quartz/docs/hosting.md

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Hosting

Quartz effectively turns your Markdown files and other resources into a bundle of HTML, JS, and CSS files (a website!).

However, if you'd like to publish your site to the world, you need a way to host it online. This guide will detail how to deploy with either GitHub Pages or Cloudflare pages but any service that allows you to deploy static HTML should work as well (e.g. Netlify, Replit, etc.)

[!hint] Some Quartz features (like RSS Feed and sitemap generation) require baseUrl to be configured properly in your configuration to work properly. Make sure you set this before deploying!

Cloudflare Pages

  1. Log in to the Cloudflare dashboard and select your account.
  2. In Account Home, select Workers & Pages > Create application > Pages > Connect to Git.
  3. Select the new GitHub repository that you created and, in the Set up builds and deployments section, provide the following information:
Configuration option Value
Production branch v4
Framework preset None
Build command npx quartz build
Build output directory public

Press "Save and deploy" and Cloudflare should have a deployed version of your site in about a minute. Then, every time you sync your Quartz changes to GitHub, your site should be updated.

To add a custom domain, check out Cloudflare's documentation.

GitHub Pages

Like Quartz 3, you can deploy the site generated by Quartz 4 via GitHub Pages.

Warning

Quartz generates files in the format of file.html instead of file/index.html which means the trailing slashes for non-folder paths are dropped. As GitHub pages does not do this redirect, this may cause existing links to your site that use trailing slashes to break. If not breaking existing links is important to you, consider using #Cloudflare Pages.

In your local Quartz, create a new file quartz/.github/workflows/deploy.yml.

name: Deploy Quartz site to GitHub Pages

on:
  push:
    branches:
      - v4

permissions:
  contents: read
  pages: write
  id-token: write

concurrency:
  group: "pages"
  cancel-in-progress: false

jobs:
  build:
    runs-on: ubuntu-22.04
    steps:
      - uses: actions/checkout@v3
        with:
          fetch-depth: 0 # Fetch all history for git info
      - uses: actions/setup-node@v3
        with:
          node-version: 18.14
      - name: Install Dependencies
        run: npm ci
      - name: Build Quartz
        run: npx quartz build
      - name: Upload artifact
        uses: actions/upload-pages-artifact@v2
        with:
          path: public

  deploy:
    needs: build
    environment:
      name: github-pages
      url: ${{ steps.deployment.outputs.page_url }}
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
      - name: Deploy to GitHub Pages
        id: deployment
        uses: actions/deploy-pages@v2

Then:

  1. Head to "Settings" tab of your forked repository and in the sidebar, click "Pages". Under "Source", select "GitHub Actions".
  2. Commit these changes by doing npx quartz sync. This should deploy your site to <github-username>.github.io/<repository-name>.

[!hint] If you get an error about not being allowed to deploy to github-pages due to environment protection rules, make sure you remove any existing GitHub pages environments.

You can do this by going to your Settings page on your GitHub fork and going to the Environments tab and pressing the trash icon. The GitHub action will recreate the environment for you correctly the next time you sync your Quartz.

Custom Domain

Here's how to add a custom domain to your GitHub pages deployment.

  1. Head to the "Settings" tab of your forked repository.
  2. In the "Code and automation" section of the sidebar, click "Pages".
  3. Under "Custom Domain", type your custom domain and click "Save".
  4. This next step depends on whether you are using an apex domain (example.com) or a subdomain (subdomain.example.com).
    • If you are using an apex domain, navigate to your DNS provider and create an A record that points your apex domain to GitHub's name servers which have the following IP addresses:
      • 185.199.108.153
      • 185.199.109.153
      • 185.199.110.153
      • 185.199.111.153
    • If you are using a subdomain, navigate to your DNS provider and create a CNAME record that points your subdomain to the default domain for your site. For example, if you want to use the subdomain quartz.example.com for your user site, create a CNAME record that points quartz.example.com to <github-username>.github.io.

!dns records.pngThe above shows a screenshot of Google Domains configured for both jzhao.xyz (an apex domain) and quartz.jzhao.xyz (a subdomain).

See the GitHub documentation for more detail about how to setup your own custom domain with GitHub Pages.

[!question] Why aren't my changes showing up? There could be many different reasons why your changes aren't showing up but the most likely reason is that you forgot to push your changes to GitHub.

Make sure you save your changes to Git and sync it to GitHub by doing npx quartz sync. This will also make sure to pull any updates you may have made from other devices so you have them locally.