# Create new Vite project using React template
npm create vite@latest vite-project -- --template react
# Install dependencies and start development server
cd vite-project
npm install
npm run dev
If the project is working fine, let's init a new git repository.
git init
git add .
git commit -m "init vite project"
Go to https://github.com/new and create a new repository.
❗️ Make sure Public is selected if you don't have a premium account. Otherwise, you won't be able to host your app using GitHub pages.
Once the repo is created, copy and paste the instructions similar to these to your terminal
git remote add origin git@github.com:sitek94/vite-deploy-demo.git
git branch -M main
git push -u origin main
Create a new file: .github/workflows/deploy.yml
and paste the following code:
name: Deploy
on:
push:
branches:
- main
jobs:
build:
name: Build
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Checkout repo
uses: actions/checkout@v3
- name: Setup Node
uses: actions/setup-node@v3
- name: Install dependencies
uses: bahmutov/npm-install@v1
- name: Build project
run: npm run build
- name: Upload production-ready build files
uses: actions/upload-artifact@v3
with:
name: production-files
path: ./dist
deploy:
name: Deploy
needs: build
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
if: github.ref == 'refs/heads/main'
steps:
- name: Download artifact
uses: actions/download-artifact@v3
with:
name: production-files
path: ./dist
- name: Deploy to GitHub Pages
uses: peaceiris/actions-gh-pages@v3
with:
github_token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
publish_dir: ./dist
This workflow will run on every push to the main
branch. It will first build the project, and then deploy it to GitHub pages.
Commit deployment workflow and push the changes to GitHub.
git add .
git commit -m "add deploy workflow"
git push
When you go, to Actions and click on the recent workflow, you should see that it failed, because of missing permissions:
To fix that, go to Actions Settings, select Read and write permissions and hit Save:
Basically, our action is going to modify the repo, so it needs the write permission.
Go back to Actions, click on failed workflow and in the top-right corner click on Re-run failed jobs
After job run, you should be able to see a new branch gh-pages
created in your repository.
To host the app, go to Pages Settings, set Source to gh-pages
, and hit Save.
After a while your app should be deployed and be available at the link displayed in Pages Settings. If you want to follow the deployment process, go to Actions and pages-build-deployment workflow:
Once deployment is done, visit the app at: https://<YOUR_GITHUB_USER>.github.io/REPO_NAME
You will see that something is not right, because instead of there is a blank screen. When you inspect it, you will see that some files were not found.
This is happening, because of the subdirectory-like URL structure GitHub uses for Project Pages. Asset links are referencing the files
in the domain root, whereas our project is located in <ROOT>/vite-deploy/demo
. This is how the links should look like:
❌ Bad
https://sitek94.github.io/assets/favicon.17e50649.svg
✅ Good
https://sitek94.github.io/vite-deploy-demo/assets/favicon.17e50649.svg
Fortunately, there is a very easy fix for this. Add the following line in vite.config.js
:
import { defineConfig } from 'vite'
import react from '@vitejs/plugin-react'
// https://vitejs.dev/config/
export default defineConfig({
plugins: [react()],
+ base: '/vite-deploy-demo/'
})
Now, asset links will have a correct path, so commit the changes, push the code, wait for the deploy to finish and see it for yourself!