This version of GitHub Enterprise was discontinued on 2020-11-12. No patch releases will be made, even for critical security issues. For better performance, improved security, and new features, upgrade to the latest version of GitHub Enterprise. For help with the upgrade, contact GitHub Enterprise support.

Configuring a publishing source for your GitHub Pages site

If you use the default publishing source for your GitHub Pages site, your site will publish automatically. You can also choose to publish your project site from a different branch or folder.

People with admin or maintainer permissions for a repository can configure a publishing source for a GitHub Pages site.

GitHub Pages is available in public repositories with GitHub Free and GitHub Free for organizations, and in public and private repositories with GitHub Pro, GitHub Team, GitHub Enterprise Cloud, and GitHub Enterprise Server.

In this article

For more information about publishing sources, see "About GitHub Pages."

Choosing a publishing source

Before you configure a publishing source, make sure the branch or folder you want to use as your publishing source already exists in your repository. For example, before you can publish your project site from the /docs folder on the master branch of your repository, you or a collaborator must create a /docs folder on the default master branch of your repository.

  1. On GitHub Enterprise Server, navigate to your site's repository.

  2. Under your repository name, click Settings.

    Repository settings button

  3. Under "GitHub Pages", use the Source drop-down menu and select a publishing source.

    Drop down menu to select a publishing source

Troubleshooting publishing problems with your GitHub Pages site

Note: If your site's source files are located in the default publishing source—master for user and organization sites or gh-pages for project sites—but your site has not published automatically, make sure someone with admin permissions and a verified email address has pushed to the publishing source.

If you choose the docs folder on the master branch as your publishing source, then later remove the /docs folder from that branch in your repository, your site won't build and you'll get a page build error message for a missing /docs folder. For more information, see "Troubleshooting Jekyll build errors for GitHub Pages sites."