Found 218 repositories(showing 30)
some-programs
Exitwp is tool primarily aimed for making migration from one or more wordpress blogs to the jekyll blog engine as easy as possible.
planetjekyll
A collection of awesome Jekyll goodies (tools, templates, plugins, guides, etc.)
untra
:abc: Multilingual and i18n support tool for Jekyll Blogs
hotosm
LearnOSM.org content, Jekyll layouts & issue tracking. This repository is dedicated to helping people learn how to map in OpenStreetMap (OSM) and use many of the software and tools in the OSM community.
gautamdhameja
A CLI tool that converts exported Medium posts (html) to Jekyll/Hugo compatible markdown with front matter.
cagrimmett
A collection of Liquid templates I made for my Jekyll-powered blog: Adding open graph and Twitter cards, Disqus comments, posts by tag, a heatmap calendar for posts, and a book review template
pmarsceill
💎 🔎 A gem version of @bhardin's SEO Jekyll tool
Obsidian plugin to open URLs based on a permalink or slug in the note properties. For use with Jekyll, Hugo, Eleventy, Astro, Obsidian Publish, and other publishing tools.
theaob
This tool converts your Wordpress XML file to individual Jekyll & Octopress compatible markdown posts
notkmhn
A minimal tool to convert a "standardly" configured Obsidian vault to a Jekyll or Hugo blog.
Arcath
A collection of tools and snippets for working with Jekyll in Atom
drjekyllthemes
drjekyll gem - the missing static website theme package manager .:. jekyll command line tool
kevinbuhmann
ng-static-site-generator is a webpack-based command line build tool that builds an Angular app and Jekyll-style blog entry html files into a static html and css website. It also supports building a client app so you can have static pages that are also capable of running dynamic functionality coded in Angular.
journaltxt
journaltxt library & tool - reads Journal.TXT and writes out (auto-builds) a blog (w/ Jekyll posts etc.)
Single HTML / PDF and other formats of the "PHP The Right Way" ebook by Josh Lockhart. Also includes a ghetto build tool. This requires Jekyll, Pandoc and probably MacTex.
chrissimpkins
A command line tool that simplifies and extends the management tasks of the Octopress & Jekyll website framework
vimalgandhi
# Docker Commands, Help & Tips ### Show commands & management commands ``` $ docker ``` ### Docker version info ``` $ docker version ``` ### Show info like number of containers, etc ``` $ docker info ``` # WORKING WITH CONTAINERS ### Create an run a container in foreground ``` $ docker container run -it -p 80:80 nginx ``` ### Create an run a container in background ``` $ docker container run -d -p 80:80 nginx ``` ### Shorthand ``` $ docker container run -d -p 80:80 nginx ``` ### Naming Containers ``` $ docker container run -d -p 80:80 --name nginx-server nginx ``` ### TIP: WHAT RUN DID - Looked for image called nginx in image cache - If not found in cache, it looks to the default image repo on Dockerhub - Pulled it down (latest version), stored in the image cache - Started it in a new container - We specified to take port 80- on the host and forward to port 80 on the container - We could do "$ docker container run --publish 8000:80 --detach nginx" to use port 8000 - We can specify versions like "nginx:1.09" ### List running containers ``` $ docker container ls ``` OR ``` $ docker ps ``` ### List all containers (Even if not running) ``` $ docker container ls -a ``` ### Stop container ``` $ docker container stop [ID] ``` ### Stop all running containers ``` $ docker stop $(docker ps -aq) ``` ### Remove container (Can not remove running containers, must stop first) ``` $ docker container rm [ID] ``` ### To remove a running container use force(-f) ``` $ docker container rm -f [ID] ``` ### Remove multiple containers ``` $ docker container rm [ID] [ID] [ID] ``` ### Remove all containers ``` $ docker rm $(docker ps -aq) ``` ### Get logs (Use name or ID) ``` $ docker container logs [NAME] ``` ### List processes running in container ``` $ docker container top [NAME] ``` #### TIP: ABOUT CONTAINERS Docker containers are often compared to virtual machines but they are actually just processes running on your host os. In Windows/Mac, Docker runs in a mini-VM so to see the processes youll need to connect directly to that. On Linux however you can run "ps aux" and see the processes