Powered by Sculpin. =)
sculpin install
sh watch.sh
Your newly generated clone of sculpin-blog-skeleton is now
accessible at http://localhost:8000/
.
curl -O https://download.sculpin.io/sculpin.phar
php sculpin.phar install
php sculpin.phar generate --watch --server
By default the site will be generated in output_dev/
. This is the location
of your development build.
To preview it with Sculpin's built in webserver, run either of the following
commands. This will start a simple webserver listening at localhost:8000
.
To serve files right after generating them, use the generate
command with
the --server
option:
sculpin generate --server
To listen on a different port, specify the --port
option:
sculpin generate --server --port=9999
Combine with --watch
to have Sculpin pick up changes as you make them:
sculpin generate --server --watch
To serve files that have already been generated, use the serve
command:
sculpin serve
To listen on a different port, specify the --port
option:
sculpin serve --port=9999
The only special consideration that needs to be taken into account for standard webservers in development is the fact that the URLs generated may not match the path at which the site is installed.
This can be solved by overriding the site.url
configuration option when
generating the site.
sculpin generate --url=http://my.dev.host/blog-skeleton/output_dev
With this option passed, {{ site.url }}/about
will now be generated as
http://my.dev.host/blog-skelton/output_dev/about
instead of /about
.
When --env=prod
is specified, the site will be generated in output_prod/
. This
is the location of your production build.
sculpin generate --env=prod
These files are suitable to be transferred directly to a production host. For example:
sculpin generate --env=prod
rsync -avze 'ssh -p 999' output_prod/ [email protected]:public_html
If you want to make sure that rsync deletes files that you deleted locally on the on the remote too, add the --delete
option to the rsync command:
rsync -avze 'ssh -p 999' --delete output_prod/ [email protected]:public_html
In fact, publish.sh
is provided to get you started. If you plan on deploying to an
Amazon S3 bucket, you can use s3-publish.sh
alongside the s3cmd
utility (must be
installed separately).