Bridgetown is a next-generation, progressive site generator & fullstack framework, powered by Ruby. Bridgetown takes your local content and external data loaded from APIs; renders templates in Markdown, ERB, and many other formats; automatically compiles frontend assets via esbuild; and exports a complete website ready to be served by fast CDNs like Render or traditional web servers. Bridgetown also integrates closely with Roda for fullstack, dynamic web application functionality—but only when and where you need it.
Say howdy 👋 to our blossoming list of current and past sponsors of Bridgetown on GitHub!
You too can join this list and sponsor open source “alt” Ruby development.
Commercial Support
Bridgetown development is spearheaded by Portland-based web studio Whitefusion. Contact us if you need commercial support for your Bridgetown content strategy, site design, or deployment. Also providing commercial support: Radioactive Toy based in the UK.
Star History
Start Here
Get Up to Speed
- Explore the Folder Structure of a Bridgetown website
- Start adding content to your site in the form of Resources
- Learn how Front Matter works for adding metadata to resources
- Add extra information to your site with Data Files
- Customize the Permalinks your resources are generated with
- Use Template Engines like Liquid, ERB, and Serbea to author sophisticated template designs
- Extend with Custom Plugins to generate and manipulate content specific to your site
- Discover how to add Frontend Assets using esbuild for a modern Javascript & CSS build pipeline
Testing Locally
If you’d like to hack away on Bridgetown directly, you’ll need to clone this repo and ensure the test suite passes. Note that this is a “monorepo”, meaning that multiple Rubygem codebases are stored within a single repo.
shell
$ git clone git@github.com:bridgetownrb/bridgetown.git
$ cd bridgetown
$ bundle # install development gems
$ bundle exec rake # run the full test suite
After making changes in one of the gems, say bridgetown-core
, if you want to run a single unit test, you can use the command:
shell
$ script/test test/test_foo.rb
Or run script/test
to run the full test suite. You can also run script/cibuild
to include Rubocop linting, etc., and at the root level of the repo, run bundle exec rake test_all
to test the entire monorepo.
To switch one of your own website repos to using the local gem, add the local gem path to
the site’s Gemfile as follows:
ruby
gem "bridgetown-core", path: "/path/to/bridgetown/bridgetown-core"
# additional gems as needed
Need help?
If you don’t find the answer to your problem in our docs, ask the community for help.
Code of Conduct
In order to have a more open and welcoming community, Bridgetown adheres to a
code of conduct adapted from the Contributor Covenant.
Please adhere to this code of conduct in any interactions you have in the
Bridgetown community. It is strictly enforced on all official Bridgetown
repositories, websites, and resources. If you encounter someone violating
these terms, please let one of our core team members know and we will address it as soon as possible.
Contributors
Bridgetown is built by:
|
You Next? |
Anywhere |
Interested in joining the Bridgetown Core Team? Send a DM to Jared in Discord and let’s chat!
License
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT LICENSE file.