Contributing to Fluo Website

Contributions to the website can be made by submitting pull requests to this repo. Checkout How to Contribute on for general instructions on contributing to Fluo projects.

Local Builds for Testing

Setting up Your Jekyll/Bundler Environment

Ruby and RubyGems are required to use Jekyll and Bundler, so first make sure you have those on your machine.

If you are using an OS packaged version of Ruby, you may also need to install the ruby-dev (Ubuntu) or ruby-devel (Fedora) package as well to build any native code for gems that are installed later. Installing these will also ensure your system's RubyGems package is installed. Depending on your OS, you may also need other packages to install/build gems, such as ruby-full, make, gcc, nodejs, build-essentials, or patch.

Once Ruby, RubyGems, and any necessary native tools are installed, you are ready to install Bundler to manage the remaining RubyGem dependencies. Bundler is included in Ruby 2.6 and later as a default gem, so installing it may not be needed.

Because we use Bundler to install specific versions of gems, it is not recommended to use an OS packaged version of gems other than what comes built-in. If you are using an OS packaged version of Ruby, it is strongly recommended to avoid sudo when installing additional gems, in order to avoid conflicting with your system's package-managed installation. Instead, you can specify a GEM_HOME directory for installing gems locally in your home directory. You can do this in your $HOME/.bashrc file or other appropriate place for your environment:

# in .bashrc
export GEM_HOME=$HOME/.gem/ruby

With Ruby installed on your machine, you can install Bundler using the command below:

# not necessary in Ruby >2.6, since it is a default gem since 2.6
gem install bundler

Next, use Bundler to install Jekyll and other dependencies needed to run the website (this command assumes your current working directory is your clone of this repository with the main branch checked out, because that's where the Gemfile dependency list exists).

bundle install

Testing with the Built-in Jekyll Webserver

The command to serve the site contents using Jekyll‘s built-in webserver is as follows (this webserver may behave differently than apache.org’s servers).

bundle exec jekyll serve -w

You do NOT need to execute a bundle exec jekyll build command first, as the serve command is sufficient to both build the site and serve its contents. By default, it will also try to re-build any pages you change while running the webserver, which can be quite useful if trying to get some CSS or HTML styled “just right”.

Jekyll will print a local URL where the site can be viewed (usually, http://0.0.0.0:4000/).