jekyll-sitemap
jekyll-minifier
jekyll-sitemap | jekyll-minifier | |
---|---|---|
1 | 2 | |
933 | 243 | |
0.0% | - | |
0.0 | 3.1 | |
about 1 year ago | 4 months ago | |
Ruby | Ruby | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
jekyll-sitemap
-
Generate an XML Sitemap for a Static Website in GitHub Actions
I use GitHub Pages for my personal website, as well as for several project sites. Although some static site generators include support for sitemap generation (e.g., Jekyll has a plugin for sitemaps), my personal website is generated by a custom static site generator that I built for a few specialized reasons, and most of my project sites for Java libraries consist of a single hand-written HTML page combined with javadoc-generated documentation. So a while back I implemented a GitHub Action, generate-sitemap, that can generate an XML sitemap by crawling a GitHub repository containing the HTML of the site. It uses the last commit date of each file to produce the tags. By default, it includes URLs for HTML and PDF files in the sitemap, and skips other file extensions in the repository. But it can be configured to include URLs corresponding to whatever file extensions you want included. It checks the head of HTML pages for noindex meta tags, and excludes such files from the sitemap, and it likewise excludes files from the sitemap if they match a Disallow rule in your robots.txt. The generate-sitemap can be configured in a few other ways as well (see the documentation in the GitHub repository for all details). The generate-sitemap action is implemented in Python as a container action.
jekyll-minifier
- JS Uglify/Minify Gems?
-
Watching your Core Web Vitals on Jamstack
Minify your CSS, JS, and HTML where possible. Again, your chosen build tools will help you here — Sass allows style: compressed, for example, and something like jekyll-minifier could be a solid turnkey option for Jekyll users to minify HTML, XML, CSS, JSON, and JavaScript.
What are some alternatives?
jekyll-feed - :memo: A Jekyll plugin to generate an Atom (RSS-like) feed of your Jekyll posts
astro - The web framework for content-driven websites. ⭐️ Star to support our work!
generate-sitemap - Generate an XML sitemap for a GitHub Pages site using GitHub Actions
minification-benchmarks - 🏃♂️🏃♀️🏃 JS minification benchmarks: babel-minify, esbuild, terser, uglify-js, swc, google closure compiler, tdewolff/minify
github-metadata - Jekyll plugin to propagate the `site.github` namespace and set default values for use with GitHub Pages.
jekyll-asset-post-processor - Process then suffix your Jekyll assets with cache busting version hashes
jekyll-gist - :page_with_curl: Liquid tag for displaying GitHub Gists in Jekyll sites.
jektex - A Jekyll plugin for blazing-fast server-side cached LaTeX rendering, with support for macros. Enjoy the comfort of LaTeX and Markdown without cluttering your site with bloated JavaScript.
pages-gem - A simple Ruby Gem to bootstrap dependencies for setting up and maintaining a local Jekyll environment in sync with GitHub Pages
jekyll-github-deploy - Jekyll Site Automated Deployer to GitHub Pages
jekyll-uglify - A Jekyll command plugin for uglifying given JS files or directories.
lighthouse - Automated auditing, performance metrics, and best practices for the web.