directly # IMAGE COMMANDS ### List the images we have pulled ``` $ docker image ls ``` ### We can also just pull down images ``` $ docker pull [IMAGE] ``` ### Remove image ``` $ docker image rm [IMAGE] ``` ### Remove all images ``` $ docker rmi $(docker images -a -q) ``` #### TIP: ABOUT IMAGES - Images are app bianaries and dependencies with meta data about the image data and how to run the image - Images are no a complete OS. No kernel, kernel modules (drivers) - Host provides the kernel, big difference between VM ### Some sample container creation NGINX: ``` $ docker container run -d -p 80:80 --name nginx nginx (-p 80:80 is optional as it runs on 80 by default) ``` APACHE: ``` $ docker container run -d -p 8080:80 --name apache httpd ``` MONGODB: ``` $ docker container run -d -p 27017:27017 --name mongo mongo ``` MYSQL: ``` $ docker container run -d -p 3306:3306 --name mysql --env MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=123456 mysql ``` ## CONTAINER INFO ### View info on container ``` $ docker container inspect [NAME] ``` ### Specific property (--format) ``` $ docker container inspect --format '{{ .NetworkSettings.IPAddress }}' [NAME] ``` ### Performance stats (cpu, mem, network, disk, etc) ``` $ docker container stats [NAME] ``` ## ACCESSING CONTAINERS ### Create new nginx container and bash into ``` $ docker container run -it --name [NAME] nginx bash ``` - i = interactive Keep STDIN open if not attached - t = tty - Open prompt **For Git Bash, use "winpty"** ``` $ winpty docker container run -it --name [NAME] nginx bash ``` ### Run/Create Ubuntu container ``` $ docker container run -it --name ubuntu ubuntu ``` **(no bash because ubuntu uses bash by default)** ### You can also make it so when you exit the container does not stay by using the -rm flag ``` $ docker container run --rm -it --name [NAME] ubuntu ``` ### Access an already created container, start with -ai ``` $ docker container start -ai ubuntu ``` ### Use exec to edit config, etc ``` $ docker container exec -it mysql bash ``` ### Alpine is a very small Linux distro good for docker ``` $ docker container run -it alpine sh ``` (use sh because it does not include bash) (alpine uses apk for its package manager - can install bash if you want) # NETWORKING ### "bridge" or "docker0" is the default network ### Get port ``` $ docker container port [NAME] ``` ### List networks ``` $ docker network ls ``` ### Inspect network ``` $ docker network inspect [NETWORK_NAME] ("bridge" is default) ``` ### Create network ``` $ docker network create [NETWORK_NAME] ``` ### Create container on network ``` $ docker container run -d --name [NAME] --network [NETWORK_NAME] nginx ``` ### Connect existing container to network ``` $ docker network connect [NETWORK_NAME] [CONTAINER_NAME] ``` ### Disconnect container from network ``` $ docker network disconnect [NETWORK_NAME] [CONTAINER_NAME] ``` ### Detach network from container ``` $ docker network disconnect ``` # IMAGE TAGGING & PUSHING TO DOCKERHUB # tags are labels that point ot an image ID ``` $ docker image ls ``` Youll see that each image has a tag ### Retag existing image ``` $ docker image tag nginx btraversy/nginx ``` ### Upload to dockerhub ``` $ docker image push bradtraversy/nginx ``` ### If denied, do ``` $ docker login ``` ### Add tag to new image ``` $ docker image tag bradtraversy/nginx bradtraversy/nginx:testing ``` ### DOCKERFILE PARTS - FROM - The os used. Common is alpine, debian, ubuntu - ENV - Environment variables - RUN - Run commands/shell scripts, etc - EXPOSE - Ports to expose - CMD - Final command run when you launch a new container from image - WORKDIR - Sets working directory (also could use 'RUN cd /some/path') - COPY # Copies files from host to container ### Build image from dockerfile (reponame can be whatever) ### From the same directory as Dockerfile ``` $ docker image build -t [REPONAME] . ``` #### TIP: CACHE & ORDER - If you re-run the build, it will be quick because everythging is cached. - If you change one line and re-run, that line and everything after will not be cached - Keep things that change the most toward the bottom of the Dockerfile # EXTENDING DOCKERFILE ### Custom Dockerfile for html paqge with nginx ``` FROM nginx:latest # Extends nginx so everything included in that image is included here WORKDIR /usr/share/nginx/html COPY