This README assumes you are using a modern macOS system
The same setup can be achieved on Windows and Linux however, the requirements are different.
- Jekyll & Bundler:
$ gem install jekyll
$ gem install bundler
-
Nodejs/npm - We use NVM (Node Version Manager): https://github.com/creationix/nvm
- .nvmrc file in this repo will make NVM use Node v8.9.4 (to avoid compatibility issues)
- Or, if you must - Use the Nodejs installer: https://nodejs.org/
-
Gulp:
$ npm install --global gulp-cli # mac users may need sudo
$ git clone https://github.com/wdzajicek/wzportfolio.git <project name>
# ssh clone use: git@github.com:wdzajicek/wzportfolio.git
$ cd <project name>
$ sh install.sh # install.sh runs bundle & npm installs, among a few other things.
Both production builds and dev builds use the run-p (running npm scripts in parallel) using npm-run-all.
Both dev and production builds run two npm scripts in parallel: one starts the $ gulp
command, the other starts $ npx webpack
.
A dev build runs the default gulp task (i.e. with no --production
flag) and Webpack passing the --mode="development"
flag to Webpack.
A production build runs gulp with the --production
flag and Webpack with the --mode=production
flag.
Do NOT push dev builds to the GitHub repo.
$ npm run dev
# This alias in your dotfiles is convenient:
alias npm-d="npm run dev"
Dev builds run quicker on your machine. They make un-minified CSS, JS, & images.
Dev builds also create a sourcemap in the stylesheets. This allows tools like Chrome's inspect to display the Sass module a particular style is located in.
Only production builds should be pushed to the GitHub repo.
$ npm run production
# Another convenient alias:
alias npm-p="npm run production"
Production build minifies CSS and JavaScript and compresses image files.