The CentOS.org website is using the following tools:
Just ensure that you have git, podman installed on your CentOS, Fedora workstation (or any other linux distro, just showing this as example):
sudo yum install slirp4netns podman git
You should first login with your ACO login on https://git.centos.org, and then fork this repo (if not already done)
Once done, you'll have to clone your fork locally, and submit changes. This section describes the steps you need to follow in order to render the final site using jekyll in Fedora 31/CentOS 8, with rootless container.
Let's assume the following (so feel free to update):
export git_upstream="ssh://git@git.centos.org/forks/<ACO_LOGIN>/centos/centos.org.git" # replace with your ACO username export git_directory="${HOME}/git/" # where you'll git clone git repo
Let's first clone git repo:
test -d ${git_directory} || mkdir -p ${git_directory} pushd ${git_directory} test -d centos.org || git clone ${git_upstream}
Let's now for the first time launch jekyll using jekyll-theme-centos container
image v2.51.1-beta.49
version:
install -d public podman run --rm \ --name $@ \ -v $PWD/src:/site \ -v $PWD/public:/public \ registry.gitlab.com/centos/artwork/centos-web/jekyll-theme-centos:v2.51.1-beta.49 \ bundle exec jekyll build --config /site/_config.yml -s /site -d /public
The jekyll-theme-centos
theme may introduce updates from time to time and
produce newer container images with them. To keep your site presentation
consistent, always use a fixed version when you run the jekyll build command.
The better way to work on local changes is to have jekyll to automatically "watch" for local changes, and rebuild automatically on the fly when it detects that files were added/modified. To do this, and then to be able to browse "live" on http://localhost:4000, launch Jekyll like this:
install -d public podman run --rm -d \ --name $@ \ -v $PWD/src:/site \ -v $PWD/public:/public \ -p 0.0.0.0:4000:4000 \ registry.gitlab.com/centos/artwork/centos-web/jekyll-theme-centos:v2.51.1-beta.49 \ bundle exec jekyll serve -H 0.0.0.0 -p 4000 --config /site/_config.yml -s /site -d /public
The jekyll serve
command fits well on development environments, however when
you want to use a more robust web server (e.g., Apache, Nginx) in production
environments the jekyll serve
command may be not appropriate. Instead, you
may use the jekyll build --watch
command inside a container and control it
using systemd. In this configuration the web server should be configured to
expose the ${git_directory}/centos.org/_site/
directory as document root, the
place where jekyll build command renders the final files.
Create a detached container running jekyll build --watch
command:
podman run -d --volume="${git_directory}/centos.org:/srv/jekyll:z" \ --volume="${git_directory}/centos.org/vendor/bundle:/usr/local/bundle:z" \ -it --name www.centos.org docker.io/jekyll/jekyll:latest jekyll build --watch
Use podman-generate-systemd(1) command to create the systemd service unit
under the ~/.config/systemd/user/
directory. If this directory doesn't
exist, create it.
cd ~/.config/systemd/user/ podman generate systemd --files --name www.centos.org
Stop the container previously created. Don't remove it. It will be controlled by systemd.
podman stop www.centos.org
Enable and start the container using systemctl command.
systemctl --user enable container-www.centos.org.service systemctl --user start container-www.centos.org.service
To start the service at system start and persist over user logouts, enter (as root user):
loginctl enable-linger <username>
Reference:
Once you're satisfied with local changes, proceed as usual:
git commit
and git push
to origin (your fork)When someone will open a PR, there is a way to pull locally the proposed
changed and render locally. We can apply the method above with "jekyll serve"
but we can pull locally. On each PR, there is a link at bottom named "Pull
this pull-request locally" with a link to instructions. If you proceed, that
will create a new temporary branch named pr<number>, so you can then git
checkout pr<number>
, render website automatically and see if that looks ok.
If it is, you can go back to git.centos.org, and then either comment (if you
need some changes) or just merge
it. Merging it in main branch will
automatically means that website will be rebuilt and pushed in the next
minute[s] to www.centos.org nodes.