Static site generators can be very appealing to bloggers. They’re free, fast, secure, rich with plugins and themes, and the lack of a database and little to no server-side processing sheds a lot of the hassle associated with blogging. There are features common to dynamic sites (like WordPress) that you don’t get out of the box with a static site generator, though. One such feature is publishing content on a schedule.

Why Publish on a Schedule?

The ability to schedule blog posts enables writing in batches. For my business, Giving Jar, I write about and promote a different charity every other week. If I can spend one day interviewing and writing about two or three charities, it frees me from that task for four to six weeks!

Publishing articles at a specific time also make it easier to automate newsletters, social media posts, and other promotional material for the blog. Making your schedule well-known also encourages visitors to return to your site to look for new content.

Stay Near Your Comfort Zone

Once you find a solution for scheduling your static content, you probably won’t have to mess with it again. For that reason, I’m going to recommend doing something that I normally discourage: stay near your comfort zone. This isn’t the time to spend a lot of time learning a ton of new things if you have more important tasks to work on.

My comfort zone included Jekyll for the static site generator, Surge.sh for free static site hosting, GitHub for version control, Grunt for building and deploying, and a Linux-based VM on Digital Ocean for scheduling code.

If you know Middleman, Gulp, or Windows, use them! Take the ideas from this article, adapt them, and save yourself some time (and probably a headache!). Perhaps even write about your alternative experience?

Assumptions

Let’s assume you already have a blog created with Jekyll, you maintain your changes in GitHub, and you manually build the site, then deploy your changes at 9 AM every Wednesday to Surge.sh. Let’s also assume you are hosting your site at my-site.com and your GitHub repository is located at https://github.com/my-user/my-site.com .

The general steps to automating this process are to consolidate the build and deployment process to a single script, and then run that script somewhere that is “always on” at the desired time.

Another quick note about command syntax: commands should be typed exactly as they appear after the dollar sign ($). Any text before the $ is just a hint about which user should run the command. Any lines starting with a hashtag (#) are simply comments about what the subsequent commands do and should not be typed out.

At the end of this step, you should have a single command that you can run to checkout, build, and deploy your site.

Right now, the manual process looks like this:

$ cd ~/my-site.com $ git fetch --all $ git reset --hard origin/master $ jekyll build $ surge _site

If we use Grunt to perform these steps as a single command, we first must install NPM (I recommend using NVM to install NPM), then creating a package.json file to save development dependencies (such as Grunt), installing those dependencies, and finally, writing a Gruntfile.js file that Grunt will use to do our checkout, build, and deployment.

If you’re using Surge, you probably have NPM installed. As a refresher, installing NVM and NPM in Bash will look like this:

# Install NVM $ touch ~/.bash_profile $ curl -o- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/creationix/nvm/v0.31.0/install.sh | bash $ . ~/.bash_profile # Install NPM 4.3.1 $ nvm install 4.3.1 $ nvm use 4.3.1

Next, create a package.json file at the base of your static site and add the dependencies we’ll need:

# Change to your project directory $ cd ~/my-site.com # Create package.json $ npm init # Install grunt $ npm install -g grunt # Install dependencies $ npm install grunt --save-dev $ npm install grunt-git --save-dev $ npm install grunt-jekyll --save-dev $ npm install grunt-surge --save-dev

You’ll have a package.json that looks something like this:

{ "name" : "my-site.com" , "version" : "1.0.0" , "homepage" : "http://my-site.com" , "license" : "MIT" , "scripts" : { "test" : "echo \"Error: no test specified\" && exit 1" }, "repository" : { "type" : "git" , "url" : "git+https://github.com/my-user/my-site.com.git" }, "devDependencies" : { "grunt" : "~0.4.5" , "grunt-git" : "^0.3.7" , "grunt-jekyll" : "^0.4.3" , "grunt-surge" : "^0.7.0" } }

