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author | Achilleas Pipinellis <axilleas@axilleas.me> | 2017-02-22 18:02:37 +0000 |
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committer | Achilleas Pipinellis <axilleas@axilleas.me> | 2017-02-22 18:02:37 +0000 |
commit | 7273745e33a4f2a8f0c7c9d3a31f0f6164230ef4 (patch) | |
tree | 1f5f20de10cab5e3311141b0b546dab14c3580e0 /doc | |
parent | 643ff19e00a93a226bdbaa7c43aa340fd558b12b (diff) | |
parent | 324260cef9ac8282bfb5b729b510f47e64b680fa (diff) | |
download | gitlab-ce-7273745e33a4f2a8f0c7c9d3a31f0f6164230ef4.tar.gz |
Merge branch 'pages-guides' into 'master'
GitLab Pages: new guides
Closes #28097, gitlab-ee#994, #28098, and #28190
See merge request !9395
Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/administration/pages/index.md | 3 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/pages/getting_started_part_one.md | 266 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/pages/getting_started_part_three.md | 386 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/pages/getting_started_part_two.md | 152 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/pages/img/add_certificate_to_pages.png | bin | 0 -> 14608 bytes | |||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/pages/img/choose_ci_template.png | bin | 0 -> 23532 bytes | |||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/pages/img/dns_a_record_example.png | bin | 0 -> 4709 bytes | |||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/pages/img/dns_cname_record_example.png | bin | 0 -> 5004 bytes | |||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/pages/img/remove_fork_relashionship.png | bin | 0 -> 13646 bytes | |||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/pages/img/setup_ci.png | bin | 0 -> 10033 bytes | |||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/pages/index.md | 39 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/user/project/pages/index.md | 12 |
12 files changed, 858 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/doc/administration/pages/index.md b/doc/administration/pages/index.md index 8de0cc5af5c..1c444cf0d50 100644 --- a/doc/administration/pages/index.md +++ b/doc/administration/pages/index.md @@ -102,6 +102,8 @@ The Pages daemon doesn't listen to the outside world. 1. [Reconfigure GitLab][reconfigure] +Watch the [video tutorial][video-admin] for this configuration. + ### Wildcard domains with TLS support >**Requirements:** @@ -270,3 +272,4 @@ latest previous version. [reconfigure]: ../restart_gitlab.md#omnibus-gitlab-reconfigure [restart]: ../restart_gitlab.md#installations-from-source [gitlab-pages]: https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-pages/tree/v0.2.4 +[video-admin]: https://youtu.be/dD8c7WNcc6s diff --git a/doc/pages/getting_started_part_one.md b/doc/pages/getting_started_part_one.md new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..ed39301df39 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/pages/getting_started_part_one.md @@ -0,0 +1,266 @@ +# GitLab Pages from A to Z: Part 1 + +> Type: user guide +> +> Level: beginner + +- **Part 1: Static Sites, Domains, DNS Records, and SSL/TLS Certificates** +- _[Part 2: Quick Start Guide - Setting Up GitLab Pages](getting_started_part_two.md)_ +- _[Part 3: Creating and Tweaking `.gitlab-ci.yml` for GitLab Pages](getting_started_part_three.md)_ + +---- + +This is a comprehensive guide, made for those who want to +publish a website with GitLab Pages but aren't familiar with +the entire process involved. + +To **enable** GitLab Pages for GitLab CE (Community Edition) +and GitLab EE (Enterprise Edition), please read the +[admin documentation](https://docs.gitlab.com/ce/administration/pages/index.html), +and/or watch this [video tutorial](https://youtu.be/dD8c7WNcc6s). + +> For this guide, we assume you already have GitLab Pages +server up and running for your GitLab instance. + +## What you need to know before getting started + +Before we begin, let's understand a few concepts first. + +### Static Sites + +GitLab Pages only supports static websites, meaning, +your output files must be HTML, CSS, and JavaScript only. + +To create your static site, you can either hardcode in HTML, +CSS, and JS, or use a [Static Site Generator (SSG)](https://www.staticgen.com/) +to simplify your code and build the static site for you, +which is highly recommendable and much faster than hardcoding. + +--- + +- Read through this technical overview on [Static versus Dynamic Websites](https://about.gitlab.com/2016/06/03/ssg-overview-gitlab-pages-part-1-dynamic-x-static/) +- Understand [how modern Static Site Generators work](https://about.gitlab.com/2016/06/10/ssg-overview-gitlab-pages-part-2/) and what you can add to your static site +- You can use [any SSG with GitLab Pages](https://about.gitlab.com/2016/06/17/ssg-overview-gitlab-pages-part-3-examples-ci/) +- Fork an [example project](https://gitlab.com/pages) to build your website based upon + +### GitLab Pages Domain + +If you set up a GitLab Pages project on GitLab.com, +it will automatically be accessible under a +[subdomain of `namespace.pages.io`](https://docs.gitlab.com/ce/user/project/pages/). +The `namespace` is defined by your username on GitLab.com, +or the group name you created this project under. + +> Note: If you use your own GitLab instance to deploy your +site with GitLab Pages, check with your sysadmin what's your +Pages wildcard domain. This guide is valid for any GitLab instance, +you just need to replace Pages wildcard domain on GitLab.com +(`*.gitlab.io`) with your own. + +#### Practical examples + +**Project Websites:** + +- You created a project called `blog` under your username `john`, +therefore your project URL is `https://gitlab.com/john/blog/`. +Once you enable GitLab Pages for this project, and build your site, +it will be available under `https://john.gitlab.io/blog/`. +- You created a group for all your websites called `websites`, +and a project within this group is called `blog`. Your project +URL is `https://gitlab.com/websites/blog/`. Once you enable +GitLab Pages for this project, the site will live under +`https://websites.gitlab.io/blog/`. + +**User and Group Websites:** + +- Under your username, `john`, you created a project called +`john.gitlab.io`. Your project URL will be `https://gitlab.com/john/john.gitlab.io`. +Once you enable GitLab Pages for your project, your website +will be published under `https://john.gitlab.io`. +- Under your group `websites`, you created a project called +`websites.gitlab.io`. your project's URL will be `https://gitlab.com/websites/websites.gitlab.io`. Once you enable GitLab Pages for your project, +your website will be published under `https://websites.gitlab.io`. + +**General example:** + +- On GitLab.com, a project site will always be available under +`https://namespace.gitlab.io/project-name` +- On GitLab.com, a user or group website will be available under +`https://namespace.gitlab.io/` +- On your GitLab instance, replace `gitlab.io` above with your +Pages server domain. Ask your sysadmin for this information. + +### DNS Records + +A Domain Name System (DNS) web service routes visitors to websites +by translating domain names (such as `www.example.com`) into the +numeric IP addresses (such as `192.0.2.1`) that computers use to +connect to each other. + +A DNS record is created to point a (sub)domain to a certain location, +which can be an IP address or another domain. In case you want to use +GitLab Pages with your own (sub)domain, you need to access your domain's +registrar control panel to add a DNS record pointing it back to your +GitLab Pages site. + +Note that **how to** add DNS records depends on which server your domain +is hosted on. Every control panel has its own place to do it. If you are +not an admin of your domain, and don't have access to your registrar, +you'll need to ask for the technical support of your hosting service +to do it for you. + +To help you out, we've gathered some instructions on how to do that +for the most popular hosting services: + +- [Amazon](http://docs.aws.amazon.com/gettingstarted/latest/swh/getting-started-configure-route53.html) +- [Bluehost](https://my.bluehost.com/cgi/help/559) +- [CloudFlare](https://support.cloudflare.com/hc/en-us/articles/200169096-How-do-I-add-A-records-) +- [cPanel](https://documentation.cpanel.net/display/ALD/Edit+DNS+Zone) +- [DreamHost](https://help.dreamhost.com/hc/en-us/articles/215414867-How-do-I-add-custom-DNS-records-) +- [Go Daddy](https://www.godaddy.com/help/add-an-a-record-19238) +- [Hostgator](http://support.hostgator.com/articles/changing-dns-records) +- [Inmotion hosting](https://my.bluehost.com/cgi/help/559) +- [Media Temple](https://mediatemple.net/community/products/dv/204403794/how-can-i-change-the-dns-records-for-my-domain) +- [Microsoft](https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb727018.aspx) + +If your hosting service is not listed above, you can just try to +search the web for "how to add dns record on <my hosting service>". + +#### DNS A record + +In case you want to point a root domain (`example.com`) to your +GitLab Pages site, deployed to `namespace.gitlab.io`, you need to +log into your domain's admin control panel and add a DNS `A` record +pointing your domain to Pages' server IP address. For projects on +GitLab.com, this IP is `104.208.235.32`. For projects leaving in +other GitLab instances (CE or EE), please contact your sysadmin +asking for this information (which IP address is Pages server +running on your instance). + +**Practical Example:** + +![DNS A record pointing to GitLab.com Pages server](img/dns_a_record_example.png) + +#### DNS CNAME record + +In case you want to point a subdomain (`hello-world.example.com`) +to your GitLab Pages site initially deployed to `namespace.gitlab.io`, +you need to log into your domain's admin control panel and add a DNS +`CNAME` record pointing your subdomain to your website URL +(`namespace.gitlab.io`) address. + +Notice that, despite it's a user or project website, the `CNAME` +should point to your Pages domain (`namespace.gitlab.io`), +without any `/project-name`. + +**Practical Example:** + +![DNS CNAME record pointing to GitLab.com project](img/dns_cname_record_example.png) + +#### TL;DR + +| From | DNS Record | To | +| ---- | ---------- | -- | +| domain.com | A | 104.208.235.32 | +| subdomain.domain.com | CNAME | namespace.gitlab.io | + +> **Notes**: +> +> - **Do not** use a CNAME record if you want to point your +`domain.com` to your GitLab Pages site. Use an `A` record instead. +> - **Do not** add any special chars after the default Pages +domain. E.g., **do not** point your `subdomain.domain.com` to +`namespace.gitlab.io.