This project is designed to help you get around the github-pages Jekyll behaviour of ignoring top level directories starting with an underscore.
This is solved in a much neater way by creating a .nojekyll
in the root
of you github-pages which will disable Jekyll as described here and here.
This makes this project largely useless! Thank you to acdha for making me aware of this.
A Python script for preparing the html output of the Sphinx documentation system for github pages.
It renames any top level folders which start with an underscore and edits any references to them within the html files.
GitHub processes the incoming html with Jekyll which believes top level folders starting with an underscore are special and does not let their content be accessible to the server. This is incompatible with Sphinx which uses underscores at the start of folder names for static content.
The sphinxtogithub.py
script can be run on the command line or used as a
Sphinx extension.
Place the script on the PYTHONPATH
and add sphinxtogithub
to the
extensions list in the conf.py
file in your Sphinx project:
extensions = [ "sphinxtogithub" ]
Additionally there are three config variables you can use to control the
extension. The first enables/disables the extension, the second enables verbose
output and the third determines the encoding which is used to read & write
files. The first two are True
by default and the third is set to utf-8
:
sphinx_to_github = True sphinx_to_github_verbose = True sphinx_to_github_encoding = "utf-8"
Run the script with the path to the html
output directory as the first
argument. There is a --verbose
flag for basic output.
It should be possible to install this tool directly from github using pip:
pip install -e git+git://github.com/michaeljones/sphinx-to-github.git#egg=sphinx-to-github
Thanks to winhamwr's work.
The script uses /usr/bin/env
and python
.
Unit tests can be run using the setuptools test
target. eg:
$ python setup.py test
dinoboff's project github-tools provides similar functionality combined with a much more comprehensive set of tools for helping you to manage Python based projects on github.
Thank you to:
For their contributions, which are beginning to outweigh mine, to Georg Brandl for Sphinx and the github crew for the pages functionality.