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I have a github pages website. I need to use the jekyll-pagniation-v2 gem, but github pages only support v1. Thus I'm compiling the site locally and pusing up the entire _site directory to my github repo.
My understanding is that it should use what I've pushed in the _site dir, which looks fine locally. When I view the live site the index page doesn't contain any of the posts. As if it tried to rebuild the site and failed to find any posts because it's using the wrong pagination version.
How can I ensure github pages is not rebuulding the site and is using the version of the site I pushed to _site
The issue was that it wasn't actually pushing changes to the right branch and i'm an idiot.
Here is my GitHub repository on the gh-pages branch.
Everything looks good, I have my index.html, my CSS, JS and pictures folders.
But when I access http://roine.github.com/p1 I get HTTP 404 not found.
Any explanation and solution?
I had just one commit with all my files. I pushed an empty commit, refreshed the page and it worked.
git commit --allow-empty -m "Trigger rebuild"
git push
If this doesn't work, as #Hendrikto pointed out in the comments, check out the Github status page and make sure GitHub Pages are operational.
I did all the tricks on my repo to fix page 404 on Github Page (https://eq19.github.io/) but it kept 404'ing.
Finaly found that my browser hardly keep the 10 minutes cache before it up on the web.
Just add /index.html into the end of URL then it showed up and solved the case.
https://username.github.io/{repoName}/index.html
In my case, I had folders whose names started with _ (like _css and _js), which GH Pages ignores as per Jekyll processing rules. If you don't use Jekyll, the workaround is to place a file named .nojekyll in the root directory. Otherwise, you can remove the underscores from these folders
Four months ago I have contacted the support and they told me it was a problem on their side, they have temporarily fix it (for the current commit).
Today I tried again
I deleted the gh-pages branch on github
git push origin --delete gh-pages
I deleted the gh-pages branch on local
git branch -D gh-pages
I reinitialized git
git init
I recreated the branch on local
git branch gh-pages
I pushed the gh-pages branch to github
git push origin gh-pages
Works fine, I can finally update my files on the page.
If you haven't already, choose a Jekyll theme in your GitHub Pages settings tab. Apparently this is required even if you're not using Jekyll for your Pages site.
I had the same issue after forking a repo with a gh-pages branch. I was able to fix by simply pushing a new commit (just whitespace in index.html) to my fork's gh-pages branch.
In my case on 8/Aug/2017
if your user page is https://github.com/mgravell, you repo name must be
mgravell.github.io
under root, create a file index.html
under root, create a folder docs, create a file
CNAME under docs (note: NO extension like .txt, make sure your file
system shows extension)
gh-pages branch is optional, master branch is sufficient
more: check official docs here: https://help.github.com/articles/configuring-a-publishing-source-for-github-pages/
Just wait about ten minutes to one hour. If it still doesn't work, contact github. Usually it's the problem at their end.
But, if you're in a hurry, you can try to open by adding "?" question mark at the end of URL. It force query to search for the resource. Like this:
http://roine.github.com/p1?
In my case the browser had a previous cached version of my app. To avoid getting the cached version, access you url using a random query string:
https://{{your-username}}.github.io/{{your-repository}}?randomquery
My pages also kept 404'ing. Contacted support, and they pointed out that the url is case sensitive; solved my issue.
in my case i had to go to project settings and enable the github pages. The default is off
If you saw 404 even everything looks right, try switching https/http.
The original question has the url wrong, usually you can check repo settings and found the correct url for generated site.
However I have everything set up correctly, and the setting page said it's published, then I still saw 404.
Thanks for the comment of #Rohit Suthar (though that comment was to use https), I changed the url to http and it worked, then https worked too.
Add the following in the beginning of the index.html file
<!DOCTYPE html>
In my case in react was necessary to select the gh-pages branch:
I was facing the same issue, after trying most of the methods mentioned above I couldn't get the solution. In my case the issue of because of Github changing the name of master to main branch.
Go to Setting -> go to GitHub Pages section and change the branch to main:
to
Save it and select a theme, and the website is live.
If you are sure that your structure is correct, just push an empty commit or update the index.html file with some space, it works!
I had this exact problem with typedocs. The README.md worked but none of the actual docs generated by my doc strings displayed, I just got a 404 Github Pages screen.