` or `namespace.gitlab.io/`. + +### SSL/TLS Certificates + +Every GitLab Pages project on GitLab.com will be available under +HTTPS for the default Pages domain (`*.gitlab.io`). Once you set +up your Pages project with your custom (sub)domain, if you want +it secured by HTTPS, you will have to issue a certificate for that +(sub)domain and install it on your project. + +> Note: certificates are NOT required to add to your custom +(sub)domain on your GitLab Pages project, though they are +highly recommendable. + +The importance of having any website securely served under HTTPS +is explained on the introductory section of the blog post +[Secure GitLab Pages with StartSSL](https://about.gitlab.com/2016/06/24/secure-gitlab-pages-with-startssl/#https-a-quick-overview). + +The reason why certificates are so important is that they encrypt +the connection between the **client** (you, me, your visitors) +and the **server** (where you site lives), through a keychain of +authentications and validations. + +### Issuing Certificates + +GitLab Pages accepts [PEM](https://support.quovadisglobal.com/kb/a37/what-is-pem-format.aspx) certificates issued by +[Certificate Authorities (CA)](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Certificate_authority) +and self-signed certificates. Of course, +[you'd rather issue a certificate than generate a self-signed](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-signed_certificate), +for security reasons and for having browsers trusting your +site's certificate. + +There are several different kinds of certificates, each one +with certain security level. A static personal website will +not require the same security level as an online banking web app, +for instance. There are a couple Certificate Authorities that +offer free certificates, aiming to make the internet more secure +to everyone. The most popular is [Let's Encrypt](https://letsencrypt.org/), +which issues certificates trusted by most of browsers, it's open +source, and free to use. Please read through this tutorial to +understand [how to secure your GitLab Pages website with Let's Encrypt](https://about.gitlab.com/2016/04/11/tutorial-securing-your-gitlab-pages-with-tls-and-letsencrypt/). + +With the same popularity, there are [certificates issued by CloudFlare](https://www.cloudflare.com/ssl/), +which also offers a [free CDN service](https://blog.cloudflare.com/cloudflares-free-cdn-and-you/). +Their certs are valid up to 15 years. Read through the tutorial on +[how to add a CloudFlare Certificate to your GitLab Pages website](https://about.gitlab.com/2017/02/07/setting-up-gitlab-pages-with-cloudflare-certificates/). + +### Adding certificates to your project + +Regardless the CA you choose, the steps to add your certificate to +your Pages project are the same. + +#### What do you need + +1. A PEM certificate +1. An intermediate certificate +1. A public key + +![Pages project - adding certificates](img/add_certificate_to_pages.png) + +These fields are found under your **Project**'s **Settings** > **Pages** > **New Domain**. + +#### What's what? + +- A PEM certificate is the certificate generated by the CA, +which needs to be added to the field **Certificate (PEM)**. +- An [intermediate certificate](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intermediate_certificate_authority) (aka "root certificate") is +the part of the encryption keychain that identifies the CA. +Usually it's combined with the PEM certificate, but there are +some cases in which you need to add them manually. +[CloudFlare certs](https://about.gitlab.com/2017/02/07/setting-up-gitlab-pages-with-cloudflare-certificates/) +are one of these cases. +- A public key is an encrypted key which validates +your PEM against your domain. + +#### Now what? + +Now that you hopefully understand why you need all +of this, it's simple: + +- Your PEM certificate needs to be added to the first field +- If your certificate is missing its intermediate, copy +and paste the root certificate (usually available from your CA website) +and paste it in the [same field as your PEM certificate](https://about.gitlab.com/2017/02/07/setting-up-gitlab-pages-with-cloudflare-certificates/), +just jumping a line between them. +- Copy your public key and paste it in the last field + +> Note: **do not** open certificates or encryption keys in +regular text editors. Always use code editors (such as +Sublime Text, Atom, Dreamweaver, Brackets, etc). + +||| +|:--|--:| +||[**Part 2: Quick start guide - Setting up GitLab Pages →**](getting_started_part_two.md)| diff --git a/doc/pages/getting_started_part_three.md b/doc/pages/getting_started_part_three.md new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..8acf8a85d5a --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/pages/getting_started_part_three.md @@ -0,0 +1,386 @@ +# GitLab Pages from A to Z: Part 3 + +> Type: user guide +> +> Level: intermediate + +- _[Part 1: Static Sites, Domains, DNS Records, and SSL/TLS Certificates](getting_started_part_one.md)_ +- _[Part 2: Quick Start Guide - Setting Up GitLab Pages](getting_started_part_two.md)_ +- **Part 3: Creating and Tweaking `.gitlab-ci.yml` for GitLab Pages** + +--- + +### Creating and Tweaking `.gitlab-ci.yml` for GitLab Pages + +[GitLab CI](https://about.gitlab.com/gitlab-ci/) serves +numerous purposes, to build, test, and deploy your app +from GitLab through +[Continuous Integration, Continuous Delivery, and Continuous Deployment](https://about.gitlab.com/2016/08/05/continuous-integration-delivery-and-deployment-with-gitlab/) +methods. You will need it to build your website with GitLab Pages, +and deploy it to the Pages server. + +What this file actually does is telling the +[GitLab Runner](https://docs.gitlab.com/runner/) to run scripts +as you would do from the command line. The Runner acts as your +terminal. GitLab CI tells the Runner which commands to run. +Both are built-in in GitLab, and you don't need to set up +anything for them to work. + +Explaining [every detail of GitLab CI](https://docs.gitlab.com/ce/ci/yaml/README.html) +and GitLab Runner is out of the scope of this guide, but we'll +need to understand just a few things to be able to write our own +`.gitlab-ci.yml` or tweak an existing one. It's an +[Yaml](http://docs.ansible.com/ansible/YAMLSyntax.html) file, +with its own syntax. You can always check your CI syntax with +the [GitLab CI Lint Tool](https://gitlab.com/ci/lint). + +**Practical Example:** + +Let's consider you have a [Jekyll](https://jekyllrb.com/) site. +To build it locally, you would open your terminal, and run `jekyll build`. +Of course, before building it, you had to install Jekyll in your computer. +For that, you had to open your terminal and run `gem install jekyll`. +Right? GitLab CI + GitLab Runner do the same thing. But you need to +write in the `.gitlab-ci.yml` the script you want to run so +GitLab Runner will do it for you. It looks more complicated then it +is. What you need to tell the Runner: + +``` +$ gem install jekyll +$ jekyll build +``` + +#### Script + +To transpose this script to Yaml, it would be like this: + +```yaml +script: + - gem install jekyll + - jekyll build +``` + +#### Job + +So far so good. Now, each `script`, in GitLab is organized by +a `job`, which is a bunch of scripts and settings you want to +apply to that specific task. + +```yaml +job: + script: + - gem install jekyll + - jekyll build +``` + +For GitLab Pages, this `job` has a specific name, called `pages`, +which tells the Runner you want that task to deploy your website +with GitLab Pages: + +```yaml +pages: + script: + - gem install jekyll + - jekyll build +``` + +#### `public` Dir + +We also need to tell Jekyll where do you want the website to build, +and GitLab Pages will only consider files in a directory called `public`. +To do that with Jekyll, we need to add a flag specifying the +[destination (`-d`)](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/usage/) of the +built website: `jekyll build -d public`. Of course, we need +to tell this to our Runner: + +```yaml +pages: + script: + - gem install jekyll + - jekyll build -d public +``` + +#### Artifacts + +We also need to tell the Runner that this _job_ generates +_artifacts_, which is the site built by Jekyll. +Where are these artifacts stored? In the `public` directory: + +```yaml +pages: + script: + - gem install jekyll + - jekyll build -d public + artifacts: + paths: + - public +``` + +The script above would be enough to build your Jekyll +site with GitLab Pages. But, from Jekyll 3.4.0 on, its default +template originated by `jekyll new project` requires +[Bundler](http://bundler.io/) to install Jekyll dependencies +and the default theme. To adjust our script to meet these new +requirements, we only need to install and build Jekyll with Bundler: + +```yaml +pages: + script: + - bundle install + - bundle exec jekyll build -d public + artifacts: + paths: + - public +``` + +That's it! A `.gitlab-ci.yml` with the content above would deploy +your Jekyll 3.4.0 site with GitLab Pages. This is the minimum +configuration for our example. On the steps below, we'll refine +the script by adding extra options to our GitLab CI. + +#### Image + +At this point, you probably ask yourself: "okay, but to install Jekyll +I need Ruby. Where is