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Ben Nadel at cf.Objective() 2010 (Minneapolis, MN) with: Doug Hughes and Ezra Parker and Dan Wilson and John Mason and Jason Dean and Luis Majano and Mark Mandel and Brian Kotek and Wil Genovese and Rob Brooks-Bilson and Andy Matthews and Simeon Bateman and Ray Camden and Chris Rockett and Joe Bernard and Dan Skaggs and Byron Raines and Barney Boisvert and Simon Free and Steve 'Cutter' Blades and Seth Bienek and Katie Bienek and Jeff Coughlin
Ben Nadel at cf.Objective() 2010 (Minneapolis, MN) with: Doug Hughes Ezra Parker Dan Wilson John Mason Jason Dean Luis Majano Mark Mandel Brian Kotek Wil Genovese Rob Brooks-Bilson Andy Matthews Simeon Bateman Ray Camden Chris Rockett Joe Bernard Dan Skaggs Byron Raines Barney Boisvert Simon Free Steve 'Cutter' Blades Seth Bienek Katie Bienek Jeff Coughlin

Including node_modules And vendors Folders In Your GitHub Pages Site

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Published in Comments (10)

CAUTION: This post is mostly a note-to-self, for Future Ben.

Yesterday morning, I woke up, pushed a new demo to my JavaScript Demos project on GitHub, and then subsequently found out that every single one of my demos was broken. Apparently GitHub started using Jekyll 3.3.0 to power GitHub pages (which is how I render my demos on a gh-pages branch). This version of Jekyll ignores the "vendor" and "node_modules" directories by default, which is why all of my demos were broken. You can override this behavior, but doing so was not obvious to me.

First, I want to give a huge shout-out to Eric McCormick, Erik Zaadi, and Bill Rawlinson who watched me panic on Twitter and then helped me to regain my composure.

According to the GitHub blog post, you can add a _config.yml file to tell Jekyll to "include" the "node_modules" and "vendors" directories. I don't know anything about Jekyll (or even that this is what was powering GitHub Pages); so I tried creating a _config.yml file. To no avail. Nothing changed.

Apparently, according to the GitHub support ticket I opened, _config.yml only works if you're actually using Jekyll in your GitHub Pages branch:

Hey Ben,

Sorry for the confusion here.

We recently moved to Jekyll 3.3. which ignores the "vendors" folder by default.

A _config.yml file will only work if you are using Jekyll, so the .nojekyll is your best bet.

Since I'm not using Jekyll - since I thought GitHub pages was just "HTML" - I created an empty .nojekyll text file in the root of my gh-pages branch. And kablamo! It started working again!

Future Ben, you're welcome.

Reader Comments

1 Comments

Thank you thank you thank you! This is the only resource on this issue I could find. Adding the empty .nojekyll file worked!

1 Comments

Thank you very much. You are a savior. I was trying the service worker and faced the node_modules issue which consumed a lot of time. The .nojekyll worked and could find the solution only here. Thanks a lot again. Salute from India.

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