This is the source of the Adoptium blog.
- Install gatsby, run
npm install -g gatsby-cli
- Install dependencies, run
npm install
in the root directory of the repository.
- Create a folder in
blog
that is named after your post's title. Slugify the title if it's more than a single word. Example:hello-world
. - Create a file called
index.md
in the directory you just created (blog/hello-world
). - Add the required metadata at the beginning of the file
--- title: Hello World date: "2020-04-21T12:20:00+00:00" author: janedoe featuredImage: "./featured_image.png" (optional) ---
title
is the title of your post as it appears on the website.date
is the ISO 8601 timestamp of the publication date (date -u +"%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%SZ"
generates that for you on the command line) andauthor
the identifier of the author as specified in theauthors.json
.featuredImage
(optional) the relative path to the featured image. - Write your post in Markdown. Save any images in the folder of your post alongside the
index.md
. Put the biggest resolution in there that you have. Responsive images will automatically be generated for you.
To preview your post, start the local development server by running gatsby develop
in the root directory of the repository.
WARNING: The RSS feed is only generated in production mode: gatsby build && gatsby serve
.
On the front page, we only display excerpts and not full posts. By default, Gatsby will shorten your post automatically, which might yield unsatisfactory results. To control that behaviour, add a field description
with the text you want to see on the front page in the frontmatter of your post (metadata delimited with ---
at the beginning of your post).
To add captions to your images, use the following structure:
![Alt text](./image.jpg)
*Your caption here*
Our CSS will take care of rendering it correctly by looking for img + em
.
Example:
![Photo depiciting a drop of water](./clean-drop-of-water-liquid.jpg)
*AQA v1.0 is a first drop in an on-going series of improvements.*
> Quote
>
> <cite>Name of the person</cite>
Example:
> When the Well is Dry, We’ll Know the Worth of Water.
>
> <cite>Benjamin Franklin</cite>
Right after the front matter, add the following snippet to introduce the person that wrote the post:
<GuestPost>
Some introductory text
</GuestPost>
This is going to render as:
<p className="guestpost">
<em>Some introductory text – Adoptium Team</em>
</p>
Example:
<GuestPost>
This a guest post by <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/weitzelm/">Mark Weitzel</a>, General Manager, New Relic One at New Relic.
</GuestPost>
Note: Markdown is not supported within <GuestPost/>
. This is a limitation of MDX v1 and fixed in MDX v2 which is currently being developed.
- Create an entry in
content/authors.json
. Structure:{ "janedoe": { "name": "Jane Doe", "summary": "Some info about Jane", "twitter": "Jane's Twitter handle", "github": "Jane's GitHub username" } }
- Your profile picture comes from github but this can be changed by adding a profile picture in
content/assets/authors
. If the key in theauthors.json
isjanedoe
, name the image filejanedoe.jpg
.