Ruby on that script?". The answer is simple: the +first thing GitLab Runner will look for in your `.gitlab-ci.yml` is a +[Docker](https://www.docker.com/) image specifying what do you need in +your container to run that script: + +```yaml +image: ruby:2.3 + +pages: + script: + - bundle install + - bundle exec jekyll build -d public + artifacts: + paths: + - public +``` + +In this case, you're telling the Runner to pull this image, which +contains Ruby 2.3 as part of its file system. When you don't specify +this image in your configuration, the Runner will use a default +image, which is Ruby 2.1. + +If your SSG needs [NodeJS](https://nodejs.org/) to build, you'll +need to specify which image you want to use, and this image should +contain NodeJS as part of its file system. E.g., for a +[Hexo](https://gitlab.com/pages/hexo) site, you can use `image: node:4.2.2`. + +> Note: we're not trying to explain what a Docker image is, +we just need to introduce the concept with a minimum viable +explanation. To know more about Docker images, please visit +their website or take a look at a +[summarized explanation](http://paislee.io/how-to-automate-docker-deployments/) here. + +Let's go a little further. + +#### Branching + +If you use GitLab as a version control platform, you will have your +branching strategy to work on your project. Meaning, you will have +other branches in your project, but you'll want only pushes to the +default branch (usually `master`) to be deployed to your website. +To do that, we need to add another line to our CI, telling the Runner +to only perform that _job_ called `pages` on the `master` branch `only`: + +```yaml +image: ruby:2.3 + +pages: + script: + - bundle install + - bundle exec jekyll build -d public + artifacts: + paths: + - public + only: + - master +``` + +#### Stages + +Another interesting concept to keep in mind are build stages. +Your web app can pass through a lot of tests and other tasks +until it's deployed to staging or production environments. +There are three default stages on GitLab CI: build, test, +and deploy. To specify which stage your _job_ is running, +simply add another line to your CI: + +```yaml +image: ruby:2.3 + +pages: + stage: deploy + script: + - bundle install + - bundle exec jekyll build -d public + artifacts: + paths: + - public + only: + - master +``` + +You might ask yourself: "why should I bother with stages +at all?" Well, let's say you want to be able to test your +script and check the built site before deploying your site +to production. You want to run the test exactly as your +script will do when you push to `master`. It's simple, +let's add another task (_job_) to our CI, telling it to +test every push to other branches, `except` the `master` branch: + +```yaml +image: ruby:2.3 + +pages: + stage: deploy + script: + - bundle install + - bundle exec jekyll build -d public + artifacts: + paths: + - public + only: + - master + +test: + stage: test + script: + - bundle install + - bundle exec jekyll build -d test + artifacts: + paths: + - test + except: + - master +``` + +The `test` job is running on the stage `test`, Jekyll +will build the site in a directory called `test`, and +this job will affect all the branches except `master`. + +The best benefit of applying _stages_ to different +_jobs_ is that every job in the same stage builds in +parallel. So, if your web app needs more than one test +before being deployed, you can run all your test at the +same time, it's not necessary to wait one test to finish +to run the other. Of course, this is just a brief +introduction of GitLab CI and GitLab Runner, which are +tools much more powerful than that. This is what you +need to be able to create and tweak your builds for +your GitLab Pages site. + +#### Before Script + +To avoid running the same script multiple times across +your _jobs_, you can add the parameter `before_script`, +in which you specify which commands you want to run for +every single _job_. In our example, notice that we run +`bundle install` for both jobs, `pages` and `test`. +We don't need to repeat it: + +```yaml +image: ruby:2.3 + +before_script: + - bundle install + +pages: + stage: deploy + script: + - bundle exec jekyll build -d public + artifacts: + paths: + - public + only: + - master + +test: + stage: test + script: + - bundle exec jekyll build -d test + artifacts: + paths: + - test + except: + - master +``` + +#### Caching Dependencies + +If you want to cache the installation files for your +projects dependencies, for building faster, you can +use the parameter `cache`. For this example, we'll +cache Jekyll dependencies in a `vendor` directory +when we run `bundle install`: + +```yaml +image: ruby:2.3 + +cache: + paths: + - vendor/ + +before_script: + - bundle install --path vendor + +pages: + stage: deploy + script: + - bundle exec jekyll build -d public + artifacts: + paths: + - public + only: + - master + +test: + stage: test + script: + - bundle exec jekyll build -d test + artifacts: + paths: + - test + except: + - master +``` + +For this specific case, we need to exclude `/vendor` +from Jekyll `_config.yml` file, otherwise Jekyll will +understand it as a regular directory to build +together with the site: + +```yml +exclude: + - vendor +``` + +There we go! Now our GitLab CI not only builds our website, +but also **continuously test** pushes to feature-branches, +**caches** dependencies installed with Bundler, and +**continuously deploy** every push to the `master` branch. + +### Advanced GitLab CI for GitLab Pages + +What you can do with GitLab CI is pretty much up to your +creativity. Once you get used to it, you start creating +awesome scripts that automate most of tasks you'd do +manually in the past. Read through the +[documentation of GitLab CI](https://docs.gitlab.com/ce/ci/yaml/README.html) +to understand how to go even further on your scripts. + +- On this blog post, understand the concept of +[using GitLab CI `environments` to deploy your +web app to staging and production](https://about.gitlab.com/2016/08/26/ci-deployment-and-environments/). +- On this post, learn [how to run jobs sequentially, +in parallel, or build a custom pipeline](https://about.gitlab.com/2016/07/29/the-basics-of-gitlab-ci/) +- On this blog post, we go through the process of +[pulling specific directories from different projects](https://about.gitlab.com/2016/12/07/building-a-new-gitlab-docs-site-with-nanoc-gitlab-ci-and-gitlab-pages/) +to deploy this website you're looking at, docs.gitlab.com. +- On this blog post, we teach you [how to use GitLab Pages to produce a code coverage report](https://about.gitlab.com/2016/11/03/publish-code-coverage-report-with-gitlab-pages/). + +||| +|:--|--:| +|[**← Part 1: Static sites, domains, DNS records, and SSL/TLS certificates**](getting_started_part_one.md)|[**Part 2: Quick start guide - Setting up GitLab Pages →**](getting_started_part_two.md)| diff --git a/doc/pages/getting_started_part_two.md b/doc/pages/getting_started_part_two.md new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..94b9d11e5d5 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/pages/getting_started_part_two.md @@ -0,0 +1,152 @@ +# GitLab Pages from A to Z: Part 2 + +> Type: user guide +> +> Level: beginner + +- _[Part 1: Static Sites, Domains, DNS Records, and SSL/TLS Certificates](getting_started_part_one.md)_ +- **Part 2: Quick Start Guide - Setting Up GitLab Pages** +- _[Part 3: Creating and Tweaking `.gitlab-ci.yml` for GitLab Pages](getting_started_part_three.md)_ + +---- + +## Setting Up GitLab Pages + +For a complete step-by-step tutorial, please read the +blog post [Hosting on GitLab.com with GitLab Pages](https://about.gitlab.com/2016/04/07/gitlab-pages-setup/). The following sections will explain +what do you need and why do you need them. + +### What You Need to Get Started + +1. A project +1. A configuration file (`.gitlab-ci.yml`) to deploy your site +1. A specific `job` called `pages` in the configuration file +that will make GitLab aware that you are deploying a GitLab Pages website + +#### Optional Features + +1. A custom domain or subdomain +1. A DNS pointing your (sub)domain to your Pages site + 1. **Optional**: an SSL/TLS certificate so your custom + domain is accessible under HTTPS. + +### Project + +Your GitLab Pages project is a regular project created the +same way you do for the other ones. To get started with GitLab Pages, you have two ways: + +- Fork one of the templates from Page Examples, or +- Create a new project from scratch + +Let's go over both options. + +#### Fork a Project to Get Started From + +To make things easy for you, we've created this +[group](https://gitlab.com/pages) of default projects +containing the most popular SSGs templates. + +Watch the [video tutorial](https://youtu.be/TWqh9MtT4Bg) we've +created for the steps below. + +1. Choose your SSG template +1. Fork a project from the [Pages group](https://gitlab.com/pages) +1. Remove the fork relationship by navigating to your **Project**'s **Settings** > **Edit Project** + + ![remove fork relashionship](img/remove_fork_relashionship.png) + +1. Enable Shared Runners for your fork: navigate to your **Project**'s **Settings** > **CI/CD Pipelines** +1. Trigger a build (push a change to any file) +1. As soon as the build passes, your website will have been deployed with GitLab Pages. Your website URL will be available under your **Project**'s **Settings** > **Pages** + +To turn a **project website** forked from the Pages group into a **user/group** website, you'll need to: + +- Rename it to `namespace.gitlab.io`: navigate to **Project**'s **Settings** > **Edit Project** > **Rename repository** +- Adjust your SSG's [base URL](#urls-and-baseurls) to from `"project-name"` to `""`. This setting will be at a different place for each SSG, as each of them have their own structure and file tree. Most likelly, it will be in the SSG's config file. + +> **Notes:** +> +>1. Why do I need to remove the fork relationship? +> +> Unless you want to