Jekyll on Windows
While Windows is not an officially-supported platform, it can be used to run Jekyll with the proper tweaks. This page aims to collect some of the general knowledge and lessons that have been unearthed by Windows users.
Installing Jekyll
Installation via RubyInstaller
The easiest way to run Jekyll is by using the RubyInstaller for Windows.
RubyInstaller is a self-contained Windows-based installer that includes the Ruby language, an execution environment, important documentation, and more. We only cover RubyInstaller-2.4 and newer here, older versions need to install the Devkit manually.
- Download and Install a Ruby+Devkit version from RubyInstaller Downloads. Use default options for installation.
- Run the
ridk install
step on the last stage of the installation wizard. This is needed for installing gems with native extensions. You can find additional information regarding this in the RubyInstaller Documentation - Open a new command prompt window from the start menu, so that changes to the
PATH
environment variable becomes effective. Install Jekyll and Bundler via:gem install jekyll bundler
- Check if Jekyll installed properly:
jekyll -v
That’s it, you’re ready to use Jekyll!
Installation via Bash on Windows 10
If you are using Windows 10 version 1607 or later, another option to run Jekyll is by installing the Windows Subsystem for Linux.
Note: You must have Windows Subsystem for Linux enabled.
First let’s make sure all our packages / repositories are up to date. Open a new Command Prompt instance, and type the following:
bash
Your Command Prompt instance should now be a Bash instance. Now we must update our repo lists and packages.
sudo apt-get update -y && sudo apt-get upgrade -y
Now we can install Ruby. To do this we will use a repository from BrightBox, which hosts optimized versions of Ruby for Ubuntu.
sudo apt-add-repository ppa:brightbox/ruby-ng
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install ruby2.5 ruby2.5-dev build-essential dh-autoreconf
Next let’s update our Ruby gems:
gem update
Now all that is left to do is install Jekyll.
gem install jekyll bundler
(Note: no sudo
here.)
Check if Jekyll installed properly by running:
jekyll -v
And that’s it!
You can make sure time management is working properly by inspecting your _posts
folder. You should see a markdown file
with the current date in the filename.
Non-superuser account issues
If the `jekyll new` command prints the error "Your user account isn't allowed to install to the system RubyGems", see the "Running Jekyll as Non-Superuser" instructions in Troubleshooting.
Note: Bash on Ubuntu on Windows is still under development, so you may run into issues.
Encoding
If you use UTF-8 encoding, make sure that no BOM
header characters exist in your files or very, very bad things will happen to
Jekyll. This is especially relevant when you’re running Jekyll on Windows.
Additionally, you might need to change the code page of the console window to UTF-8 in case you get a
Liquid Exception: Incompatible character encoding
error during the site generation process. It can be done with the following
command:
chcp 65001
Time-Zone Management
Since Windows doesn’t have a native source of zoneinfo data, the Ruby Interpreter would not understand IANA Timezones and hence
using them had the TZ
environment variable default to UTC/GMT 00:00.
Though Windows users could alternatively define their blog’s timezone by setting the key to use POSIX format of defining timezones, it wasn’t as user-friendly when it came to having the clock altered to changing DST-rules.
Jekyll now uses a rubygem to internally configure Timezone based on established
IANA Timezone Database.
While ‘new’ blogs created with Jekyll v3.4 and greater, will have the following added to their Gemfile
by default, existing
sites will have to update their Gemfile
(and installed) to enable development on Windows:
# Windows does not include zoneinfo files, so bundle the tzinfo-data gem
gem 'tzinfo-data', platforms: [:mingw, :mswin, :x64_mingw, :jruby]
TZInfo 2.0 incompatibility
v2.0
of the TZInfo library has introduced a change in how timezone offsets are calculated.
This will result in incorrect date and time for your posts when the site is built with Jekyll 3.x on Windows.
We therefore recommend that you lock the Timezone library to v1.2
and above by listing
gem 'tzinfo', '~> 1.2'
in your Gemfile
.
Auto Regeneration
Jekyll uses the listen
gem to watch for changes when the --watch
switch is specified during a build or serve.
While listen
has built-in support for UNIX systems, it may require an extra gem for compatibility with Windows.
Add the following to the Gemfile
for your site if you have issues with auto-regeneration on Windows alone:
gem 'wdm', '~> 0.1.1', :install_if => Gem.win_platform?
You have to use a Ruby+Devkit version of the RubyInstaller and install
the MSYS2 build tools to successfully install the wdm
gem.