Jekyll
appJekyll is a simple, blog-aware, static site generator. It takes text written in your favorite markup language and uses layouts to create a static website. You can tweak the site’s look and feel, URLs, the data displayed on the page, and more.
Release | Released | Active Development | Active Maintenance | Latest |
---|---|---|---|---|
4 | 3 years and 9 months ago (20 Aug 2019) |
Yes | Yes |
4.3.2
(20 Jan 2023)
|
3 | 7 years ago (26 Oct 2015) |
No | Yes |
3.9.3
(30 Jan 2023)
|
2 | 9 years ago (06 May 2014) |
No |
Ended
7 years ago (27 Oct 2015)
|
2.5.3
(22 Dec 2014)
|
1 | 10 years ago (06 May 2013) |
No |
Ended
9 years ago (07 May 2014)
|
1.5.1
(28 Mar 2014)
|
0 | 14 years ago (19 Oct 2008) |
No |
Ended
9 years ago (07 May 2014)
|
0.9.0
(15 Dec 2010)
|
Jekyll follows Semantic Versioning. It does not have a fixed release policy,
nor a clearly defined support policy. Nevertheless, limited bug fixes and security updates are
always applied to the version used by GitHub Pages (Currently
3.9.x
).
Ruby Compatibility
Release | Ruby |
---|---|
4 | 2.5+ |
3 | 2.0+ |
2 | 1.9.3+ |
0 - 1 | 1.8+ |
More information is available on the Jekyll website.
You should be running one of the supported release numbers listed above in the rightmost column.
You can submit an improvement to this page
on GitHub
.
This page has a corresponding
Talk Page.
A JSON version of this page is available at /api/jekyll.json. See the API Documentation for more information. You can subscribe to the iCalendar feed at /calendar/jekyll.ics.