+[2014-09-04T17:55:14Z]mightyiamjaybe, but now I'm not getting it to include anything other than the index.html +[2014-09-04T17:57:50Z]mightyiamjaybe, I am actually, getting almost the desired behavior. I can get explicitly included files but not directories! +[2014-09-04T17:58:09Z]mightyiamIt itches the most when it is so close +[2014-09-04T18:00:51Z]jaybemightyiam, try '*/*' ? +[2014-09-04T18:02:24Z]mightyiamI don't have a problem excluding. I have a problem including.
I somehow switched my ^ and < on my keyboard, that sucks -.-
+[2014-09-05T15:09:08Z]tortaljekyll isn't a web-server right? it outputs simply .html files which i can upload to any existing web server w/o any additional server-configuration - am i understanding correctly? +[2014-09-05T15:10:29Z]jbleuzentortal: Yes, jekyll is not a web-server (there is a web-server embedded but you can't say jekyll is a web-server). Jekyll is site generator so you sum it up correctly, it "just" outputs .html +[2014-09-05T15:13:53Z]tortalthanks. I guess many are running it on the server-side to directly develop "in-place" ? maybe it has some extra configuations that can be made to simplify development if it resides on the server? Or is that just all the same, i.e. no advantage whatsoever to hve it installed on the server +[2014-09-05T15:15:50Z]jbleuzengenerally people use it on there local machine and upload generates files on server with rsync (or other stuff), but github runs it on their server for github-pages feature +[2014-09-05T15:16:07Z]jbleuzenthe choice is up to you, but I guess it easier to runs it on your computer