# eleventy-base-blog A starter repository showing how to build a blog with the [Eleventy](https://github.com/11ty/eleventy) static site generator. [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/11ty/eleventy-base-blog.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/11ty/eleventy-base-blog) ## Demos * [Netlify](https://eleventy-base-blog.netlify.com/) * [Get your own Eleventy web site on Netlify](https://app.netlify.com/start/deploy?repository=https://github.com/11ty/eleventy-base-blog)—seriously, just click OK a few times and it’s live—Netlify is amazing. * [GitHub Pages](https://11ty.github.io/eleventy-base-blog/) * [Remix on Glitch](https://glitch.com/~11ty-eleventy-base-blog) ## Getting Started ### 1. Clone this repository: ``` git clone https://github.com/11ty/eleventy-base-blog.git my-blog-name ``` ### 2. Navigate to the directory ``` cd my-blog-name ``` Specifically have a look at `.eleventy.js` to see if you want to configure any Eleventy options differently. ### 3. Install dependencies ``` npm install ``` ### 4. Edit _data/metadata.json ### 5. Run Eleventy ``` npx eleventy ``` Or build and host locally for local development ``` npx eleventy --serve ``` Or build automatically when a template changes: ``` npx eleventy --watch ``` Or in debug mode: ``` DEBUG=* npx eleventy ``` ### Implementation Notes * `about/index.md` shows how to add a content page. * `posts/` has the blog posts but really they can live in any directory. They need only the `post` tag to be added to this collection. * Add the `nav` tag to add a template to the top level site navigation. For example, this is in use on `index.njk` and `about/index.md`. * Content can be any template format (blog posts needn’t be markdown, for example). Configure your supported templates in `.eleventy.js` -> `templateFormats`. * Because `css` and `png` are listed in `templateFormats` but are not supported template types, any files with these extensions will be copied without modification to the output (while keeping the same directory structure). * The blog post feed template is in `feed/feed.njk`. This is also a good example of using a global data files in that it uses `_data/metadata.json`. * This example uses three layouts: * `_includes/layouts/base.njk`: the top level HTML structure * `_includes/layouts/home.njk`: the home page template (wrapped into `base.njk`) * `_includes/layouts/post.njk`: the blog post template (wrapped into `base.njk`) * `_includes/postlist.njk` is a Nunjucks include and is a reusable component used to display a list of all the posts. `index.njk` has an example of how to use it.