To fix this, just place a empty file in your /docs directory (or wherever you generate your docs) & call it .nojekyll
To confirm, your file structure should now look like:
./docs/.nojekyll # plus all your generated docs
Push this up to your remote Github repo and your links etc should work now.
Also make sure you have selected in your Github settings:
Settings -> Github Pages -> Source -> master brach /docs folder
Depending on your doc framework, you probably have to recreate this file each time you update your docs, this is an example of using typedocs & creating the .nojekyll file each time in a package.json file:
# package.json
"scripts": {
"typedoc": "typedoc --out docs src && touch docs/.nojekyll"
},
The solution for me was to set right the homepage in package.json.
My project name is monsters-rolodex and I am publishing from console gh-pages -d build.
"homepage": "https://github.com/monsters-rolodex",
The project was built assuming it is hosted at /monsters-rolodex/.
Before it didn't work because in the homepage url I included my github username.
I got the site to work by deleting the "username.github.io" folder on my computer going through the steps again, including changing the index/html file.
My mistake (I think) is that i initially cloned "https://github.com/username/username.github.io.git" instead of https://github.com/username/username.github.io (no ".git")
In my case, all the suggestions above were correct. I had most pages working except few that were returning 404 even though the markdown files are there and they seemed correct. Here is what fixed it for me on these pages:
On one page, there were a few special characters that are not part of UTF-8 and I think that's why GitHub pages was not able to render them. Updating/removing these char and pushing a new commit fixed it.
On another page, I found that there were apostrophes ' surrounding the title, I removed them and the page content started showing fine
Another variant of this error:
I set up my first Github page after a tutorial but gave the file readme.md a - from my perspective - more meaningful name: welcome.md.
That was a fatal mistake:
We’ll use your README file as the site’s index if you don’t have an
index.md (or index.html), not dissimilar from when you browse to a
repository on GitHub.
from Publishing with GitHub Pages, now as easy as 1, 2, 3
I was then able to access my website page using the published at link specified under Repository / Settings / GitHub Pages followed by welcome.html or shorter welcome.
For some reason, the deployment of the GitHub pages stopped working today (2020-may-05). Previously I did not have any html, only md files. I tried to create an index.html and it published the page immediately. After removal of index.html, the publication keeps working.
I was following this YT video. So, when I ran the command in my terminal, it pushed the code to gh-pages branch already. Then I pushed to the master branch. It was giving me 404 error.
Then I swapped the branch to master and then again reverted to gh-pages and now the error is gone. It's pointing to the index.html even if it's not in the URL.
I bound my domain before this problem appeared. I committed and pushed the branch gh-pages and it solved my problem. New commits force jekyll to rebuild your pages.
In my case, the URL was quite long. So, I guess there is a limit. I put it to my custom subdomain and it worked.
On a private repo, when I first added and pushed my gh-pages branch to github, the settings for github pages automatically changed to indicate that the gh-pages branch would be published, but there no green or blue bar with the github.io url and no custom domain options.
It wasn't until I switched the source to master and quickly switched the source back to gh-pages that it actually updated with the green bar that contains the published url.
Your GitHub Pages is available at http://roine.github.io/p1 instead of http://roine.github.com/p1.
By the way, you can fix your project's description.
In my case it was that I had recently set up a custom domain for GitHub pages, but GitHub had forgotten my custom domain under (repo)<name>.github.io / Settings / Pages.
I added the custom domain again and then it immediately started working.
Go to settings section of your repository and choose master branch at the Source section and click save button after that refresh the page and you will be able to see the link of your page!.
I faced this problem (404) too and the root cause was my file was named INDEX.md. I was developing on Windows and my local Jekyll site worked (since Windows treats file names case insensitive by default). When pushed to Github, it didn't work. Once I renamed the INDEX.md to index.md, things worked well.
I am using VSTS to share my project's code, but since a couple of days I am facing this weird issue:
using a web browser I can navigate to the git repo Project on VSTS and it is showing my repo is empty!
<-- screen capture
inside the web page where it is showing the repo is empty I copied and pasted the URL where it says "Clone to your computer"
I am able to clone the repo using the URL above, into a fresh local repo with no issue, and navigate between the different branches and files after a clean clone, but using a web browser it shows the repot is empty!
how to solve it? probably it is a minor issue, but I am a little worried because it says like my repo was erased or it is empty :/
I have a static site, built locally by Jekyll, in a /docs folder inside the master branch of my repo, and have set my GH Pages settings to serve from that folder.
