Publish your site¶
Site generation¶
Once Pelican is installed and you have some content (e.g., in Markdown or reST
format), you can convert your content into HTML via the pelican
command,
specifying the path to your content and (optionally) the path to your
settings file:
pelican /path/to/your/content/ [-s path/to/your/settings.py]
The above command will generate your site and save it in the output/
folder, using the default theme to produce a simple site. The default theme
consists of very simple HTML without styling and is provided so folks may use
it as a basis for creating their own themes.
When working on a single article or page, it is possible to generate only the
file that corresponds to that content. To do this, use the --write-selected
argument, like so:
pelican --write-selected output/posts/my-post-title.html
Note that you must specify the path to the generated output file — not the
source content. To determine the output file name and location, use the
--debug
flag. If desired, --write-selected
can take a comma-separated
list of paths or can be configured as a setting. (See:
Writing only selected content)
You can also tell Pelican to watch for your modifications, instead of manually
re-running it every time you want to see your changes. To enable this, run the
pelican
command with the -r
or --autoreload
option. On non-Windows
environments, this option can also be combined with the -l
or --listen
option to simultaneously both auto-regenerate and serve the output at
http://localhost:8000:
pelican --autoreload --listen
Pelican has other command-line switches available. Have a look at the help to see all the options you can use:
pelican --help
Viewing the generated files¶
The files generated by Pelican are static files, so you don’t actually need anything special to view them. You can use your browser to open the generated HTML files directly:
firefox output/index.html
Because the above method may have trouble locating your CSS and other linked assets, running Pelican’s simple built-in web server will often provide a more reliable previewing experience:
pelican --listen
Once the web server has been started, you can preview your site at: http://localhost:8000/
Deployment¶
After you have generated your site, previewed it in your local development environment, and are ready to deploy it to production, you might first re-generate your site with any production-specific settings (e.g., analytics feeds, etc.) that you may have defined:
pelican content -s publishconf.py
To base your publish configuration on top of your pelicanconf.py
, you can
import your pelicanconf
settings by including the following line in your
publishconf.py
:
from pelicanconf import *
If you have generated a publishconf.py
using pelican-quickstart
, this
line is included by default.
The steps for deploying your site will depend on where it will be hosted. If
you have SSH access to a server running Nginx or Apache, you might use the
rsync
tool to transmit your site files:
rsync -avc --delete output/ host.example.com:/var/www/your-site/
There are many other deployment options, some of which can be configured when
first setting up your site via the pelican-quickstart
command. See the
Tips page for detail on publishing via GitHub Pages.
Automation¶
While the pelican
command is the canonical way to generate your site,
automation tools can be used to streamline the generation and publication flow.
One of the questions asked during the pelican-quickstart
process pertains
to whether you want to automate site generation and publication. If you
answered “yes” to that question, a tasks.py
and Makefile
will be
generated in the root of your project. These files, pre-populated with certain
information gleaned from other answers provided during the
pelican-quickstart
process, are meant as a starting point and should be
customized to fit your particular needs and usage patterns. If you find one or
both of these automation tools to be of limited utility, these files can
deleted at any time and will not affect usage of the canonical pelican
command.
Following are automation tools that “wrap” the pelican
command and can
simplify the process of generating, previewing, and uploading your site.
Invoke¶
The advantage of Invoke is that it is written in Python and thus can be used
in a wide range of environments. The downside is that it must be installed
separately. Use the following command to install Invoke, prefixing with
sudo
if your environment requires it:
python -m pip install invoke
Take a moment to open the tasks.py
file that was generated in your project
root. You will see a number of commands, any one of which can be renamed,
removed, and/or customized to your liking. Using the out-of-the-box
configuration, you can generate your site via:
invoke build
If you’d prefer to have Pelican automatically regenerate your site every time a change is detected (which is handy when testing locally), use the following command instead:
invoke regenerate
To serve the generated site so it can be previewed in your browser at http://localhost:8000/:
invoke serve
To serve the generated site with automatic browser reloading every time a
change is detected, first python -m pip install livereload
, then use the
following command:
invoke livereload
If during the pelican-quickstart
process you answered “yes” when asked
whether you want to upload your site via SSH, you can use the following command
to publish your site via rsync over SSH:
invoke publish
These are just a few of the commands available by default, so feel free to
explore tasks.py
and see what other commands are available. More
importantly, don’t hesitate to customize tasks.py
to suit your specific
needs and preferences.
Make¶
A Makefile
is also automatically created for you when you say “yes” to the
relevant question during the pelican-quickstart
process. The advantage of
this method is that the make
command is built into most POSIX systems and
thus doesn’t require installing anything else in order to use it. The downside
is that non-POSIX systems (e.g., Windows) do not include make
, and
installing it on those systems can be a non-trivial task.
If you want to use make
to generate your site using the settings in
pelicanconf.py
, run:
make html
To generate the site for production, using the settings in publishconf.py
,
run:
make publish
If you’d prefer to have Pelican automatically regenerate your site every time a change is detected (which is handy when testing locally), use the following command instead:
make regenerate
To serve the generated site so it can be previewed in your browser at http://localhost:8000/:
make serve
Normally you would need to run make regenerate
and make serve
in two
separate terminal sessions, but you can run both at once via:
make devserver
The above command will simultaneously run Pelican in regeneration mode as well as serve the output at http://localhost:8000.
When you’re ready to publish your site, you can upload it via the method(s) you
chose during the pelican-quickstart
questionnaire. For this example, we’ll
use rsync over ssh:
make rsync_upload
That’s it! Your site should now be live.
(The default Makefile
and devserver.sh
scripts use the python
and
pelican
executables to complete its tasks. If you want to use different
executables, such as python3
, you can set the PY
and PELICAN
environment variables, respectively, to override the default executable names.)