Static sites: Difference between revisions
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== Static site template == | == Static site template == | ||
Static sites are composed from HTML, CSS and JS assets. They can be pure static sites, or clients for dynamic sites with JavaScript code to query an API, like {{repo|infra-www}}. | |||
We build the first sites from the Foundation CSS framework ZURB template. | We build the first sites from the Foundation CSS framework ZURB template. | ||
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don't use this template. | don't use this template. | ||
=== | === Build mechanism === | ||
Currently, the build mechanism and the template are to be extracted from two different places: | Currently, the build mechanism and the template are to be extracted from two different places: | ||
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| infra-www repo | | foundation/foundation-zurb-template | | | infra-www repo | | foundation/foundation-zurb-template | | ||
+-----------------+ +-------------------------------------+ | +-----------------+ +-------------------------------------+ | ||
=== Create a static site manually === | |||
'''Step 1.''' To get the build mechanism right, as of 2023-05-28, take it from | '''Step 1.''' To get the build mechanism right, as of 2023-05-28, take it from | ||
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=== Upsection === | === Upsection === | ||
''See also [[Upsection]].'' | |||
Upsection allows to deploy the latest version of the site builder. | |||
== Build Vue.js application == | == Build Vue.js application == |
Latest revision as of 00:27, 17 November 2024
Static sites are used in two context at Nasqueron:
- Information static sites. Sites with only static content
- JavaScript front-end clients. Sites with dynamic back-end: the HTML site uses JS to communicate with the back-end through a REST API.
Static site template
Static sites are composed from HTML, CSS and JS assets. They can be pure static sites, or clients for dynamic sites with JavaScript code to query an API, like infra-www.
We build the first sites from the Foundation CSS framework ZURB template.
This approach works well for pure static sites, or for JS clients to query an API like we do in infra-www.
Your site is composed of two parts:
- a src/ folder with your site assets (JS, CSS), pages and data
- a build mechanism driven by Gulp
This is perfect to quickly assemble a site, especially as we can do it on Jenkins for CD.
If you use frameworks like React/Vue and want to make them manage your site routing and structure, don't use this template.
Build mechanism
Currently, the build mechanism and the template are to be extracted from two different places:
+-----------------+ +-------------------------------------+ | Build mechanism | | Site assets: SCSS, JS, HTML, data. | | | | | | [ Gulp ] | | [ Foundation + Handlebars ] | +-----------------+ +-------------------------------------+ ^ ^ +-----------------+ +-------------------------------------+ | Copy it from an | | Take the up-to-date last version | | existing site: | | from the Foundation Zurb template: | | infra-www repo | | foundation/foundation-zurb-template | +-----------------+ +-------------------------------------+
Create a static site manually
Step 1. To get the build mechanism right, as of 2023-05-28, take it from the join or from the infra-www repository:
git clone https://devcentral.nasqueron.org/source/infra-www.git your-awesome-site cd your-awesome-site rm -rf src/ .git Jenkinsfile
You'll then get a folder with a correct build mechanism.
Step 2. Initialize your own repository:
git init . $EDITOR .babelrc .browserslistrc config.yml gulpfile.babel.js package.json readme.md git add . git commit -m "Build a new static site"
At that stage, you've a correct build mechanism, configured for your website, but no template or content.
Step 3. Add the Foundation template:
Copy a fresh src/
folder from the foundation/foundation-zurb-template repository:
git clone https://github.com/foundation/foundation-zurb-template /tmp/template mv /tmp/template/src . rm -rf /tmp/template
And that's it. You can now work on it and build your site.
You should get the following structure:
. ├── config.yml ├── gulpfile.babel.js ├── Jenkinsfile ├── package.json ├── readme.md └── src ├── assets │ ├── img │ ├── js │ │ ├── app.js │ │ └── lib │ │ └── foundation-explicit-pieces.js │ └── scss │ ├── _settings.scss │ ├── app.scss │ ├── components │ └── global │ └── _typography.scss ├── data ├── layouts │ └── default.html ├── pages │ └── index.html ├── partials └── styleguide ├── index.md └── template.html 14 directories, 14 files
Enjoy. Follow your README instructions to install Node dependencies and build your site:
yarn install yarn start
Who to contact for support. Dereckson maintains those instructions and this build mechanism.
Note about Jenkins. We're currently looking how to switch from the old Jenkins deployment method to the new Alkane one, so don't commit a Jenkinsfile (excepted if you solve that exact problem of course), we'll figure it as soon as your site is ready to be published.
Upsection
See also Upsection.
Upsection allows to deploy the latest version of the site builder.
Build Vue.js application
Nidal uses another strategy for servpulse: Vue.js provides a CLI tool to bootstrap a web site, and Foundation is added afterwards:
npm init vue@latest
Who to contact for support. Inidal maintains those instructions and this build mechanism.