_data | ||
_includes | ||
_layouts | ||
_posts | ||
css | ||
fonts | ||
images | ||
js | ||
meta | ||
resources | ||
.gitignore | ||
404.md | ||
_config.yml | ||
about.md | ||
CNAME | ||
favicon.ico | ||
feed.xml | ||
impressum.md | ||
index.html | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md | ||
resources.md |
Contributing
Pull Requests from our design, development and operations teams of Haufe.Group and its subsidiaries are greatly appreciated. If you've never contributed to an open source project before we are more than happy to walk you through how to create a pull request.
The short version of it is to simply clone this repo into (a) a repo of your own account under (b) the name [your_account_name].github.io
. Upon your first commit the blog should be published at http://[your_account_name].github.io
. In this way you can add your changes and test them live. When you are finished create a pull request with your changes and submit it against our blog repo.
Support for Categories and Tags were inspired by this blog entry. A list of the defined categories and tags can be found at _data/categories.yml
and _data\tags.yml
respectively. If you want to add new categories or tags, you need to add them to the corresponding .yml
file and add the matching template into the meta/category
or meta/tag
directories. Please do not go overboard with adding new categories and tags but try to stay within the ones we have. On the other hand - if you feel strongly about adding one, feel free to submit a pull request.
Author support was inspired by this blog entry. In order to add information on a new author, edit the _data/authors.yml
file, then use the new key as author
link in the posts. If an author cannot be found in authors.yml
, the content of the author
tag will be used verbose. In that case, no links to any social media (Twitter, Github and LinkedIn are currently supported) will be included.
If you want to find out more about using github-pages
for blogging or want to improve our blog the following links might be good starting points
- Jekyll documentation, i.e. how to include images
- Github pages powered by Jekyll
- Liquid Documentation here and here
Please note to set the proxy if you are working from within the Haufe Intranet
set HTTP_PROXY=http://10.12.1.236:8083/
set HTTPS_PROXY=http://10.12.1.236:8083/
If you find bugs or issues you can open an issue describing the problem that you're looking to resolve and we'll go from there.
Setting up jekyll on Mac OS X
If you happen to have Mac OS X device, it is a lot simpler to test your additions using the jekyll
command line directly; you don't have to set up github pages, and you can still verify everything is fine.
To install jekyll
, issue the following command in Terminal (I here assume you have the Mac OS X developer command line tools installed, which include ruby/gem):
$ sudo gem install jekyll
That will take a while. After that, cd
into your Haufe-Lexware.github.io
git clone (on your own fork obviously) and issue a
$ jekyll build
This will throw a couple of errors due to missing gems; install them one after the other in the order they occur:
$ sudo gem install jekyll-paginate
$ ...
Eventually (and hopefully) your jekyll build
will succeed. After the build has succeeded, you can do a jekyll serve
, and after that, you can browse the site locally on http://127.0.0.1:4000
.
Note: The https_proxy
setting is also needed on Mac OS X if you're inside the Haufe intranet:
$ export http_proxy=http://10.12.1.236:8083
$ export https_proxy=https://10.12.1.236:8083
Setting up jekyll on Windows
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.