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content/post/deploying-hugo-with-gitea-and-droneci.md
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date = "2018-07-20T13:30:00+02:00"
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publishdate = "2018-07-20T13:30:00+02:00"
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title = "Deploying a Hugo website using Gitea and DroneCI"
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description = "Building a continuous delivery pipeline for static websites generated with Hugo"
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draft = true
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categories = ["Continuous Delivery", "Hugo"]
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tags = ["Hugo", "DevOps", "Gitea", "DroneCI"]
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This blog is created using the [Hugo][0] static site generator. I used
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to deploy new posts using a bare git repository on the target server
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and a `post-receive` hook to build the posts and copy them to the
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public web server directory. I followed [this tutorial][1] by Digital
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Ocean. This worked well enough but, to deploy the blog, I always needed
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to push to a separate git remote. Also I had to set up SSH access to
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the server and the new git remote if I wanted to write posts on
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another machine.
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<!-- more -->
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A few weeks ago, I setup [DroneCI][2] aside my [Gitea][3] instance.
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There is a [great plugin for DroneCI][4] to build Hugo websites.
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Deploying the generated pages can be done using the [SCP][5] or
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[rsync][6] plugins. I decided to use rsync since it would be able to
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execute a custom script after copying the files over to the target
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machine (which I'm not making use of). To take the load of compressing
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requested files from my web server, I use the [`gzip_static`
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module][7] of nginx. The compression is done using the following
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`Makefile`:
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```Makefile
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.PHONY: default clean
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TARGETS = $(shell find . -type f -name '*.html')
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TARGETS += $(shell find . -type f -name '*.asc')
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TARGETS += $(shell find . -type f -name '*.css')
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TARGETS += $(shell find . -type f -name '*.js')
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TARGETS += $(shell find . -type f -name '*.txt')
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TARGETS += $(shell find . -type f -name '*.xml')
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TARGETS += $(shell find . -type f -name '*.svg')
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TARGETS_GZ = $(patsubst %, %.gz, $(TARGETS))
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CC=gzip
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CFLAGS=-k -f -9
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default: $(TARGETS_GZ)
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%.gz : %
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$(CC) $(CFLAGS) $<
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clean:
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rm -f $(TARGETS_GZ)
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```
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This way, when `index.html` is requested and the client requests a
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compressed file, nginx will look if `index.html.gz` exists and if it
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does, that file will be served, so the web server does not need to
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compress the file on the fly. I implemented another step in my build
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pipeline between the build and the deploy step, that uses the [Alpine
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Linux base image][8], installs `make` and executes the `Makefile`.
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Drone build pipelines are made up of several steps, where the changes
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made on the repository in each step are persisted to the next step. So
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when the first step (actually it is the second step since the first is
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cloning the repository but this is an implicit step) builds the Hugo
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website, the `public/` directory will still exist in the new step, so
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I can perform the AoT compression and copy all files to the target
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server in the third step. At this point my DroneCI configuration
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looked like this:
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```yaml
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pipeline:
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build:
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image: cbrgm/drone-hugo:latest
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validate: true
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url: https://www.vbrandl.net
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compress:
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image: alpine:latest
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commands:
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- apk --no-cache update
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- apk add make
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- make -C public/ -f ../Makefile
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deploy:
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image: drillster/drone-rsync
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hosts: [ "vbrandl.net" ]
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target: /var/www/vbrandl.net
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source: public/*
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user: hugo
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secrets: [ rsync_key ]
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```
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The SSH key for the user `hugo` on the target server was added as a
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secret to the repository so I was able to use rsync.
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At this point I thought it would be fun to implement a staging area
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for the blog to test unreleased drafts and get feedback on them,
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without releasing them on the main blog. The staging area should be
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based of the `develop` branch of the blog and publish every post (draft,
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expired and future posts). On my server I created a new directory for
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the staging area and let [staging.vbrandl.net][9] point there.
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I made use of [conditional step execution][10] in Drone pipelines to
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change the build and deploy steps depending on the branch:
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```yaml
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pipeline:
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build-dev:
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image: cbrgm/drone-hugo:latest
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buildDrafts: true
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buildFuture: true
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buildExpired: true
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validate: true
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url: https://staging.vbrandl.net
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when:
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branch: develop
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build-prod:
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image: cbrgm/drone-hugo:latest
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buildDrafts: false
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buildFuture: false
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buildExpired: false
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validate: true
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url: https://www.vbrandl.net
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when:
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branch: master
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compress:
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image: alpine:latest
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commands:
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- apk --no-cache update
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- apk add make
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- make -C public/ -f ../Makefile
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deploy-dev:
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image: drillster/drone-rsync
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hosts: [ "vbrandl.net" ]
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target: /var/www/staging.vbrandl.net
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source: public/*
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user: hugo
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secrets: [ rsync_key ]
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when:
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branch: develop
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deploy-prod:
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image: drillster/drone-rsync
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hosts: [ "vbrandl.net" ]
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target: /var/www/vbrandl.net
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source: public/*
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user: hugo
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secrets: [ rsync_key ]
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when:
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branch: master
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```
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Now my blog is automatically deployed once I merge new posts into the
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`master` branch, and while using a separate staging area for my little
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blog might be considered to be overkill, it was pretty fun to
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implement a proper deployment pipeline.
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Due to Drones modular approach for build pipelines, it is trivial to
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deploy the blog to other targets. There are plugins to deploy to [AWS
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S3][11], use [FTP(S)][12] for uploading and many others. Only the
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according `deploy-*` steps in the pipeline need to be replaced.
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[0]: https://gohugo.io/
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[1]: https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-deploy-a-hugo-site-to-production-with-git-hooks-on-ubuntu-14-04
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[2]: https://drone.io/
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[3]: https://gitea.io/
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[4]: http://plugins.drone.io/cbrgm/drone-hugo/
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[5]: http://plugins.drone.io/appleboy/drone-scp/
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[6]: http://plugins.drone.io/drillster/drone-rsync/
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[7]: http://nginx.org/en/docs/http/ngx_http_gzip_static_module.html
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[8]: https://hub.docker.com/_/alpine/
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[9]: https://staging.vbrandl.net/
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[10]: http://docs.drone.io/pipelines/
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[11]: http://plugins.drone.io/drone-plugins/drone-s3/
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[12]: http://plugins.drone.io/christophschlosser/drone-ftps/
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