Added info on using docker for jekyll; small fixes in ppt which were not saved the last time.

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Martin Danielsson 2016-04-05 18:16:51 +02:00
parent b0a60b7861
commit 1bb8af7544
2 changed files with 23 additions and 1 deletions

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@ -58,3 +58,25 @@ $ export https_proxy=https://10.12.1.236:8083
The short version of this is: It's complicated, and not actually advisable. The short version of this is: It's complicated, and not actually advisable.
The most promising path to doing this is most probably to set up a Linux VM and do it from there; that involves setting up ruby correctly, which may also be challenging, but it's still a lot simpler (and more supported) than directly on Windows. The most promising path to doing this is most probably to set up a Linux VM and do it from there; that involves setting up ruby correctly, which may also be challenging, but it's still a lot simpler (and more supported) than directly on Windows.
But you can try this:
### Setting up jekyll using docker
If you have a working `docker` setup on your machine, you can use the prepackaged docker image by the jekyll team to try out the blog generation using that image.
Pull the `jekyll/jekyll:pages` image to get something which behaves almost exactly (or really close to) the github pages generation engine:
```sh
$ docker pull jekyll/jekyll:pages
```
Inside the docker Quickstart terminal, `cd` into your `Haufe-Lexware.github.io` fork containing your changes, and then issue the following command:
```sh
$ docker run --rm --label=jekyll --volume=$(pwd):/srv/jekyll \
-it -p $(docker-machine ip `docker-machine active`):4000:4000 \
jekyll/jekyll:pages
```
If everything works out, the jekyll server will serve the blog preview on `http://<ip of your docker machine>:4000`. More information on running jekyll inside docker can be found here: [github.com/jekyll/docker](https://github.com/jekyll/docker).