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Deploy Your VitePress Site
The following guides are based on some shared assumptions:
-
The VitePress site is inside the
docs
directory of your project. -
You are using the default build output directory (
.vitepress/dist
). -
VitePress is installed as a local dependency in your project, and you have set up the following scripts in your
package.json
:{ "scripts": { "docs:build": "vitepress build docs", "docs:preview": "vitepress preview docs" } }
Build and Test Locally
-
Run this command to build the docs:
$ npm run docs:build
-
Once built, preview it locally by running:
$ npm run docs:preview
The
preview
command will boot up a local static web server that will serve the output directory.vitepress/dist
athttp://localhost:4173
. You can use this to make sure everything looks good before pushing to production. -
You can configure the port of the server by passing
--port
as an argument.{ "scripts": { "docs:preview": "vitepress preview docs --port 8080" } }
Now the
docs:preview
method will launch the server athttp://localhost:8080
.
Setting a Public Base Path
By default, we assume the site is going to be deployed at the root path of a domain (/
). If your site is going to be served at a sub-path, e.g. https://mywebsite.com/blog/
, then you need to set the base
option to '/blog/'
in the VitePress config.
Example: If you're using Github (or GitLab) Pages and deploying to user.github.io/repo/
, then set your base
to /repo/
.
HTTP Cache Headers
If you have control over the HTTP headers on your production server, you can configure cache-control
headers to achieve better performance on repeated visits.
The production build uses hashed file names for static assets (JavaScript, CSS and other imported assets not in public
). If you inspect the production preview using your browser devtools' network tab, you will see files like app.4f283b18.js
.
This 4f283b18
hash is generated from the content of this file. The same hashed URL is guaranteed to serve the same file content - if the contents change, the URLs change too. This means you can safely use the strongest cache headers for these files. All such files will be placed under assets/
in the output directory, so you can configure the following header for them:
Cache-Control: max-age=31536000,immutable
::: details Example Netlify _headers
file
/assets/*
cache-control: max-age=31536000
cache-control: immutable
Note: the _headers
file should be placed in the public directory - in our case, docs/public/_headers
- so that it is copied verbatim to the output directory.
Netlify custom headers documentation
:::
::: details Example Vercel config in vercel.json
{
"headers": [
{
"source": "/assets/(.*)",
"headers": [
{
"key": "Cache-Control",
"value": "max-age=31536000, immutable"
}
]
}
]
}
Note: the vercel.json
file should be placed at the root of your repository.
Vercel documentation on headers config
:::
Platform Guides
Netlify / Vercel / Cloudflare Pages / AWS Amplify / Render
Set up a new project and change these settings using your dashboard:
- Build Command:
npm run docs:build
- Output Directory:
docs/.vitepress/dist
- Node Version:
16
(or above, by default it usually will be 14 or 16, but on Cloudflare Pages the default is still 12, so you may need to change that)
::: warning Don't enable options like Auto Minify for HTML code. It will remove comments from output which have meaning to Vue. You may see hydration mismatch errors if they get removed. :::
GitHub Pages
-
Create a file named
deploy.yml
inside.github/workflows
directory of your project with some content like this:# Sample workflow for building and deploying a VitePress site to GitHub Pages # name: Deploy VitePress site to Pages on: # Runs on pushes targeting the `main` branch. Change this to `master` if you're # using the `master` branch as the default branch. push: branches: [main] # Allows you to run this workflow manually from the Actions tab workflow_dispatch: # Sets permissions of the GITHUB_TOKEN to allow deployment to GitHub Pages permissions: contents: read pages: write id-token: write # Allow only one concurrent deployment, skipping runs queued between the run in-progress and latest queued. # However, do NOT cancel in-progress runs as we want to allow these production deployments to complete. concurrency: group: pages cancel-in-progress: false jobs: # Build job build: runs-on: ubuntu-latest steps: - name: Checkout uses: actions/checkout@v3 with: fetch-depth: 0 # Not needed if lastUpdated is not enabled # - uses: pnpm/action-setup@v2 # Uncomment this if you're using pnpm - name: Setup Node uses: actions/setup-node@v3 with: node-version: 18 cache: npm # or pnpm / yarn - name: Setup Pages uses: actions/configure-pages@v3 - name: Install dependencies run: npm ci # or pnpm install / yarn install - name: Build with VitePress run: npm run docs:build # or pnpm docs:build / yarn docs:build - name: Upload artifact uses: actions/upload-pages-artifact@v2 with: path: docs/.vitepress/dist # Deployment job deploy: environment: name: github-pages url: ${{ steps.deployment.outputs.page_url }} needs: build runs-on: ubuntu-latest name: Deploy steps: - name: Deploy to GitHub Pages id: deployment uses: actions/deploy-pages@v2
::: warning Make sure the
base
option in your VitePress is properly configured. See Setting a Public Base Path for more details. ::: -
In your repository's settings under "Pages" menu item, select "GitHub Actions" in "Build and deployment > Source".
-
Push your changes to the
main
branch and wait for the GitHub Actions workflow to complete. You should see your site deployed tohttps://<username>.github.io/[repository]/
orhttps://<custom-domain>/
depending on your settings. Your site will automatically be deployed on every push to themain
branch.
GitLab Pages
-
Set
outDir
in VitePress config to../public
. Configurebase
option to'/<repository>/'
if you want to deploy tohttps://<username>.gitlab.io/<repository>/
. -
Create a file named
.gitlab-ci.yml
in the root of your project with the content below. This will build and deploy your site whenever you make changes to your content:image: node:16 pages: cache: paths: - node_modules/ script: # - apk add git # Uncomment this if you're using small docker images like alpine and have lastUpdated enabled - npm install - npm run docs:build artifacts: paths: - public only: - main
Azure Static Web Apps
-
Follow the official documentation.
-
Set these values in your configuration file (and remove the ones you don't require, like
api_location
):app_location
:/
output_location
:docs/.vitepress/dist
app_build_command
:npm run docs:build
Firebase
-
Create
firebase.json
and.firebaserc
at the root of your project:firebase.json
:{ "hosting": { "public": "docs/.vitepress/dist", "ignore": [] } }
.firebaserc
:{ "projects": { "default": "<YOUR_FIREBASE_ID>" } }
-
After running
npm run docs:build
, run this command to deploy:firebase deploy
Surge
-
After running
npm run docs:build
, run this command to deploy:npx surge docs/.vitepress/dist
Heroku
-
Follow documentation and guide given in
heroku-buildpack-static
. -
Create a file called
static.json
in the root of your project with the below content:{ "root": "docs/.vitepress/dist" }