From 38d9d5213784ba3250326c66567be5a91d93c415 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: makondratev <69584771+makondratev@users.noreply.github.com>
Date: Mon, 18 Mar 2024 00:48:00 +0000
Subject: [PATCH] feat(search): add search by title/content index and tag at the same time (#978)
---
docs/hosting.md | 40 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1 files changed, 40 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-)
diff --git a/docs/hosting.md b/docs/hosting.md
index bae7ed8..e5ef9a6 100644
--- a/docs/hosting.md
+++ b/docs/hosting.md
@@ -228,3 +228,43 @@
When `.gitlab-ci.yaml` is committed, GitLab will build and deploy the website as a GitLab Page. You can find the url under `Deploy > Pages` in the sidebar.
By default, the page is private and only visible when logged in to a GitLab account with access to the repository but can be opened in the settings under `Deploy` -> `Pages`.
+
+## Self-Hosting
+
+Copy the `public` directory to your web server and configure it to serve the files. You can use any web server to host your site. Since Quartz generates links that do not include the `.html` extension, you need to let your web server know how to deal with it.
+
+### Using Nginx
+
+Here's an example of how to do this with Nginx:
+
+```nginx title="nginx.conf"
+server {
+ listen 80;
+ server_name example.com;
+ root /path/to/quartz/public;
+ index index.html;
+ error_page 404 /404.html;
+
+ location / {
+ try_files $uri $uri.html $uri/ =404;
+ }
+}
+```
+
+### Using Caddy
+
+Here's and example of how to do this with Caddy:
+
+```caddy title="Caddyfile"
+example.com {
+ root * /path/to/quartz/public
+ try_files {path} {path}.html {path}/ =404
+ file_server
+ encode gzip
+
+ handle_errors {
+ rewrite * /{err.status_code}.html
+ file_server
+ }
+}
+```
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