Note: Organization owners can restrict the publication of GitHub Pages sites from repositories owned by the organization. For more information, see "Managing the publication of GitHub Pages sites."
Creating a repository for your site
If your site is an independent project, you can create a new repository to store your site's source code. If your site is associated with an existing project, you can add the source code to that project's repository, in a /docs
folder on the default branch or on a different branch. For example, if you're creating a site to publish documentation for a project that's already on GitHub Enterprise Server, you may want to store the source code for the site in the same repository as the project.
If you want to create a site in an existing repository, skip to the "Creating your site" section.
- In the upper-right corner of any page, use the drop-down menu, and select New repository.
- Use the Owner drop-down menu, and select the account you want to own the repository.
- Type a name for your repository and an optional description. If you're creating a user or organization site, your repository must be named
<user>.github.io
or<organization>.github.io
. If your user or organization name contains uppercase letters, you must lowercase the letters. For more information, see "About GitHub Pages." - Choose a repository visibility. For more information, see "About repositories."
- Select Initialize this repository with a README.
- Click Create repository.
Creating your site
Before you can create your site, you must have a repository for your site on GitHub Enterprise Server. If you're not creating your site in an existing repository, see "Creating a repository for your site."
Warning: If your site administrator has enabled Public Pages, GitHub Pages sites are publicly available on the internet, even if the repository for the site is private or internal. If you have sensitive data in your site's repository, you may want to remove the data before publishing. For more information, see "Configuring GitHub Pages for your enterprise" and "About repositories."
-
On GitHub Enterprise Server, navigate to your site's repository.
-
Decide which publishing source you want to use. For more information, see "About GitHub Pages."
-
If your chosen publishing source already exists, navigate to the publishing source. If your chosen publishing source doesn't exist, create the publishing source.
-
In the root of the publishing source, create a new file called
index.md
that contains the content you want to display on the main page of your site.Tip: If
index.html
is present, this will be used instead ofindex.md
. If neitherindex.html
norindex.md
are present,README.md
will be used. -
Configure your publishing source. For more information, see "Configuring a publishing source for your GitHub Pages site."
-
Under your repository name, click Settings.
-
In the left sidebar, click Pages.
-
To see your published site, under "GitHub Pages", click your site's URL.
Note: It can take up to 10 minutes for changes to your site to publish after you push the changes to GitHub Enterprise Server. If you don't see your GitHub Pages site changes reflected in your browser after an hour, see "About Jekyll build errors for GitHub Pages sites."
Note: If your site has not published automatically, make sure someone with admin permissions and a verified email address has pushed to the publishing source.
Next steps
You can add more pages to your site by creating more new files. Each file will be available on your site in the same directory structure as your publishing source. For example, if the publishing source for your project site is the gh-pages
branch, and you create a new file called /about/contact-us.md
on the gh-pages
branch, the file will be available at http(s)://<hostname>/pages/<username>/<repository>/about/contact-us.html
.
You can also add a theme to customize your site’s look and feel. For more information, see "Adding a theme to your GitHub Pages site using Jekyll."
To customize your site even more, you can use Jekyll, a static site generator with built-in support for GitHub Pages. For more information, see "About GitHub Pages and Jekyll."