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Website

CI status Last deployed

Source code of reactphp.org.

Setup

  1. Copy .env.dist to .env and add a personal access token to the GITHUB_TOKEN entry.

    You don't need to check any of the scopes, public access is enough. The build script uses the GitHub API to render markdown files and fetch repository data and using the access token ensures that you don't run into API rate limits.

  2. Install dependencies with composer install.

Build

Once set up, you can build the website by executing this:

bin/build

This script will fetch all project repositories and then rebuild the entire website. The resulting static website will be built into the tmp/build directory.

If you're working on the website source code, you may want to skip fetching all components on every build like this:

bin/build --no-component-update

If you're working on the website CSS or Javascript code, you will have to rebuild the static assets like this:

npm run-script build

Note that compiled assets are expected to change much less frequently and are under version control. Run npm install to install and later commit any changes in static-files/assets/.

Deploy

Once built (see previous chapter), deployment is as simple as hosting the static website contents of the tmp/build directory behind a webserver of your choice.

We use GitHub Pages to deploy this to the live site. This is done by pushing the contents of the tmp/build directory to the repository hosted in reactphp/reactphp.github.io.

This deployment can be started by executing this:

bin/build --deploy

Note that this will publish any changes you've made to your local repository, including any uncommitted ones. There should usually be no need to do this manually, see next chapter for auto-deployment.

Auto-Deployment

The website can be automatically deployed via the GitHub Pages feature.

Any time a commit is merged (such as when a PR is merged), GitHub actions will automatically build and deploy the website. This is done by running the above deployment script (see previous chapter).

Repository setup: We're using a SSH deploy key for pushing to this target repository. Make sure the required DEPLOY_KEY secret is set in the repository settings on GitHub. See action documentation for more details. On top of this, you're recommended to add a personal access token as a repository secret with the name PAT to avoid running into secondary rate limits. If this secret is not found, it will fall back to the automatic GITHUB_TOKEN secret, which may cause the build to fail occasionally.

License

Released under the MIT license.

Note: The logo and the brand name are not MIT licensed. Please check their LICENSE for usage guidelines.