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-rw-r--r-- | README.markdown | 33 |
1 files changed, 16 insertions, 17 deletions
diff --git a/README.markdown b/README.markdown index e40edf93..2ebcd4e1 100644 --- a/README.markdown +++ b/README.markdown @@ -18,9 +18,9 @@ repository is named `your_username.github.com` or `your_organization.github.com` git remote add origin (your repository url) git push origin master - # If you're using Github user or organization pages, - # rename the master branch to source and then push - git branch -m master source + # Next, if you're using Github user or organization pages, + # Create a source branch and push to origin source. + git branch source git push origin source @@ -40,7 +40,7 @@ Next, setup an [RVM](http://beginrescueend.com/) and install dependencies. rake generate # Generates your blog into the public directory rake watch # Watches files for changes and regenerates your blog - rake preview # Watches, regenerates, and mounts a webserver at http://localhost:4000 + rake preview # Watches, and mounts a webserver at http://localhost:4000 Jekyll's built in webbrick server is handy, but if you're a [POW](http://pow.cx) user, you can set it up to work with Octopress like this. @@ -48,29 +48,28 @@ Jekyll's built in webbrick server is handy, but if you're a [POW](http://pow.cx) ln -s /path/to/octopress cd - -Now you'll just run `rake watch` and load up `http://octopress.dev` instead. +Now that you're setup with POW, you'll just run `rake watch` and load up `http://octopress.dev` instead. ## Writing A Post -While running `rake preview` or `rake watch`, open a new terminal session and start a Hello World post. +Create your first post. rake post['hello world'] -This will create a new post named something like `2011-06-17-hello-world.markdown` in the `source/_posts` directory. +This will put a new post in source/_posts with a name like like `2011-07-3-hello-world.markdown` in the `source/_posts` directory. Open that file in your favorite text editor and you'll see a block of [yaml front matter](https://github.com/mojombo/jekyll/wiki/yaml-front-matter) which tells Jekyll how to processes posts and pages. --- title: Hello World - date: 2011-06-17 14:34 + date: 2011-07-03 5:59 layout: post --- -Now, go ahead and type up a sample post, or use some [inspired filler](http://baconipsum.com/). Save and refresh your browser, and you +Now beneath the yaml block, go ahead and type up a sample post, or use some [inspired filler](http://baconipsum.com/). If you're running the watcher, save and refresh your browser and you should see the new post show up in your blog index. -Octopress does more than this though. Check out [Blogging with Octopress](#include_link) to learn about cool features which -help make blogging easier and more beautiful. +Octopress does more than this though. Check out [Blogging with Octopress](#include_link) to learn about all the different ways Octopress makes blogging easier. ## Configuring Octopress @@ -106,18 +105,18 @@ If you're using Github user or organization pages, clone the repository `git@git # For Github project pages: git clone git@github.com:username/project.git _deploy - rake init_deploy[gh-pages] + rake config_deploy[gh-pages] # For Github user/organization pages: git clone git@github.com:username/username.github.com _deploy - rake init_deploy[master] + rake config_deploy[master] # Now to deploy, you'll run - rake push + rake deploy -The `init_deploy` rake task takes a branch name as an argument and creates a [new empty branch](http://book.git-scm.com/5_creating_new_empty_branches.html), adds an initial commit, and pushes it to the origin remote. -This prepares your branch for easy deployment. The `rake push` task copies the generated blog from the `public` directory to the `_deploy` directory, adds new files, removes old files, sets a commit message, and pushes to Github. -Then Github will queue your site for publishing (which usually occurs within minutes). +The `config_deploy` rake task takes a branch name as an argument and creates a [new empty branch](http://book.git-scm.com/5_creating_new_empty_branches.html), and adds an initial commit. +This prepares your branch for easy deployment. The `rake deploy` task copies the generated blog from the `public` directory to the `_deploy` directory, adds new files, removes old files, sets a commit message, and pushes to Github. +Github will queue your site for publishing (which usually occurs instantly or within minutes if it's your first commit). ## License (The MIT License) |