contribute to the original project, +you won't need it connected to the upstream. A +[fork](https://about.gitlab.com/2016/12/01/how-to-keep-your-fork-up-to-date-with-its-origin/#fork) +is useful for submitting merge requests to the upstream. +> +> 2. Why do I need to enable Shared Runners? +> +> Shared Runners will run the script set by your GitLab CI +configuration file. They're enabled by default to new projects, +but not to forks. + +#### Create a Project from Scratch + +1. From your **Project**'s **[Dashboard](https://gitlab.com/dashboard/projects)**, +click **New project**, and name it considering the +[pratical examples](getting_started_part_one.md#practical-examples). +1. Clone it to your local computer, add your website +files to your project, add, commit and push to GitLab. +1. From the your **Project**'s page, click **Set up CI**: + + ![setup GitLab CI](img/setup_ci.png) + +1. Choose one of the templates from the dropbox menu. +Pick up the template corresponding to the SSG you're using (or plain HTML). + + ![gitlab-ci templates](img/choose_ci_template.png) + +Once you have both site files and `.gitlab-ci.yml` in your project's +root, GitLab CI will build your site and deploy it with Pages. +Once the first build passes, you see your site is live by +navigating to your **Project**'s **Settings** > **Pages**, +where you'll find its default URL. + +> **Notes:** +> +> - GitLab Pages [supports any SSG](https://about.gitlab.com/2016/06/17/ssg-overview-gitlab-pages-part-3-examples-ci/), but, +if you don't find yours among the templates, you'll need +to configure your own `.gitlab-ci.yml`. Do do that, please +read through the article [Creating and Tweaking `.gitlab-ci.yml` for GitLab Pages](getting_started_part_three.md). New SSGs are very welcome among +the [example projects](https://gitlab.com/pages). If you set +up a new one, please +[contribute](https://gitlab.com/pages/pages.gitlab.io/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md) +to our examples. +> +> - The second step _"Clone it to your local computer"_, can be done +differently, achieving the same results: instead of cloning the bare +repository to you local computer and moving your site files into it, +you can run `git init` in your local website directory, add the +remote URL: `git remote add origin git@gitlab.com:namespace/project-name.git`, +then add, commit, and push. + +### URLs and Baseurls + +Every Static Site Generator (SSG) default configuration expects +to find your website under a (sub)domain (`example.com`), not +in a subdirectory of that domain (`example.com/subdir`). Therefore, +whenever you publish a project website (`namespace.gitlab.io/project-name`), +you'll have to look for this configuration (base URL) on your SSG's +documentation and set it up to reflect this pattern. + +For example, for a Jekyll site, the `baseurl` is defined in the Jekyll +configuration file, `_config.yml`. If your website URL is +`https://john.gitlab.io/blog/`, you need to add this line to `_config.yml`: + +```yaml +baseurl: "/blog" +``` + +On the contrary, if you deploy your website after forking one of +our [default examples](https://gitlab.com/pages), the baseurl will +already be configured this way, as all examples there are project +websites. If you decide to make yours a user or group website, you'll +have to remove this configuration from your project. For the Jekyll +example we've just mentioned, you'd have to change Jekyll's `_config.yml` to: + +```yaml +baseurl: "" +``` + +||| +|:--|--:| +|[**← Part 1: Static sites, domains, DNS records, and SSL/TLS certificates**](getting_started_part_one.md)|[**Part 3: Creating and tweaking `.gitlab-ci.yml` for GitLab Pages →**](getting_started_part_three.md)| diff --git a/doc/pages/img/add_certificate_to_pages.png b/doc/pages/img/add_certificate_to_pages.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 00000000000..d92a981dc60 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/pages/img/add_certificate_to_pages.png diff --git a/doc/pages/img/choose_ci_template.png b/doc/pages/img/choose_ci_template.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 00000000000..0697542abc8 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/pages/img/choose_ci_template.png diff --git a/doc/pages/img/dns_a_record_example.png b/doc/pages/img/dns_a_record_example.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 00000000000..b923730388a --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/pages/img/dns_a_record_example.png diff --git a/doc/pages/img/dns_cname_record_example.png b/doc/pages/img/dns_cname_record_example.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 00000000000..d64a843a283 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/pages/img/dns_cname_record_example.png diff --git a/doc/pages/img/remove_fork_relashionship.png b/doc/pages/img/remove_fork_relashionship.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 00000000000..f5b5e543f21 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/pages/img/remove_fork_relashionship.png diff --git a/doc/pages/img/setup_ci.png b/doc/pages/img/setup_ci.