Adapted from the al-folio template mentioned below.
A simple, clean, and responsive Jekyll theme for academics.
The vibrant community of al-folio users is growing! Academics around the world use this theme for their homepages, blogs, lab pages, as well as webpages for courses, workshops, conferences, meetups, and more. Check out the community webpages below. Feel free to add your own page(s) by sending a PR.
| Academics | ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ |
| Labs | ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ |
| Courses |
CMU PGM (S-19) CMU DeepRL (F-19, S-20, F-20, S-21) CMU MMML (F-20) CMU Distributed Systems (S-21) |
| Conferences & workshops |
ML Retrospectives (NeurIPS: 2019, 2020; ICML: 2020) HAMLETS (NeurIPS: 2020) ICBINB (NeurIPS: 2020, 2021) Neural Compression (ICLR: 2021) |
For more about how to use Jekyll, check out this tutorial. Why Jekyll? Read Andrej Karpathy's blog post!
Assuming you have Ruby and Bundler installed on your system (hint: for ease of managing ruby gems, consider using rbenv), first fork the theme from github.com:alshedivat/al-folio to github.com:<your-username>/<your-repo-name> and do the following:
$ git clone git@github.com:<your-username>/<your-repo-name>.git
$ cd <your-repo-name>
$ bundle install
$ bundle exec jekyll serveNow, feel free to customize the theme however you like (don't forget to change the name!). After you are done, commit your final changes.
Deploying your website to GitHub Pages is the most popular option. Starting version v0.3.5, al-folio will automatically re-deploy your webpage each time you push new changes to your repository! ✨
For personal and organization webpages:
- Rename your repository to
<your-github-username>.github.ioor<your-github-orgname>.github.io. - In
_config.yml, seturltohttps://<your-github-username>.github.ioand leavebaseurlempty. - Set up automatic deployment of your webpage (see instructions below).
- Make changes, commit, and push!
- After deployment, the webpage will become available at
<your-github-username>.github.io.
For project pages:
- In
_config.yml, seturltohttps://<your-github-username>.github.ioandbaseurlto/<your-repository-name>/. - Set up automatic deployment of your webpage (see instructions below).
- Make changes, commit, and push!
- After deployment, the webpage will become available at
<your-github-username>.github.io/<your-repository-name>/.
To enable automatic deployment:
- Click on Actions tab and Enable GitHub Actions; do not worry about creating any workflows as everything has already been set for you.
- Make any other changes to your webpage, commit, and push. This will automatically trigger the Deploy action.
- Wait for a few minutes and let the action complete. You can see the progress in the Actions tab. If completed successfully, in addition to the
masterbranch, your repository should now have a newly builtgh-pagesbranch. - Finally, in the Settings of your repository, in the Pages section, set the branch to
gh-pages(NOT tomaster). For more details, see Configuring a publishing source for your GitHub Pages site.
(click to expand) Manual deployment to GitHub Pages:
If you need to manually re-deploy your website to GitHub pages, run the deploy script from the root directory of your repository:
$ ./bin/deployuses the master branch for the source code and deploys the webpage to gh-pages.
(click to expand) Deployment to another hosting server (non GitHub Pages):
If you decide to not use GitHub Pages and host your page elsewhere, simply run:
$ bundle exec jekyll buildwhich will (re-)generate the static webpage in the _site/ folder.
Then simply copy the contents of the _site/ foder to your hosting server.
Note: Make sure to correctly set the url and baseurl fields in _config.yml before building the webpage. If you are deploying your webpage to your-domain.com/your-project/, you must set url: your-domain.com and baseurl: /your-project/. If you are deploing directly to your-domain.com, leave baseurl blank.
(click to expand) Deployment to a separate repository (advanced users only):
Note: Do not try using this method unless you know what you are doing (make sure you are familiar with publishing sources). This approach allows to have the website's source code in one repository and the deployment version in a different repository.
Let's assume that your website's publishing source is a publishing-source sub-directory of a git-versioned repository cloned under $HOME/repo/.
For a user site this could well be something like $HOME/<user>.github.io.
Firstly, from the deployment repo dir, checkout the git branch hosting your publishing source.
Then from the website sources dir (commonly your al-folio fork's clone):
$ bundle exec jekyll build --destination $HOME/repo/publishing-sourceThis will instruct jekyll to deploy the website under $HOME/repo/publishing-source.
Note: Jekyll will clean $HOME/repo/publishing-source before building!
The quote below is taken directly from the jekyll configuration docs:
Destination folders are cleaned on site builds
The contents of
<destination>are automatically cleaned, by default, when the site is built. Files or folders that are not created by your site will be removed. Some files could be retained by specifying them within the<keep_files>configuration directive.Do not use an important location for
<destination>; instead, use it as a staging area and copy files from there to your web server.
If $HOME/repo/publishing-source contains files that you want jekyll to leave untouched, specify them under keep_files in _config.yml.
In its default configuration, al-folio will copy the top-level README.md to the publishing source. If you want to change this behaviour, add README.md under exclude in _config.yml.
Note: Do not run jekyll clean on your publishing source repo as this will result in the entire directory getting deleted, irrespective of the content of keep_files in _config.yml.
If you installed al-folio as described above, you can upgrade to the latest version as follows:
# Assuming the current directory is <your-repo-name>
$ git remote add upstream https://github.com/alshedivat/al-folio.git
$ git fetch upstream
$ git rebase upstream/v0.3.5If you have extensively customized a previous version, it might be trickier to upgrade.
You can still follow the steps above, but git rebase may result in merge conflicts that must be resolved.
See git rebase manual and how to resolve conflicts for more information.
If rebasing is too complicated, we recommend to re-install the new version of the theme from scratch and port over your content and changes from the previous version manually.
The theme is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.
Originally, al-folio was based on the *folio theme (published by Lia Bogoev and under the MIT license). Since then, it got a full re-write of the styles and many additional cool features.