# gh-pages Publish files to a `gh-pages` branch on GitHub (or any other branch anywhere else). ## Getting Started ```shell npm install gh-pages --save-dev ``` This module requires Git `>=1.7.6`. ## Basic Usage ```js var ghpages = require('gh-pages'); var path = require('path'); ghpages.publish(path.join(__dirname, 'dist'), function(err) { ... }); ``` ## `publish` ```js ghpages.publish(basePath, callback); // or... ghpages.publish(basePath, options, callback); ``` Calling this function will create a temporary clone of the current repository, create a `gh-pages` branch if one doesn't already exist, copy over all files from the base path, or only those that match patterns from the optional `src` configuration, commit all changes, and push to the `origin` remote. If a `gh-pages` branch already exists, it will be updated with all commits from the remote before adding any commits from the provided `src` files. **Note** that any files in the `gh-pages` branch that are *not* in the `src` files **will be removed**. See the [`add` option](#optionsadd) if you don't want any of the existing files removed. ### `basePath` * type: `string` The base directory for all source files (those listed in the `src` config property). Example use of the `basePath`: ```js /** * Given the following directory structure: * * build/ * index.html * js/ * site.js * * The usage below will create a `gh-pages` branch that looks like this: * * index.html * js/ * site.js * */ ghpages.publish(path.join(__dirname, 'build'), callback); ``` ### Options The default options work for simple cases cases. The options described below let you push to alternate branches, customize your commit messages, and more. #### options.src * type: `string|Array` * default: `'**/*'` The [minimatch](https://github.com/isaacs/minimatch) pattern or array of patterns used to select which files should be published. #### options.dotfiles * type: `boolean` * default: `false` Include dotfiles. By default, files starting with `.` are ignored unless they are explicitly provided in the `src` array. If you want to also include dotfiles that otherwise match your `src` patterns, set `dotfiles: true` in your options. Example use of the `dotfiles` option: ```js /** * The usage below will push dotfiles (directories and files) * that otherwise match the `src` pattern. */ ghpages.publish(path.join(__dirname, 'dist'), { dotfiles: true }, callback); ``` #### options.add * type: `boolean` * default: `false` Only add, and never remove existing files. By default, existing files in the target branch are removed before adding the ones from your `src` config. If you want the task to add new `src` files but leave existing ones untouched, set `add: true` in your options. Example use of the `add` option: ```js /** * The usage below will only add files to the `gh-pages` branch, never removing * any existing files (even if they don't exist in the `src` config). */ ghpages.publish(path.join(__dirname, 'build'), { add: true }, callback); ``` #### options.repo * type: `string` * default: url for the origin remote of the current dir (assumes a git repository) By default, `gh-pages` assumes that the current working directory is a git repository, and that you want to push changes to the `origin` remote. If instead your script is not in a git repository, or if you want to push to another repository, you can provide the repository URL in the `repo` option. Example use of the `repo` option: ```js /** * If the current directory is not a clone of the repository you want to work * with, set the URL for the repository in the `repo` option. This usage will * push all files in the `src` config to the `gh-pages` branch of the `repo`. */ ghpages.publish(path.join(__dirname, 'build'), { repo: 'https://example.com/other/repo.git' }, callback); ``` #### options.branch * type: `string` * default: `'gh-pages'` The name of the branch you'll be pushing to. The default uses GitHub's `gh-pages` branch, but this can be configured to push to any branch on any remote. Example use of the `branch` option: ```js /** * This task pushes to the `master` branch of the configured `repo`. */ ghpages.publish(path.join(__dirname, 'build'), { branch: 'master', repo: 'https://example.com/other/repo.git' }, callback); ``` #### options.remote * type: `string` * default: `'origin'` The name of the remote you'll be pushing to. The default is your `'origin'` remote, but this can be configured to push to any remote. Example use of the `remote` option: ```js /** * This task pushes to the `gh-pages` branch of of your `upstream` remote. */ ghpages.publish(path.join(__dirname, 'build'), { remote: 'upstream' }, callback); ``` #### options.tag * type: `string` * default: `''` Create a tag after committing changes on the target branch. By default, no tag is created. To create a tag, provide the tag name as the option value. #### options.message * type: `string` * default: `'Updates'` The commit message for all commits. Example use of the `message` option: ```js /** * This adds commits with a custom message. */ ghpages.publish(path.join(__dirname, 'build'), { message: 'Auto-generated commit' }, callback); ``` #### options.user * type: `Object` * default: `null` If you are running the `gh-pages` task in a repository without a `user.name` or `user.email` git config properties (or on a machine without these global config properties), you must provide user info before git allows you to commit. The `options.user` object accepts `name` and `email` string values to identify the committer. Example use of the `user` option: ```js ghpages.publish(path.join(__dirname, 'build'), { user: { name: 'Joe Code', email: 'coder@example.com' } }, callback); ``` #### options.clone * type: `string` * default: temporary directory inside the `gh-pages` directory Path to a directory where your repository will be cloned. If this directory doesn't already exist, it will be created. If it already exists, it is assumed to be a clone of your repository. Example use of the `clone` option: ```js /** * If you already have a temp directory, and want the repository cloned there, * use the `clone` option as below. To avoid re-cloning every time the task is * run, this should be a directory that sticks around for a while. */ ghpages.publish(path.join(__dirname, 'build'), { clone: 'path/to/tmp/dir' }, callback); ``` #### options.push * type: `boolean` * default: `true` Push branch to remote. To commit only (with no push) set to `false`. Example use of the `push` option: ```js ghpages.publish(path.join(__dirname, 'build'), { push: false }, callback); ``` #### options.silent * type: `boolean` * default: `false` Suppress logging. This option should be used if the repository URL or other information passed to git commands is sensitive and should not be logged. With silent `true` log messages are suppressed and error messages are sanitized. Example use of the `silent` option: ```js /** * This configuration will suppress logging and sanitize error messages. */ ghpages.publish(path.join(__dirname, 'build'), { repo: 'https://' + process.env.GH_TOKEN + '@github.com/user/private-repo.git', silent: true }, callback); ``` #### options.logger * type: `function(string)` * default: `function(){}` Logger function. The default logging function is a no-op, allowing you to provide a custom logging implementation. Example use of the `logger` option: ```js /** * This configuration will log to the console */ ghpages.publish(path.join(__dirname, 'build'), { logger: function(message) { console.log(message); } }, callback); ``` #### options.git * type: `string` * default: `'git'` Your `git` executable. Example use of the `git` option: ```js /** * If `git` is not on your path, provide the path as shown below. */ ghpages.publish(path.join(__dirname, 'build'), { git: '/path/to/git' }, callback); ``` ## Command Line Utility Installing the package creates a `gh-pages` command line utility. Run `gh-pages --help` to see a list of supported options. With a local install of `gh-pages`, you can set up a package script with something like the following: ```shell "scripts": { "deploy": "gh-pages -d dist" } ``` And then to publish everything from your `dist` folder to your `gh-pages` branch, you'd run this: ```shell npm run deploy ``` ## Dependencies Note that this plugin requires Git 1.7.6 or higher (because it uses the `--exit-code` option for `git ls-remote`). If you'd like to see this working with earlier versions of Git, please [open an issue](https://github.com/tschaub/gh-pages/issues). 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