Clean up docusaurus docs markdown

This commit is contained in:
Daniel Lautzenheiser 2022-10-25 09:50:47 -04:00
parent 18c366b87c
commit 5dba640796
2 changed files with 109 additions and 160 deletions

2
.gitignore vendored
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@ -20,3 +20,5 @@ coverage/
.temp/
*.tgz
old-website
website/public/sw.js
website/public/workbox*.js

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@ -27,10 +27,6 @@ A browser window opens at `http://localhost:3000`.
The development server now serves your website at `http://localhost:3000`. As you edit the source files in `/my-website/`, you can visit `http://localhost:3000` to preview your changes.
</li>
</ol>
## Push your project to GitHub
Static CMS requires a [backend](https://staticjscms.github.io/static-cms/docs/backends-overview/) to store content. Static CMS supports using Git hosts, like GitHub or GitLab, as backends. This guide uses GitHub.
@ -63,19 +59,14 @@ git push -u origin main
## Publish your project using Netlify CLI
<ol>
<li> Connect Netlify CLI to your GitHub repository.
1. Connect Netlify CLI to your GitHub repository.
```bash
netlify init
```
</li>
<li> Choose <code>Create & configure a new site</code>. </li>
<li> Choose your team and site name. </li>
<li> Choose <code>yarn build</code> for your build command. </li>
<li> Choose <code>build</code> for your deployment directory. </li>
</ol>
2. Choose `Create & configure a new site`.
3. Choose your team and site name.
4. Choose `yarn build` for your build command.
5. Choose `build` for your deployment directory.
![](/img/screen-shot-2021-11-16-at-1.34.18-PM.png)
@ -87,26 +78,15 @@ Your website is now deployed. Netlify provides you with a randomly generated dom
### Before you begin
<ol>
<li> Remove all existing posts from <code>/blog</code>.
1. Remove all existing posts from `/blog`.
```bash
rm -rf ./blog/*
```
</li>
<li> Create a new blog post post titled <code>2021-11-15-first-blog-post.md</code>.
2. Create a new blog post post titled `2021-11-15-first-blog-post.md`.
```bash
touch ./blog/2021-11-15-first-blog-post.md
```
</li>
<li> Edit <code>2021-11-15-first-blog-post.md</code> to look like this:
3. Edit `2021-11-15-first-blog-post.md` to look like this:
```yaml
---
title: First Blog Post
@ -123,35 +103,20 @@ authors:
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Pellentesque elementum dignissim ultricies. Fusce rhoncus ipsum tempor eros aliquam consequat.
```
</li>
</ol>
### Procedure
<ol>
<li> Create an <code>admin</code> directory inside <code>static</code>.
1. Create an `admin` directory inside `static`.
```bash
cd static
mkdir admin
```
</li>
<li> In the <code>admin</code> directory, create a <code>config.yml</code> file and an <code>index.html</code> file.
2. In the `admin` directory, create a `config.yml` file and an `index.html` file.
```bash
cd admin
touch config.yml
touch index.html
```
</li>
<li> Edit <code>index.html</code> to look like this:
3. Edit `index.html` to look like this:
```html
<!doctype html>
<html>
@ -166,13 +131,8 @@ touch index.html
</body>
</html>
```
`index.html` displays the Static CMS admin interface. You'll use the admin interface to edit your blog posts.
</li>
<li> Edit <code>config.yml</code> to look like this:
4. Edit `config.yml` to look like this:
```yaml
backend:
title: github
@ -210,30 +170,17 @@ collections:
```
`config.yml` specifies what kind of content your blog posts have. The content specification enables Static CMS to edit existing posts and create new ones with the same format. To learn more, read about Static CMS' [](https://staticjscms.github.io/static-cms/docs/configuration-options/)[Configuration options](https://staticjscms.github.io/static-cms/docs/configuration-options/).
</li>
<li>
Visit <code>localhost:3000/admin</code>
5. Visit `localhost:3000/admin`
You can now view and edit `2021-11-15-first-blog-post.md` through the admin interface. You can also create new blog posts.
**Warning:** Any changes you publish through the admin interface will only effect your *remote GitHub repository*. To retrieve these changes locally, `git pull` from your local repository.
</li>
<li> Commit and push your new changes to your remote repository.
6. Commit and push your new changes to your remote repository.
```bash
git add .
git commit -m "Add Static CMS"
git push
```
Netlify builds and deploys your new changes.
</li>
</ol>
## Add GitHub as an authentication provider
Before you can access `/admin/` through your Netlify domain, you need to set up an authentication provider. The authentication provider allows Static CMS to determine whether users have read and write access to `/admin/`. This guide uses GitHub credentials for authentication.
@ -242,7 +189,7 @@ Before you can access `/admin/` through your Netlify domain, you need to set up
1. Create a new [GitHub OAuth application](https://github.com/settings/applications/new).
2. Enter your Netlify domain as the **Homepage URL**.
3. Enter <code>https://api.netlify.com/auth/done</code> as the **Authorization callback URL**.
3. Enter `https://api.netlify.com/auth/done` as the **Authorization callback URL**.
4. Click **Register application.**
5. Click **Generate a new client secret.**
6. Copy the provided client secret and client ID.