Introduction
I've reused the old but efficient shakyShane/jekyll-gulp-sass-browser-sync code.
As Jekyll now includes native sass/scss processing, I've only left commands necessary to use browsersync in a Gulp task
Prerequisits
You need to have Jekyll, Node
and Npm installed.
NB: This is only tested on Ubuntu 14.04. Apple and Windows user may have to adapt this howto or maybe not, constructive feedback is welcome.
Jekyll
This browser sync install can be made on existing Jekyll sources.
You can also start from a new source : jekyll new folderName && cd folderName
. This creates a new jekyll and goes in the working folder folderName.
Nodes modules
In order to install necessary node modules, create a package.json at the root of your working folder.
{
"devDependencies": {
"browser-sync": "^2.2.0",
"gulp": "^3.7"
}
}
Install dependencies with : npm install
from your working folder (sudo npm install
if it didn't work)
Gulp setup
Create a gulpfile.js at the root of your working folder :
var gulp = require('gulp');
var browserSync = require('browser-sync');
var cp = require('child_process');
var messages = {
jekyllBuild: '<span style="color: grey">Running:</span> $ jekyll build'
};
/**
* Build the Jekyll Site
*/
gulp.task('jekyll-build', function (done) {
browserSync.notify(messages.jekyllBuild);
return cp.spawn('jekyll', ['build'], {stdio: 'inherit'})
.on('close', done);
});
/**
* Rebuild Jekyll & do page reload
*/
gulp.task('jekyll-rebuild', ['jekyll-build'], function () {
browserSync.reload();
});
/**
* Wait for jekyll-build, then launch the Server
*/
gulp.task('browser-sync', ['jekyll-build'], function() {
browserSync({
server: {
baseDir: '_site'
}
});
});
/**
* Watch html/md files, run jekyll & reload BrowserSync
* if you add folder for pages, collection or datas, add them to this list
*/
gulp.task('watch', function () {
gulp.watch(['./*', '_layouts/*', '_includes/*', '_posts/*', '_sass/*', 'css/*'], ['jekyll-rebuild']);
});
/**
* Default task, running just `gulp` will compile the sass,
* compile the jekyll site, launch BrowserSync & watch files.
*/
gulp.task('default', ['browser-sync', 'watch']);
Now just run gulp
at the root of your working folder, it will start a server, load the page in your default browser, and each time you update a Jekyll file, it fires a jekyll build and then an automatic browser reload.
Note: Depending on Jekyll build time, it can take a few second to reload the browser.
For more information take a look at Browsersync.
Note to censors (see answer #2)
That's what I call a constructive action. I run a business and I do what I can for the community. Sometimes I have only a little time to give, but I give it in a constructive way, trying to find solutions for others, not trolling the interwooz! trying to demonstrate that I can be evil. You're part of the system, and you make the evil side of the system, cutting knowledge because you think you own the truth. (oups nearly a Godwin point for me)
My answer #2 will still be ok in two year, this one will be obsolete in one year. Module version, node.js dying in favor of io.js and so on.
And yes stupidity is really stackoverflowing me !