+ [2016-02-24T21:10:35Z] jaybe i.e. ~/Sites/SiteName/source is jekyll/other source ... and ~/Sites/SiteName/pub; is web root. then, plain/txt mime type served for dev.example.com/SiteName for browsing/discovery/learning/sharing, ... and the rendered (HTML/served) site is at SiteName.example.com/ ;)
+ [2016-02-24T21:11:01Z] phatso727 rockyapplepi: sort of. We sell sites, and we decide what kind of site is best for the client based on their needs
+ [2016-02-24T21:11:23Z] phatso727 jaybe: that's super neat
+ [2016-02-24T21:11:41Z] phatso727 this is my first ever dev job, and I only touched jekyll or nginx for the first time in last year or so
+ [2016-02-24T21:11:57Z] phatso727 I'm only 19 though, I have time to make more cool things I guess

message no. 124809

Posted by Calinou in #jekyll at 2016-02-24T12:35:51Z

Jekyll needs absolute paths to work well, typically
+ [2016-02-26T11:37:27Z] napster What could be the reason I'm not able to add new posts to my jekyll blog? I created a new post file as per the specs, run jekyll serve --incremental, but the new post is not coming up on the _site
+ [2016-02-26T11:37:59Z] napster Running Jekyll version 3.1.2
+ [2016-02-26T11:38:06Z] napster Mac OSX
+ [2016-02-26T11:39:10Z] napster Tried one obvious thing. Removed all posts from _posts and recreated the entire blog again. Only the newly added posts are missing.
+ [2016-02-26T11:40:22Z] napster # Build settings