index.html index.html ``` ### Build image from Dockerfile ``` $ docker image build -t nginx-website ``` ### Running it ``` $ docker container run -p 80:80 --rm nginx-website ``` ### Tag and push to Dockerhub ``` $ docker image tag nginx-website:latest btraversy/nginx-website:latest ``` ``` $ docker image push bradtraversy/nginx-website ``` # VOLUMES ### Volume - Makes special location outside of container UFS. Used for databases ### Bind Mount -Link container path to host path ### Check volumes ``` $ docker volume ls ``` ### Cleanup unused volumes ``` $ docker volume prune ``` ### Pull down mysql image to test ``` $ docker pull mysql ``` ### Inspect and see volume ``` $ docker image inspect mysql ``` ### Run container ``` $ docker container run -d --name mysql -e MYSQL_ALLOW_EMPTY_PASSWORD=True mysql ``` ### Inspect and see volume in container ``` $ docker container inspect mysql ``` #### TIP: Mounts - You will also see the volume under mounts - Container gets its own uniqe location on the host to store that data - Source: xxx is where it lives on the host ### Check volumes ``` $ docker volume ls ``` **There is no way to tell volumes apart for instance with 2 mysql containers, so we used named volumes** ### Named volumes (Add -v command)(the name here is mysql-db which could be anything) ``` $ docker container run -d --name mysql -e MYSQL_ALLOW_EMPTY_PASSWORD=True -v mysql-db:/var/lib/mysql mysql ``` ### Inspect new named volume ``` docker volume inspect mysql-db ``` # BIND MOUNTS - Can not use in Dockerfile, specified at run time (uses -v as well) - ... run -v /Users/brad/stuff:/path/container (mac/linux) - ... run -v //c/Users/brad/stuff:/path/container (windows) **TIP: Instead of typing out local path, for working directory use $(pwd):/path/container - On windows may not work unless you are in your users folder** ### Run and be able to edit index.html file (local dir should have the Dockerfile and the index.html) ``` $ docker container run -p 80:80 -v $(pwd):/usr/share/nginx/html nginx ``` ### Go into the container and check ``` $ docker container exec -it nginx bash $ cd /usr/share/nginx/html $ ls -al ``` ### You could create a file in the container and it will exiost on the host as well ``` $ touch test.txt ``` # DOCKER COMPOSE - Configure relationships between containers - Save our docker container run settings in easy to read file - 2 Parts: YAML File (docker.compose.yml) + CLI tool (docker-compose) ### 1. docker.compose.yml - Describes solutions for - containers - networks - volumes ### 2. docker-compose CLI - used for local dev/test automation with YAML files ### Sample compose file (From Bret Fishers course) ``` version: '2' # same as # docker run -p 80:4000 -v $(pwd):/site bretfisher/jekyll-serve services: jekyll: image: bretfisher/jekyll-serve volumes: - .:/site ports: - '80:4000' ``` ### To run ``` docker-compose up ``` ### You can run in background with ``` docker-compose up -d ``` ### To cleanup ``` docker-compose down ```
michaelx
Build tooling for web development. Integrates Jekyll with Gulp.js, BrowserSync, PostCSS, Stylelint, and more.
quikstart
mrhyde-tools gem - static site quick starter script wizard .:. jekyll command line tool
jekyll
Benchmarking tools for Jekyll
yestool
deploy static website tool (Hugo, Hexo, Astro, Jekyll, VuePress....)
trinketapp
Easy interactive Python & HTML examples on Jekyll sites
yegor256
Jekyll plugin with simple and nice tools for better blogging
iansinnott
A tool for managing Jekyll from the command line
dshevtsov
A CLI tool that helps to generate news digest from pull requests in a Jekyll friendly format for the Adobe Commerce documentation projects
Krypto-Hashers-Community
MD-TO-XML is a tool that converts a folder of markdown files (from Jekyll, Hexo, Eleventy, etc.) into a WordPress-compatible XML import file. This makes it easy to migrate or import your markdown-based blog content into WordPress using the standard importer.
jekyll-store
Jekyll-Store cmdline tool to translate CSV file to products.
PoshWeb
PowerShell Tools for Jekyll
macbleser
A starting point for a Jekyll site including modern tools like gulp.js, BrowserSync, and Zurb Foundation's Sass
kulkarniamit
101, Security, Science, Network, Operating System, UNIX, tools, Open source, Github, Questions, How-to, Jekyll, Opinions, Thoughts, Answers, and more...