2.0 KiB
title |
---|
Setting up your GitHub repository |
First, make sure you have Quartz index#🪴 Get Started.
Then, create a new repository on GitHub.com. Do not initialize the new repository with README
, license, or gitignore
files.
At the top of your repository on GitHub.com's Quick Setup page, click the clipboard to copy the remote repository URL.
In your terminal of choice, navigate to the root of your Quartz folder. Then, run the following commands, replacing REMOTE-URL
with the URL you just copied from the previous step.
# list all the repositories that are tracked
git remote -v
# if the origin doesn't match your own repository, set your repository as the origin
git remote set-url origin REMOTE-URL
# if you don't have upstream as a remote, add it so updates work
git remote add upstream https://github.com/jackyzha0/quartz.git
Then, you can sync the content to upload it to your repository. This is a helper command that will do the initial push of your content to your repository.
npx quartz sync --no-pull
[!warning]-
fatal: --[no-]autostash option is only valid with --rebase
You may have an outdated version ofgit
. Updatinggit
should fix this issue.
In future updates, you can simply run npx quartz sync
every time you want to push updates to your repository.
[!hint] Flags and options For full help options, you can run
npx quartz sync --help
.Most of these have sensible defaults but you can override them if you have a custom setup:
-d
or--directory
: the content folder. This is normally justcontent
-v
or--verbose
: print out extra logging information--commit
or--no-commit
: whether to make agit
commit for your changes--push
or--no-push
: whether to push updates to your GitHub fork of Quartz--pull
or--no-pull
: whether to try and pull in any updates from your GitHub fork (i.e. from other devices) before pushing