Docs: update Pages for newbies

This commit is contained in:
Marcia Ramos 2018-04-30 08:52:11 +00:00 committed by Achilleas Pipinellis
parent 507e3fbca3
commit ef804d5c1b

View file

@ -1,23 +1,22 @@
# GitLab Pages
With GitLab Pages you can host your website at no cost.
Your files live in a GitLab project's [repository](../repository/index.md),
from which you can deploy [static websites](#explore-gitlab-pages).
GitLab Pages supports all static site generators (SSGs).
With GitLab Pages it's easy to publish your project website. GitLab Pages is a hosting service for static websites, at no additional cost.
## Getting Started
Follow the steps below to get your website live. They shouldn't take more than
5 minutes to complete:
[Create a project from scratch](getting_started_part_two.md#create-a-project-from-scratch)
to get you started quickly, or,
alternatively, start from an existing project as follows:
- 1. [Fork](../../../gitlab-basics/fork-project.md#how-to-fork-a-project) an [example project](https://gitlab.com/pages)
- 2. Change a file to trigger a GitLab CI/CD pipeline
- 3. Visit your project's **Settings > Pages** to see your **website link**, and click on it. Bam! Your website is live.
- 1. [Fork](../../../gitlab-basics/fork-project.md#how-to-fork-a-project) an [example project](https://gitlab.com/pages):
by forking a project, you create a copy of the codebase you're forking from to start from a template instead of starting from scratch.
- 2. Change a file to trigger a GitLab CI/CD pipeline: GitLab CI/CD will build and deploy your site to GitLab Pages.
- 3. Visit your project's **Settings > Pages** to see your **website link**, and click on it. Bam! Your website is live! :)
_Further steps (optional):_
- 4. Remove the [fork relationship](getting_started_part_two.md#fork-a-project-to-get-started-from) (_You don't need the relationship unless you intent to contribute back to the example project you forked from_).
- 4. Remove the [fork relationship](getting_started_part_two.md#fork-a-project-to-get-started-from)
(_You don't need the relationship unless you intent to contribute back to the example project you forked from_).
- 5. Make it a [user/group website](getting_started_part_one.md#user-and-group-websites)
**Watch a video with the steps above: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TWqh9MtT4Bg**
@ -27,14 +26,23 @@ _Advanced options:_
- [Use a custom domain](getting_started_part_three.md#adding-your-custom-domain-to-gitlab-pages)
- Apply [SSL/TLS certification](getting_started_part_three.md#ssl-tls-certificates) to your custom domain
## Explore GitLab Pages
## How Does It Work?
With GitLab Pages you can create [static websites](getting_started_part_one.md#what-you-need-to-know-before-getting-started)
for your GitLab projects, groups, or user accounts. You can use any static
website generator: Jekyll, Middleman, Hexo, Hugo, Pelican, you name it!
for your GitLab projects, groups, or user accounts.
It supports plain static content, such as HTML, and **all** [static site generators (SSGs)](https://about.gitlab.com/2016/06/03/ssg-overview-gitlab-pages-part-1-dynamic-x-static/), such as Jekyll, Middleman, Hexo, Hugo, and Pelican.
Connect as many custom domains as you like and bring your own TLS certificate
to secure them.
Your files live in a project [repository](../repository/index.md) on GitLab.
[GitLab CI](../../../ci/README.md) picks up those files and makes them available at, typically,
`http://<username>.gilab.io/<projectname>`. Please read through the docs on
[GitLab Pages domains](getting_started_part_one.md#gitlab-pages-domain) for more info.
## Explore GitLab Pages
Read the following tutorials to know more about:
- [Static websites and GitLab Pages domains](getting_started_part_one.md): Understand what is a static website, and how GitLab Pages default domains work