The last step is to create a Gruntfile.js in the same directory as your package.json and add all of the checkout, build, and deployment steps. Start with this:

module . exports = function ( grunt ) { grunt . initConfig ({ pkg : grunt . file . readJSON ( 'package.json' ), gitfetch : { latest : { options : { all : true } } }, gitreset : { latest : { options : { mode : 'hard' , commit : 'origin/master' } } }, jekyll : { dist : { options : { serve : false , drafts : false , future : false } }, test : { options : { serve : true , drafts : true , future : true } } }, surge : { publish : { options : { project : '_site/' } } } }); grunt . loadNpmTasks ( 'grunt-git' ); grunt . loadNpmTasks ( 'grunt-jekyll' ); grunt . loadNpmTasks ( 'grunt-surge' ); grunt . registerTask ( 'default' , [ 'jekyll:dist' ]); grunt . registerTask ( 'publish' , [ 'gitfetch:latest' , 'gitreset:latest' , 'jekyll:dist' , 'surge:publish' ]); grunt . registerTask ( 'test' , [ 'jekyll:test' ]); };

At this point the manual process has now been consolidated down to a single grunt command that will checkout, build, and deploy your site:

$ grunt prod

This Gruntfile.js also allows you to run grunt to build your site without deploying it or grunt test to preview articles written for dates in the future or draft content.

GOTCHA #1: Running grunt prod works on your computer, but it won’t simply work like this when running from cron. That’s because cron runs scheduled commands in isolated environments and certain settings that typically come from your Bash profile and NVM won’t be accessible to cron commands. To get around this, create a shell script named deploy.sh at the root of your static site that will setup the environment before invoking Grunt.

Here’s what your deploy.sh might look like:

#!/bin/bash exit_usage () { echo "usage: $0 gruntfile_dir" exit 1 } if [ "$#" -ne 1 ] ; then exit_usage fi . ~/.bash_profile . ~/.nvm/nvm.sh nvm use default cd $1 grunt prod

Add deploy.sh to a list of files excluded from your static site when it is built. In Jekyll, add an “exclude” list to the end of your _config.yml :

# Exclude files from generated site exclude : - Gemfile - Gemfile.lock - LICENSE - README.md - package.json - Gruntfile.js - node_modules - deploy.sh

Also, make sure you mark deploy.sh as executable.

# Set execute permission on deploy.sh $ chmod 755 deploy.sh

Don’t forget to add, commit, and push your changes to GitHub!

Step 2: Setup a Virtual Machine

In order to deploy content on a schedule, we need a server that is running at the times we want to deploy. If you have a physical server that fits this criterion, by all means use it! I did not have a server to spare so I chose a virtual machine schedule deployments.

Overview

This is a fairly large step and there are a few gotchas, so let me speak generally about what we’re doing before diving into the details. We are creating a virtual environment where we can install all of the tools needed to checkout, build, and deploy our site at any time that we want. Ultimately we need to install Git, Ruby, Jekyll, NPM, Grunt, and Surge. Then we’ll clone our site and use cron to run our grunt publish command on a schedule.

Detailed Instructions

If you’re following these steps to the letter, then the next step is to create a Digital Ocean account. Then create a droplet using the $5 per month pricing tier (yes, this solution costs money), choose the “Ubuntu 15.10 x64” image, and pick a data center nearest to where your readers are located.

GOTCHA #2: If you use Digital Ocean for your VM, pay close attention to the IP address assigned to your VM. If it starts with “192.241.” then delete it and create a new one. Surge.sh is also hosted on Digital Ocean and Surge’s software prevents uploads from IP addresses on the same subnet as their own.

Follow these instructions to Use SSH Keys with Digital Ocean Droplets. Then SSH to your Droplet as the root user to run the rest of the commands in this article.

You should run the first set of commands as root to do things like install git, curl, libssl, and ntpdate.

# Install git, curl, libssl, ntpdate, etc. root@vm $ apt-get update root@vm $ apt-get install git curl build-essential libssl-dev ntpdate

I also recommend creating a dedicated user for performing your deployments, so let’s take care of that.

# Create a user named "myuser" and set its password root@vm $ useradd -m myuser root@vm $ passwd myuser # Add user to sudoers file root@vm $ echo "myuser ALL=(ALL:ALL) ALL" >> /etc/sudoers

Since we’re going to be scheduling time-sensitive content, let’s also adjust the time zone and run ntpdate occasionally so the time on the VM doesn’t drift over a long period of time.