However, I keep getting Your site is having problems building: Page build failed. For more information, see https://help.github.com/articles/troubleshooting-github-pages-build-failures.
Some notes:
The repo itself is a Jekyll project, however, as I am using a private submodule GH Pages won't serve this as a Jekyll site, therefore this is why I have compiled the site locally to /docs and set this to be where GH Pages serves from.
The files in /docs are all compiled and just HTML, CSS and JS. No folders or files with _ preceding.
I have added .nojekyll in both the /docs folder and also in the root of the project, just in case.
The error message above is the only information GitHub is returning; no specific error code.
As far as I can tell, this is just a basic static website and GH should have no problem serving it. The only thing I can think is that it's getting confused by the fact that it's inside a jekyll project, but the only fix I can see for that is .nojekyll and that hasn't worked.
Does anyone have any ideas? I'm afraid I can't share the repo as it is a private company repo.
Posting this answer immediately so others may find it useful.
The private submodule breaks the build process, even though the pages site is set to serve from the /docs subfolder. Removing the submodule fixes the issue and serves the site as expected.
Here is my GitHub repository on the gh-pages branch.
Everything looks good, I have my index.html, my CSS, JS and pictures folders.
But when I access http://roine.github.com/p1 I get HTTP 404 not found.
Any explanation and solution?
I had just one commit with all my files. I pushed an empty commit, refreshed the page and it worked.
git commit --allow-empty -m "Trigger rebuild"
git push
If this doesn't work, as #Hendrikto pointed out in the comments, check out the Github status page and make sure GitHub Pages are operational.
I did all the tricks on my repo to fix page 404 on Github Page (https://eq19.github.io/) but it kept 404'ing.
Finaly found that my browser hardly keep the 10 minutes cache before it up on the web.
Just add /index.html into the end of URL then it showed up and solved the case.
https://username.github.io/{repoName}/index.html
In my case, I had folders whose names started with _ (like _css and _js), which GH Pages ignores as per Jekyll processing rules. If you don't use Jekyll, the workaround is to place a file named .nojekyll in the root directory. Otherwise, you can remove the underscores from these folders
Four months ago I have contacted the support and they told me it was a problem on their side, they have temporarily fix it (for the current commit).
Today I tried again
I deleted the gh-pages branch on github
git push origin --delete gh-pages
I deleted the gh-pages branch on local
git branch -D gh-pages
I reinitialized git
git init
I recreated the branch on local
git branch gh-pages
I pushed the gh-pages branch to github
git push origin gh-pages
Works fine, I can finally update my files on the page.
If you haven't already, choose a Jekyll theme in your GitHub Pages settings tab. Apparently this is required even if you're not using Jekyll for your Pages site.
I had the same issue after forking a repo with a gh-pages branch. I was able to fix by simply pushing a new commit (just whitespace in index.html) to my fork's gh-pages branch.
In my case on 8/Aug/2017
if your user page is https://github.com/mgravell, you repo name must be
mgravell.github.io
under root, create a file index.html
under root, create a folder docs, create a file
CNAME under docs (note: NO extension like .txt, make sure your file
system shows extension)
gh-pages branch is optional, master branch is sufficient
more: check official docs here: https://help.github.com/articles/configuring-a-publishing-source-for-github-pages/
Just wait about ten minutes to one hour. If it still doesn't work, contact github. Usually it's the problem at their end.
But, if you're in a hurry, you can try to open by adding "?" question mark at the end of URL. It force query to search for the resource. Like this:
http://roine.github.com/p1?
In my case the browser had a previous cached version of my app. To avoid getting the cached version, access you url using a random query string:
https://{{your-username}}.github.io/{{your-repository}}?randomquery
My pages also kept 404'ing. Contacted support, and they pointed out that the url is case sensitive; solved my issue.
in my case i had to go to project settings and enable the github pages. The default is off
If you saw 404 even everything looks right, try switching https/http.
The original question has the url wrong, usually you can check repo settings and found the correct url for generated site.
However I have everything set up correctly, and the setting page said it's published, then I still saw 404.
Thanks for the comment of #Rohit Suthar (though that comment was to use https), I changed the url to http and it worked, then https worked too.
