This repository contains the source code for the Crosswalk website. The live website is generated from this code.
Any bugs for the website should be logged on the Crosswalk Jira, under the Website component.
Pull requests for the website should be submitted via github.
This document gives an overview of the source and how to build the project on your system.
This static site for Crosswalk is built with:
First, install Node.js. Then, run the following commands:
# Install Harp. You may need to preface this command with `sudo`
# Note that v 0.14.0 of Harp is required to build the website.
# Using later versions will produce errors.
npm install --global [email protected]
# Clone this project from GitHub
git clone https://github.com/crosswalk-project/crosswalk-website.git
# Install the project’s dependencies
cd crosswalk-website/
npm install
# Serve the project
harp server
# The project is now available at http://localhost:9000
Harp can be used to create static web content. This is the content that the current website uses.
The styleguide should be created first. The markup and CSS modules are documented in a Styleguide. It’s comparable to a miniature version of the documentation for Bootstrap, where each module has an example and the accompanying code.
To build the Styleguide, run the following commands:
# Install dependencies
npm install -g kss
# Build the Styleguide
npm run styleguide
This site has been built to take advantage of Harp’s niceties, so the web server should:
- Create clean URLs by rewriting, for example,
about.html
toabout/
- Allow absolute paths from
/
harp compile
The results are placed in "www" directory and can be viewed on your local
system with apache server by simply setting
DocumentRoot <path to www directory>
in the apache configuration file.
The Crosswalk blog accepts static posts written in Markdown. If your post was called “Meet Crosswalk”, create the file meet-crosswalk.md
in public/blog/
. Add your post’s metadata in public/blog/_data.json
. It will probably look something like this:
"meet-crosswalk": {
"title": "Meet Crosswalk",
"date": "2014-10-16T12:00",
"author": "Annie Person"
},
If you’d like, you can also include a path to a large “Hero” image for the blog post:
"meet-crosswalk": {
"title": "Meet Crosswalk",
"date": "2014-10-16T12:00",
"author": "Annie Person",
"hero": "/assets/illustrations/my-hero-image.png"
},
If you are linking to a remote post rather than a local post—for example, a post on the Chromium blog about Crosswalk—you only need to edit the public/blog/_data.json
file. The key, in this case chrome-apps-for-mobile
, must be unique, but the url
will be what’s used to link to the external post.
"chrome-apps-for-mobile": {
"title": "Chrome Apps for Mobile: Now with a faster dev workflow and a modern WebView",
"date": "2014-09-22T09:00",
"author": "Michal Mocny",
"url": "http://blog.chromium.org/2014/09/now-with-faster-dev-workflow-and-modern.html",
"desc": "…now you have a way to leverage the latest Chromium WebView on any device running Android versions back to Ice Cream Sandwich by bundling your Chrome App with an embeddable Chromium WebView, provided by the Crosswalk open source project."
},