I have an organization here: https://github.com/casbin/. I have setup the organization's GitHub pages to this repo: https://github.com/casbin/casbin.github.io and bound the domain: casbin.org to it.
Now I want to build a new GitHub pages from this repo: https://github.com/casbin/casbin-gui-editor and publish it to a custom sub-path: casbin.org/editor. But when I enable GitHub pages in: https://github.com/casbin/casbin-gui-editor, GitHub directly publishes it to: http://casbin.org/casbin-gui-editor/ instead. See the below screenshot:
I want it to be published to casbin.org/editor instead of casbin.org/casbin-gui-editor. But I didn't find a place to modify it. I attempted to modify the below Custom domain input box but it doesn't allow me to specify a sub-path like casbin.org/editor.
I know I can finally solve this issue by renaming my repo to the sub-path I want, but it makes my repo name obscure. So I'd still like to find other ways. Any other ways to do it?
Related
My GitHub Pages site is built from the master branch, using my README.md. The top of my read-me file is directly below.
![pytest](https://github.com/preritdas/wooster-trading-systems/actions/workflows/pytest.yml/badge.svg)
![coverage-badge](tests/badge.svg)
![version](https://img.shields.io/badge/python-3.10-blue)
![maintenance-status](https://img.shields.io/badge/maintenance-actively--developed-brightgreen.svg)
![firebase](https://github.com/preritdas/wooster-trading-systems/actions/workflows/firebase-hosting-merge.yml/badge.svg)
![pages-build-deployment](https://github.com/preritdas/wooster-trading-systems/actions/workflows/pages/pages-build-deployment/badge.svg)
# :chart_with_upwards_trend: :robot: Wooster Systems :moneybag: :money_with_wings:
This looks just fine in the read-me inside the repository. Image below.
Unfortunately, the workflow status badges don't populate on the Jekyll GitHub Pages site. Specifically, the badges that come directly from GitHub don't show, but the rest do. The ones that don't show are tests, firebase deployment, and pages-build-deployment. A screenshot from the site is below.
I'm not sure why this is happening. My hunch is that it has to do with the fact that my repository is private, but what has me confused is the fact that the coverage badge comes from an SVG file directly in my private repository. This works fine on the site (possibly has to do with "artifacts", though I don't really understand the behavior). If the workflow badges are indeed private, how can I make them display on my site?
The only config file (or file that has anything to do with the GitHub Pages site) is my _config.yml, which has the following contents.
theme: jekyll-theme-cayman
plugins:
- jemoji
I installed added jemoji to support the emoji shortcode in my title, which works fine.
Any help appreciated.
Private repositories are not publicly visible. For security, any requests to them from an account without the right credentials will get a 404, so you can't guess which repositories exist.
Because the repository isn't available, your workflows and their results aren't public either. If you want a developer on your team to have the build status, invite them to your private repository. If you want your builds to be publicly visible, open source your repository.
It can be because this tags are alterated because of github actions, so they update and change on the Repository, Github pages treats different the information so this tags are nos updating when you are accessing the web page.
Live tags from Shields.io doesn't work properly on github pages.
https://github.com/jchu4483/auth0
I'm following Github's tutorial to host a Github Page. I creating the repo and set the Github Page to track my main branch and published the Page.
Github says my site should be published at http://test-blog-on-qa.com/auth0/ but the site doesn't load. As a side note: Why would Github choose that weird domain name(test-blog-on-qa)?
I've chosen a theme(Jekyll), pushed an empty commit to rebuild but nothing works. This should be very simple so I'm confused as to what could be wrong?
You are using the Github Custom Domain for your site chu4483.github.io.
Have a look at: https://github.com/jchu4483/jchu4483.github.io/blob/master/CNAME
That's why test-blog-on-qa.com is used as the domain name automatically.
I have set up custom domain for my repo project page on DOMAIN.COM. But how can set it as DOMAIN.COM/REPO instead?
According to the help page, this should be the default.
Here's the response from Github. I don't think this is well-documented on the help page (or I missed it).
To do that, your DOMAIN.COM should be set in your primary repo, i.e. the one name username.github.io. This would be our main repo. Any other repo in our profile for which we've setup GitHub Pages, would start serving at DOMAIN.COM/repoName
You can read more here: [https://help.github.com/en/github/working-with-github-pages/about-github-pages#types-of-github-pages-sites]
A discussion from Stackoverflow about this: [Can I create more than one repository for github pages?
I created a page for a github repository following these instructions:Getting Started with GitHub Pages. Worked perfectly, the page is already hosted.
But I would like to change the page URL, This is the currently URL: http://myusername.github.io/repositoryName/
Is there any way to remove the repository name? (http://myusername.github.io/)
I've seen the articles to configure a custom domain, but I think that's not the case.
To remove the repository name, you'll need to make it a User Page (or an Organization page). Create a repository named myusername.github.io, and commit your content to the master branch. See this help page for more information.
I am trying to figure out how to setup github pages for account rather than for a repository.
E.g
I want the blog address to be like this:
xxx.github.io rather than xxx.github.io/repo. Therefore when i go to xxx.github.iothe static markdown pages should appear rather than a 404 page.
Thanks.
You're looking for Pages' user / organization sites. The official site has a good getting started guide, but the first bit is the most important one:
Create a repository
Head over to GitHub and create a new repository named username.github.io, where username is your username (or organization name) on GitHub.
If the first part of the repository doesn’t exactly match your username, it won’t work, so make sure to get it right.
So, instead of creating a gh-pages branch as you would for a project site, you must create a repository that matches your user name.