3.8 KiB
Running mdbook
in Continuous Integration
While the following examples use Travis CI, their principles should straightforwardly transfer to other continuous integration providers as well.
Ensuring Your Book Builds and Tests Pass
Here is a sample Travis CI .travis.yml
configuration that ensures mdbook build
and mdbook test
run successfully. The key to fast CI turnaround times
is caching mdbook
installs, so that you aren't compiling mdbook
on every CI
run.
language: rust
sudo: false
cache:
- cargo
rust:
- stable
before_script:
- (test -x $HOME/.cargo/bin/cargo-install-update || cargo install cargo-update)
- (test -x $HOME/.cargo/bin/mdbook || cargo install --vers "^0.3" mdbook)
- cargo install-update -a
script:
- mdbook build path/to/mybook && mdbook test path/to/mybook
Deploying Your Book to GitHub Pages
Following these instructions will result in your book being published to GitHub
pages after a successful CI run on your repository's master
branch.
First, create a new GitHub "Personal Access Token" with the "public_repo"
permissions (or "repo" for private repositories). Go to your repository's Travis
CI settings page and add an environment variable named GITHUB_TOKEN
that is
marked secure and not shown in the logs.
Whilst still in your repository's settings page, navigate to Options and change the
Source on GitHub pages to gh-pages
.
Then, append this snippet to your .travis.yml
and update the path to the
book
directory:
deploy:
provider: pages
skip-cleanup: true
github-token: $GITHUB_TOKEN
local-dir: path/to/mybook/book
keep-history: false
on:
branch: master
That's it!
Note: Travis has a new dplv2 configuration that is currently in beta. To use this new format, update your .travis.yml
file to:
language: rust
os: linux
dist: xenial
cache:
- cargo
rust:
- stable
before_script:
- (test -x $HOME/.cargo/bin/cargo-install-update || cargo install cargo-update)
- (test -x $HOME/.cargo/bin/mdbook || cargo install --vers "^0.3" mdbook)
- cargo install-update -a
script:
- mdbook build path/to/mybook && mdbook test path/to/mybook
deploy:
provider: pages
strategy: git
edge: true
cleanup: false
github-token: $GITHUB_TOKEN
local-dir: path/to/mybook/book
keep-history: false
on:
branch: master
target_branch: gh-pages
Deploying to GitHub Pages manually
If your CI doesn't support GitHub pages, or you're deploying somewhere else with integrations such as Github Pages: note: you may want to use different tmp dirs:
$> git worktree add /tmp/book gh-pages
$> mdbook build
$> rm -rf /tmp/book/* # this won't delete the .git directory
$> cp -rp book/* /tmp/book/
$> cd /tmp/book
$> git add -A
$> git commit 'new book message'
$> git push origin gh-pages
$> cd -
Or put this into a Makefile rule:
.PHONY: deploy
deploy: book
@echo "====> deploying to github"
git worktree add /tmp/book gh-pages
rm -rf /tmp/book/*
cp -rp book/* /tmp/book/
cd /tmp/book && \
git add -A && \
git commit -m "deployed on $(shell date) by ${USER}" && \
git push origin gh-pages
Deploying Your Book to GitLab Pages
Inside your repository's project root, create a file named .gitlab-ci.yml
with the following contents:
stages:
- deploy
pages:
stage: deploy
image: rust:alpine
variables:
CARGO_HOME: $CI_PROJECT_DIR/cargo
before_script:
- export PATH="$PATH:$CARGO_HOME/bin"
- mdbook --version || cargo install mdbook
script:
- mdbook build -d public
only:
- master
artifacts:
paths:
- public
cache:
paths:
- $CARGO_HOME/bin
After you commit and push this new file, GitLab CI will run and your book will be available!