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 00000000000..7ce0431f4d4 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/pages/img/setup_ci.png diff --git a/doc/pages/index.md b/doc/pages/index.md new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..242fdf3147f --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/pages/index.md @@ -0,0 +1,39 @@ +# All you need to know about GitLab Pages + +## Product + +- [Product webpage](https://pages.gitlab.io) +- [We're bringing GitLab Pages to CE](https://about.gitlab.com/2016/12/24/were-bringing-gitlab-pages-to-community-edition/) +- [Pages group - templates](https://gitlab.com/pages) + +## Getting started + +- [Hosting on GitLab.com with GitLab Pages](https://about.gitlab.com/2016/04/07/gitlab-pages-setup/) a comprehensive step-by-step guide +- GitLab Pages from A to Z + - [Part 1: Static sites, domains, DNS records, and SSL/TLS certificates](getting_started_part_one.md) + - [Part 2: Quick start guide - Setting up GitLab Pages](getting_started_part_two.md) + - Video tutorial: [How to publish a website with GitLab Pages on GitLab.com: from a forked project](https://youtu.be/TWqh9MtT4Bg) + - [Part 3: Creating and tweaking `.gitlab-ci.yml` for GitLab Pages](getting_started_part_three.md) +- Secure GitLab Pages custom domain with SSL/TLS certificates + - [Let's Encrypt](https://about.gitlab.com/2016/04/11/tutorial-securing-your-gitlab-pages-with-tls-and-letsencrypt/) + - [CloudFlare](https://about.gitlab.com/2017/02/07/setting-up-gitlab-pages-with-cloudflare-certificates/) + - [StartSSL](https://about.gitlab.com/2016/06/24/secure-gitlab-pages-with-startssl/) +- Static Site Generators - Blog posts series + - [SSGs part 1: Static vs dynamic websites](https://about.gitlab.com/2016/06/03/ssg-overview-gitlab-pages-part-1-dynamic-x-static/) + - [SSGs part 2: Modern static site generators](https://about.gitlab.com/2016/06/10/ssg-overview-gitlab-pages-part-2/) + - [SSGs part 3: Build any SSG site with GitLab Pages](https://about.gitlab.com/2016/06/17/ssg-overview-gitlab-pages-part-3-examples-ci/) +- [Posting to your GitLab Pages blog from iOS](https://about.gitlab.com/2016/08/19/posting-to-your-gitlab-pages-blog-from-ios/) + +## Advanced use + +- Blog Posts: + - [GitLab CI: Run jobs sequentially, in parallel, or build a custom pipeline](https://about.gitlab.com/2016/07/29/the-basics-of-gitlab-ci/) + - [GitLab CI: Deployment & environments](https://about.gitlab.com/2016/08/26/ci-deployment-and-environments/) + - [Building a new GitLab docs site with Nanoc, GitLab CI, and GitLab Pages](https://about.gitlab.com/2016/12/07/building-a-new-gitlab-docs-site-with-nanoc-gitlab-ci-and-gitlab-pages/) + - [Publish code coverage reports with GitLab Pages](https://about.gitlab.com/2016/11/03/publish-code-coverage-report-with-gitlab-pages/) + +## General documentation + +- [User docs](../user/project/pages/index.md) +- [Admin docs](../administration/pages/index.md) + - Video tutorial - [How to Enable GitLab Pages for GitLab CE and EE](https://youtu.be/dD8c7WNcc6s) diff --git a/doc/user/project/pages/index.md b/doc/user/project/pages/index.md index 4c4f15aad40..816600964de 100644 --- a/doc/user/project/pages/index.md +++ b/doc/user/project/pages/index.md @@ -14,6 +14,8 @@ deploy static pages for your individual projects, your user or your group. Read [GitLab Pages on GitLab.com](#gitlab-pages-on-gitlab-com) for specific information, if you are using GitLab.com to host your website. +Read through [All you Need to Know About GitLab Pages][pages-index-guide] for a list of all learning materials we have prepared for GitLab Pages (webpages, articles, guides, blog posts, video tutorials). + ## Getting started with GitLab Pages > **Note:** @@ -96,6 +98,13 @@ The steps to create a project page for a user or a group are identical: A user's project will be served under `http(s)://username.example.io/projectname` whereas a group's project under `http(s)://groupname.example.io/projectname`. +## Quick Start + +Read through [GitLab Pages Quick Start Guide][pages-quick] or watch the video tutorial on +[how to publish a website with GitLab Pages on GitLab.com from a forked project][video-pages-fork]. + +See also [All you Need to Know About GitLab Pages][pages-index-guide] for a list with all the resources we have for GitLab Pages. + ### Explore the contents of `.gitlab-ci.yml` The key thing about GitLab Pages is the `.gitlab-ci.yml` file, something that @@ -435,3 +444,6 @@ For a list of known issues, visit GitLab's [public issue tracker]. [public issue tracker]: https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ee/issues?label_name=Pages [ce-14605]: https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/issues/14605 [quick start guide]: ../../../ci/quick_start/README.md +[pages-index-guide]: ../../../pages/ +[pages-quick]: ../../../pages/getting_started_part_one.md +[video-pages-fork]: https://youtu.be/TWqh9MtT4Bg |