# Choose a time zone root@vm $ dpkg-reconfigure tzdata # Run ntpdate daily root@vm $ printf '#!/bin/sh

ntpdate ntp.ubuntu.com

' > /etc/cron.daily/ntpdate

All of the remaining commands should run as the user you created. If you are prompted for a password at any point, use the password you specified for “myuser”.

# Switch to the user you created root@vm $ su - myuser

Now let’s install RVM, Ruby, and Bundler.

# Install the public key needed to fetch RVM myuser@vm $ gpg --keyserver hkp://keys.gnupg.net --recv-keys 409B6B1796C275462A1703113804BB82D39DC0E3 # Download and install RVM myuser@vm $ curl -L https://get.rvm.io | bash -s stable myuser@vm $ source ~/.rvm/scripts/rvm myuser@vm $ rvm requirements # Install and configure Ruby myuser@vm $ rvm install ruby myuser@vm $ rvm use ruby --default myuser@vm $ rvm rubygems current # Install Bundler myuser@vm $ gem install bundler

Next up: NVM and Node.

# Download and install NVM myuser@vm $ curl -o- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/creationix/nvm/v0.31.0/install.sh | bash myuser@vm $ . ~/.nvm/nvm.sh # Install Node 4.3.1, or whichever version you'd like myuser@vm $ nvm install 4.3.1 myuser@vm $ nvm use 4.3.1

That’s it for software installation on your droplet!

Step 3: Clone Your Site

Use Git to clone your static site and install its dependencies:

# Clone your static site from GitHub myuser@vm $ git clone https://github.com/my-user/my-site.com.git myuser@vm $ cd my-site.com # Install Grunt and Surge myuser@vm $ npm install -g grunt-cli myuser@vm $ npm install -g surge # Install project dependencies myuser@vm $ bundle install myuser@vm $ npm install

While we’re here, let’s log into Surge. Make sure you know your username and password.

# Login to Surge myuser@vm $ surge login

This would be a good time to test deployments from the VM. This should do the trick:

# Manually deploy your site myuser@vm $ /home/myuser/my-site.com/deploy.sh /home/myuser/my-site.com

Once everything deploys smoothly, we can schedule that script!

Step 4: Schedule Deployments

Use cron to run deploy.sh on a schedule. First, edit your user’s crontab:

# Edit your crontab myuser@vm $ crontab -e

Add the following two lines to the crontab. The first line is simply a comment to help remember the schedule. In the following example, the script will run every Wednesday at 12:30 AM in the time zone that you configured for the VM. Here’s a good intro to scheduling with cron.

# Fetch blog content and deploy every Wednesday at 12:30 AM 30 0 * * 3 /home/myuser/my-site.com/deploy.sh prod /home/myuser/my-site.com/ > /home/myuser/log/blog.log 2>&1

The command also writes all output to a log file. That way, if an error occurs, you can look at the output to determine what went wrong. If you run your deployments frequently, you may also want to put a timestamp on your log files.

THAT’S IT! The deployments will start running on your schedule, freeing you from doing it by hand!

Alternatives

Before writing my own solution, I tried to find something that already existed. There were a couple, but neither quite fit my needs. I’ve put them here just in case you might find them useful.

If you are using GitHub Pages as your static site host, here’s a pretty clever solution that uses Zapier and calendar events to avoid using a server or VM to schedule deployments. http://blog.east5th.co/2014/12/29/scheduling-posts-with-jekyll-github-pages-and-zapier/ This tutorial shows how to use Rake to consolidate your deployments instead of Grunt. If I weren’t already using Grunt for my builds and manual deployments, I probably would have tried this. http://www.jaredwolff.com/blog/schedule-jekyll-posts/

Feature Request: Add scheduling to Prose. It would be sooooper sweet if Prose could detect that you are editing content in a “gh-pages” branch and offer the option to defer pushes until a specific point in the future. This would remove the entire deployment process and you could write content from anywhere! Alas, the feature doesn’t exist.

Conclusion

It takes a little bit of work, but creating a system where you can schedule static site content has lots of perks. And even though manually deploying may only take a couple of minutes each time, avoiding the context switch and being able to step away from your computer for days or weeks are worth the time to avoid repeating yourself day after day with the same mundane task.