# Deploy Similar to [GitBook](https://www.gitbook.com), you can deploy files to GitHub Pages, GitLab Pages or VPS. ## GitHub Pages There're three places to populate your docs for your Github repository: - `docs/` folder - master branch - gh-pages branch It is recommended that you save your files to the `./docs` subfolder of the `master` branch of your repository. Then select `master branch /docs folder` as your Github Pages source in your repositories' settings page. ![github pages](_images/deploy-github-pages.png) !> You can also save files in the root directory and select `master branch`. You'll need to place a `.nojekyll` file in the deploy location (such as `/docs` or the gh-pages branch) ## GitLab Pages If you are deploying your master branch, include `.gitlab-ci.yml` with the following script: ?> The `.public` workaround is so `cp` doesn't also copy `public/` to itself in an infinite loop. ```YAML pages: stage: deploy script: - mkdir .public - cp -r * .public - mv .public public artifacts: paths: - public only: - master ``` !> You can replace script with `- cp -r docs/. public`, if `./docs` is your Docsify subfolder. ## Firebase Hosting !> You'll need to install the Firebase CLI using `npm i -g firebase-tools` after signing into the [Firebase Console](https://console.firebase.google.com) using a Google Account. Using Terminal determine and navigate to the directory for your Firebase Project - this could be `~/Projects/Docs` etc. From there, run `firebase init`, choosing `Hosting` from the menu (use **space** to select, **arrow keys** to change options and **enter** to confirm). Follow the setup instructions. You should have your `firebase.json` file looking similar to this (I changed the deployment directory from `public` to `site`): ```json { "hosting": { "public": "site", "ignore": ["firebase.json", "**/.*", "**/node_modules/**"] } } ``` Once finished, build the starting template by running `docsify init ./site` (replacing site with the deployment directory you determined when running `firebase init` - public by default). Add/edit the documentation, then run `firebase deploy` from the base project directory. ## VPS Try following nginx config. ```nginx server { listen 80; server_name your.domain.com; location / { alias /path/to/dir/of/docs/; index index.html; } } ``` ## Netlify 1. Login to your [Netlify](https://www.netlify.com/) account. 2. In the [dashboard](https://app.netlify.com/) page, click **New site from Git**. 3. Choose a repository where you store your docs, leave the **Build Command** area blank, fill in the Publish directory area with the directory of your `index.html`, for example it should be docs if you populated it at `docs/index.html`. ### HTML5 router When using the HTML5 router, you need to set up redirect rules that redirect all requests to your `index.html`, it's pretty simple when you're using Netlify, create a file named `_redirects` in the docs directory, add this snippet to the file and you're all set: ```sh /* /index.html 200 ``` ## ZEIT Now 1. Install [Now CLI](https://zeit.co/download), `npm i -g now` 2. Change directory to your docsify website, for example `cd docs` 3. Deploy with a single command, `now` ## AWS Amplify 1. Set the routerMode in the Docsify project `index.html` to *history* mode. ```html ``` 2. Login to your [AWS Console](https://aws.amazon.com). 3. Go to the [AWS Amplify Dashboard](https://aws.amazon.com/amplify). 4. Choose the **Deploy** route to setup your project. 5. When prompted, keep the build settings empty if you're serving your docs within the root directory. If you're serving your docs from a different directory, customise your amplify.yml ```yml version: 0.1 frontend: phases: build: commands: - echo "Nothing to build" artifacts: baseDirectory: /docs files: - '**/*' cache: paths: [] ``` 6. Add the following Redirect rules in their displayed order. Note that the second record is a PNG image where you can change it with any image format you are using. | Source address | Target address | Type | |----------------|----------------|---------------| | /<*>.md | /<*>.md | 200 (Rewrite) | | /<*>.png | /<*>.png | 200 (Rewrite) | | /<*> | /index.html | 200 (Rewrite) | ## Docker - Create docsify files You need prepare the initial files instead of making in container. See the [Quickstart](https://docsify.js.org/#/quickstart) section for instructions on how to create these files manually or using [docsify-cli](https://github.com/docsifyjs/docsify-cli). ```sh index.html README.md ``` - Create dockerfile ```Dockerfile FROM node:latest LABEL description="A demo Dockerfile for build Docsify." WORKDIR /docs RUN npm install -g docsify-cli@latest EXPOSE 3000/tcp ENTRYPOINT docsify serve . ``` So, current directory structure should be this: ```sh index.html README.md Dockerfile ``` - Build docker image ```sh docker build -f Dockerfile -t docsify/demo . ``` - Run docker image ```sh docker run -itp 3000:3000 --name=docsify -v $(pwd):/docs docsify/demo ```