- Basic usage: viewing your blog
- Converting the pages locally
- Visual Studio Code integration
- Advanced usage
You can run your fastpages blog on your local machine, and view any changes you make to your posts, including Jupyter Notebooks and Word documents, live. The live preview requires that you have Docker installed on your machine. Follow the instructions on this page if you need to install Docker.
All of the commands in this block assume that you're in your blog root directory. To run the blog with live preview:
docker-compose up
When you run this command for the first time, it'll build the required Docker images, and the process might take a couple minutes.
This command will build all the necessary containers and run the following services:
- A service that monitors any changes in
./_notebooks/*.ipynb/
and./_word/*.docx;*.doc
and rebuild the blog on change. - A Jupyter Notebook that will run on https://127.0.0.1:8888 — use this to write and edit your posts.
- A Jekyll server on
https://127.0.0.1:4000
— use this to preview your blog.
The services will output to your terminal. If you close the terminal or hit Ctrl-C
, the services will stop.
If you want to run the services in the background:
# run all services in the background
docker-compose up -d
# stop the services
docker-compose down
If you need to restart just the Jekyll server, and it's running in the background — you can do docker-compose restart jekyll
.
Note that the blog won't autoreload on change, you'll have to refresh your browser manually.
If you just want to convert your notebooks and word documents to .md
posts in _posts
, this command will do it for you:
docker-compose up converter
You can launch just the jekyll server with docker-compose up jekyll
.
If you're using VSCode with the Docker extension, you can run three containers from the sidebar: fastpages_jupyter_1
,fastpages_watcher_1
, and fastpages_jekyll_1
.
The containers will only show up in the list after you run or build them for the first time. So if they're not in the list — try docker-compose build
in the console.
If you changed files in _action_files
directory, you might need to rebuild the containers manually, without cache.
docker-compose build --force-rm --no-cache
Want to start from scratch and remove all the containers?
# make sure the containers are stopped:
docker-compose stop
# remove stopped containers
docker-compose rm
You can attach a terminal to a running service:
# If the container is already running:
# attach to a bash shell in the jekyll service
docker-compose exec jekyll /bin/bash
# attach to a bash shell in the jupyter / watcher service.
# they're essentially running the same software inside.
docker-compose exec watcher /bin/bash
Note: you can use docker-compose run
instead of docker-compose exec
to start a service and then attach to it.
Or you can run all your services in the background, docker-compose up -d
, and then use docker-compose exec
as in the example above.