hexo

Hexo

Hexo is a static site generator that converts Markdown syntax into prebuilt dynamic themes. Hexo’s use of Node.js, HTML, and CSS / YAML makes for a simple, scalable website that is easy to maintain, build upon, or migrate.

Installing Hexo

Installing Hexo is done with npm, and requires Node.js. To meet these requirements, we first need to install both of these tools. Luckily, there are scripts and commands to help us do so.

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# Install NVM to prep for Node
curl -o- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/nvm-sh/nvm/v0.34.0/install.sh | bash
# Close and reopen your terminal to start using nvm or run the following to use it now:
export NVM_DIR="$HOME/.nvm"
[ -s "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh" ] && \. "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh" # This loads nvm
[ -s "$NVM_DIR/bash_completion" ] && \. "$NVM_DIR/bash_completion" # This loads nvm bash_completion

# Install Node.js with NVM
nvm install stable

Now that we have everything we need, all that’s left to do is install Hexo -

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# Install Hexo with NPM
npm install -g hexo-cli

Creating Hexo Sites

Creating a site with Hexo requires that we first have an empty directory that we want to build our site within. Create this directory, then run hexo init to generate the files we will use to build our site.

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mkdir /site/
hexo init /site/

Our site is generated within /site/, and within it we can find new files and folders Hexo generated when we ran the hexo init command on the directory. The basic structure of a hexo blog can be seen below -

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├── _config.yml
├── db.json
├── node_modules
│   ├── JSONStream
│   ├── a-sync-waterfall
│   ├── abbrev
│   ├── accepts
│   │
│ ...More...
├── package.json
├── public
│   ├── 2019
│   ├── archives
│   ├── css
│   ├── fancybox
│   ├── images
│   ├── index.html
│   ├── js
│   ├── lib
│   └── tags
├── scaffolds
│   ├── draft.md
│   ├── page.md
│   └── post.md
├── source
│   ├── _drafts
│   └── _posts
└── themes
├── cactus
└── landscape

The _config.yml file contains all of the settings for our site, and its important to step through them carefully to make the changes that may need to be made in order for the site to work properly.

The source directory contains all of our drafts, posts, and pages. This blog has no additional pages, so none are seen here, but they would be represented as additional directories within the source directory, titled with the page name. These page directories contain only the index.md file that is the content.

scaffolds are the defaults used when generating a draft, post, or page using Hexo. These are useful to edit when attempting to configure your changes to initialize with some settings or information, which speeds up the process of adding new content.

The public directory is generated by Hexo, and we don’t need to worry much about it.

So, if we wanted to migrate our site from Hexo, the only files we’d need to worry about keeping are the Markdown files within source. Markdown is widely used across many tools and applications, so finding a new way to use these posts and pages is likely and easy to manage.

Installing themes

Hexo uses prebuilt themes for generating Markdown into webpages. I chose Cactus Dark for this site, and made changes where I seen fit.

Themes are installed by simply navigating to the root directory of your site, and cloning the repository into the themes directory. See the commands below for an example of installing this theme to a new Hexo site (without any modifications you may see here).

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cd /site/
git clone https://github.com/probberechts/hexo-theme-cactus.git themes/cactus

Now within your root directory, modify the _config.yml to point to the cactus theme we just added. The default theme and value within the _config.yml is landscape, that value points to the theme directory we cloned above.
After you’ve made pointed your site configuration file to your new theme, run hexo generate to apply your new theme to your site.

Its important to note that changes to the theme will need to take place within the /site/theme/cactus/ directory, which may contain a large set of files that are at first unfamilliar to you. After some time poking around your own small site, spend some time looking through the directories and files within your themes directories. They will often provide good examples to use on your own.

Starting Hexo

Now that we have a site, theme, and files have been configured to our liking, all we need is to start the Hexo server and point nginx to the port its running on. Run hexo serve & and make the needed changes to your /etc/nginx/nginx.conf to route the traffic.

Snippets

Some snippets, guides, or references that may be useful when using Hexo -

Hexo Commands

Also found by running hexo -h, see the below help text for a list of commands when using Hexo

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Usage: hexo <command>

Commands:
clean Remove generated files and cache.
config Get or set configurations.
deploy Deploy your website.
generate Generate static files.
help Get help on a command.
init Create a new Hexo folder.
list List the information of the site
migrate Migrate your site from other system to Hexo.
new Create a new post.
publish Moves a draft post from _drafts to _posts folder.
render Render files with renderer plugins.
server Start the server.
version Display version information.

Global Options:
--config Specify config file instead of using _config.yml
--cwd Specify the CWD
--debug Display all verbose messages in the terminal
--draft Display draft posts
--safe Disable all plugins and scripts
--silent Hide output on console

For more help, you can use ‘hexo help [command]’ for the detailed information
or you can check the Hexo Documentation

Markdown Guide

Below we can see the basic syntax used when writing raw markdown pages.

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Headings
# Heading level 1
OR
Heading level 1
===============

## Heading level 2
OR
Heading level 2
---------------

### Heading level 3
#### Heading level 4
##### Heading level 5
###### Heading level 6

Italics Text
Italicized text is the *cat's meow*.
Italicized text is the _cat's meow_.
A*cat*meow

Bold text
I just love **bold text**.
I just love __bold text__.
Love**is**bold

Italics and Bold text -
This text is ***really important***.
This text is ___really important___.
This text is __*really important*__.
This text is **_really important_**.

Quotes
> Dorothy followed her through many of the beautiful rooms in her castle.
>
>> The Nested Blockquote

Blockquotes can contain elements
> #### The quarterly results look great!
>
> - Revenue was off the chart.
> - Profits were higher than ever.
>
> *Everything* is going according to **plan**.



Lists

1. First item
2. Second item
3. Third item
4. Fourth item

OR

- First item
- Second item
- Third item
- Indented item
- Indented item
- Fourth item

Inline `code`

Horizonal Rules

***

---

_________________

Links
My favorite link is [Duck Duck Go](https://duckduckgo.com)
<https://www.markdownguide.org>
<fake@example.com>
I love supporting the **[EFF](https://eff.org)**.
This is the *[Markdown Guide](https://www.markdownguide.org)*.

Images
![Tux, the Linux mascot](/assets/images/tux.png)

The examples above were taken from The Official Markdown Guide

nginx.conf

Below is a basic nginx.conf that serves as an example of passing local traffic to the port running Hexo.

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# A simple nginx.conf showing how to pass traffic to a docker container
user www-data;
worker_processes auto;
pid /run/nginx.pid;
include /etc/nginx/modules-enabled/*.conf;

events { }

http {
include mime.types;

# Redirect root domains
server {
listen 80;
server_name domain.com www.domain.com;
return 301 https://www.domain.com$request_uri;

}


# SSL - domain.com
server {
server_name domain.com www.domain.com;
server_tokens off;
listen 443 ssl;
ssl_certificate /etc/letsencrypt/live/domain.com/fullchain.pem;
ssl_certificate_key /etc/letsencrypt/live/domain.com/privkey.pem;

# Pass to container
location / {
include proxy_params;
proxy_pass http://localhost:1234/;
}

}

}