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My new blogging workflow

 ·  ☕ 3 min read

    I started blogging at 2020 and was using Hugo as my go-to Static Site Generator, It was pretty fast and did the job well (Jekyll yes, I’m looking you).

    The process went as follows:
    I had two repos, one for the blog config files and the markdown sources of my posts. I then build these files using hugo build into static HTML pages which I push to another repo that serves my blog through github pages.

    The process went as follows:

    • Pull a fresh copy of my blog config repo
    • Create a new .md file with my new blog post
    • Commit the changes to my repo and push
    • Build the repo to generate the static website
    • Push the website to the gh pages serving repo

    This process was very boring and sometimes I’d forget to sync my repos across the different machines I use, eventaully I just used dropbox to store the blog config. and .md files but I still wasn’t satisfied with my setup.

    New Blogging Workflow

    I was searching for any new SSG besides hugo until I found zola which is very similar to hugo except It’s more barebones which is something I liked (rust ftw!), I migrated my posts and started thinking about an easier alternative to my current workflow.

    CI/CD is just fancy make

    I’d always hear about this CI/CD jargon and I finally thought it’s time to give it a try, It was surprisingly easy too.
    It’s like make but for the cloud ain’t it?

    I created my repo with the source code for my blog and some random yaml file which I copy-pasted from the internet and voila!
    Now I can just push any new .md file to the repo and It will automatically build and deploy for a gh pages branch for me.

    Endless possibilities

    It’s not just about deploying with a single push, I can even blog using my browser directly from the web.

    Hackmd is a markdown editor for the browser which has github integration, so I can just write my blog there and Github will handle the rest.

    The only downside to this workflow is how Hackmd uses imgur to host images, I wish there’d be an easier approach to have the images self-contained in the repo.

    Update 19/12/2022

    I have switched from hackmd to https://github.dev, the integrated vscode gave me a more streamlined experience and I enjoyed my workflow even more.
    I have switched back to hugo since I found a really cool theme which had all of the features I wanted, I’m kinda lazy to write my own theme at this point so I keep hopping between different themes I like, let’s see for how long I will stick with the current theme.

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    Yusuf Hegazy
    WRITTEN BY
    Yusuf Hegazy
    Binary Exploitation and Hardware Security Enthusiast