Add the following in the beginning of the index.html file
<!DOCTYPE html>
In my case in react was necessary to select the gh-pages branch:
I was facing the same issue, after trying most of the methods mentioned above I couldn't get the solution. In my case the issue of because of Github changing the name of master to main branch.
Go to Setting -> go to GitHub Pages section and change the branch to main:
to
Save it and select a theme, and the website is live.
If you are sure that your structure is correct, just push an empty commit or update the index.html file with some space, it works!
I had this exact problem with typedocs. The README.md worked but none of the actual docs generated by my doc strings displayed, I just got a 404 Github Pages screen.
To fix this, just place a empty file in your /docs directory (or wherever you generate your docs) & call it .nojekyll
To confirm, your file structure should now look like:
./docs/.nojekyll # plus all your generated docs
Push this up to your remote Github repo and your links etc should work now.
Also make sure you have selected in your Github settings:
Settings -> Github Pages -> Source -> master brach /docs folder
Depending on your doc framework, you probably have to recreate this file each time you update your docs, this is an example of using typedocs & creating the .nojekyll file each time in a package.json file:
# package.json
"scripts": {
"typedoc": "typedoc --out docs src && touch docs/.nojekyll"
},
The solution for me was to set right the homepage in package.json.
My project name is monsters-rolodex and I am publishing from console gh-pages -d build.
"homepage": "https://github.com/monsters-rolodex",
The project was built assuming it is hosted at /monsters-rolodex/.
Before it didn't work because in the homepage url I included my github username.
I got the site to work by deleting the "username.github.io" folder on my computer going through the steps again, including changing the index/html file.
My mistake (I think) is that i initially cloned "https://github.com/username/username.github.io.git" instead of https://github.com/username/username.github.io (no ".git")
In my case, all the suggestions above were correct. I had most pages working except few that were returning 404 even though the markdown files are there and they seemed correct. Here is what fixed it for me on these pages:
On one page, there were a few special characters that are not part of UTF-8 and I think that's why GitHub pages was not able to render them. Updating/removing these char and pushing a new commit fixed it.
On another page, I found that there were apostrophes ' surrounding the title, I removed them and the page content started showing fine
Another variant of this error:
I set up my first Github page after a tutorial but gave the file readme.md a - from my perspective - more meaningful name: welcome.md.
That was a fatal mistake:
We’ll use your README file as the site’s index if you don’t have an
index.md (or index.html), not dissimilar from when you browse to a
repository on GitHub.
from Publishing with GitHub Pages, now as easy as 1, 2, 3
I was then able to access my website page using the published at link specified under Repository / Settings / GitHub Pages followed by welcome.html or shorter welcome.
For some reason, the deployment of the GitHub pages stopped working today (2020-may-05). Previously I did not have any html, only md files. I tried to create an index.html and it published the page immediately. After removal of index.html, the publication keeps working.
I was following this YT video. So, when I ran the command in my terminal, it pushed the code to gh-pages branch already. Then I pushed to the master branch. It was giving me 404 error.
Then I swapped the branch to master and then again reverted to gh-pages and now the error is gone. It's pointing to the index.html even if it's not in the URL.
I bound my domain before this problem appeared. I committed and pushed the branch gh-pages and it solved my problem. New commits force jekyll to rebuild your pages.
In my case, the URL was quite long. So, I guess there is a limit. I put it to my custom subdomain and it worked.
On a private repo, when I first added and pushed my gh-pages branch to github, the settings for github pages automatically changed to indicate that the gh-pages branch would be published, but there no green or blue bar with the github.io url and no custom domain options.
It wasn't until I switched the source to master and quickly switched the source back to gh-pages that it actually updated with the green bar that contains the published url.
Your GitHub Pages is available at http://roine.github.io/p1 instead of http://roine.github.com/p1.
By the way, you can fix your project's description.
In my case it was that I had recently set up a custom domain for GitHub pages, but GitHub had forgotten my custom domain under (repo)<name>.github.io / Settings / Pages.
I added the custom domain again and then it immediately started working.
Go to settings section of your repository and choose master branch at the Source section and click save button after that refresh the page and you will be able to see the link of your page!.
I faced this problem (404) too and the root cause was my file was named INDEX.md. I was developing on Windows and my local Jekyll site worked (since Windows treats file names case insensitive by default). When pushed to Github, it didn't work. Once I renamed the INDEX.md to index.md, things worked well.