automatically validate the HTML in your generated site. First install the dependencies:
npm install
Then run Grunt:
grunt
This will automatically run all the files in _site directory through a HTML5 linter/validator.
This sample layout uses plugins created by Dave Perret to generate categories and sitemaps. Credit where credit is due. Please see the _plugins directory for details.
The web font icons have been created based on the Typicon set and customized via the Fontello service.
Just so you can see how it looks:
Front page:
Individual post:
Archive page:


