
blog.cavelab.dev/2023/02/hugo-build-deploy-with-make
Preview meta tags from the blog.cavelab.dev website.
Linked Hostnames
6- 27 links toblog.cavelab.dev
- 2 links todocs.drone.io
- 2 links towww.gnu.org
- 1 link toblockdiag.com
- 1 link towww.algolia.com
- 1 link towww.drone.io
Thumbnail

Search Engine Appearance
Build and deploy Hugo with Make
I’ve written before about how I deploy this blog using Drone.io. It works well, and does exactly what you’d expect. Lately I’ve started looking into reducing complexity in homelab systems that I use — and using “a Continuous Integration platform for busy development teams” felt a bit overkill for this tiny blog. So I switched to something simple; GNU Make.
Bing
Build and deploy Hugo with Make
I’ve written before about how I deploy this blog using Drone.io. It works well, and does exactly what you’d expect. Lately I’ve started looking into reducing complexity in homelab systems that I use — and using “a Continuous Integration platform for busy development teams” felt a bit overkill for this tiny blog. So I switched to something simple; GNU Make.
DuckDuckGo

Build and deploy Hugo with Make
I’ve written before about how I deploy this blog using Drone.io. It works well, and does exactly what you’d expect. Lately I’ve started looking into reducing complexity in homelab systems that I use — and using “a Continuous Integration platform for busy development teams” felt a bit overkill for this tiny blog. So I switched to something simple; GNU Make.
General Meta Tags
16- titleBuild and deploy Hugo with Make :: Cavelab blog — Stories from the Cavelab
- content-typetext/html; charset=utf-8
- viewportwidth=device-width, initial-scale=1.0
- descriptionI’ve written before about how I deploy this blog using Drone.io. It works well, and does exactly what you’d expect. Lately I’ve started looking into reducing complexity in homelab systems that I use — and using “a Continuous Integration platform for busy development teams” felt a bit overkill for this tiny blog. So I switched to something simple; GNU Make.
- keywordslinux, homelab, electronics
Open Graph Meta Tags
7- og:urlhttps://blog.cavelab.dev/2023/02/hugo-build-deploy-with-make/
- og:site_nameCavelab blog
- og:titleBuild and deploy Hugo with Make
- og:descriptionI’ve written before about how I deploy this blog using Drone.io. It works well, and does exactly what you’d expect. Lately I’ve started looking into reducing complexity in homelab systems that I use — and using “a Continuous Integration platform for busy development teams” felt a bit overkill for this tiny blog. So I switched to something simple; GNU Make.
- og:localeen
Twitter Meta Tags
4- twitter:cardsummary_large_image
- twitter:imagehttps://blog.cavelab.dev/2023/02/hugo-build-deploy-with-make/cover.png
- twitter:titleBuild and deploy Hugo with Make
- twitter:descriptionI’ve written before about how I deploy this blog using Drone.io. It works well, and does exactly what you’d expect. Lately I’ve started looking into reducing complexity in homelab systems that I use — and using “a Continuous Integration platform for busy development teams” felt a bit overkill for this tiny blog. So I switched to something simple; GNU Make.
Link Tags
8- apple-touch-iconhttps://blog.cavelab.dev/img/apple-touch-icon-144.png
- canonicalhttps://blog.cavelab.dev/2023/02/hugo-build-deploy-with-make/
- pingbackhttps://webmention.io/blog.cavelab.dev/xmlrpc
- preload/fonts/Inter-Regular.woff2
- preload/fonts/Inter-Bold.woff2
Links
34- http://blockdiag.com/en/nwdiag/rackdiag-examples.html
- https://blog.cavelab.dev
- https://blog.cavelab.dev/2021/01/hugo-aliases-to-firebase-redirects
- https://blog.cavelab.dev/2021/01/hugo-aliases-to-nginx-map-file
- https://blog.cavelab.dev/2021/02/hugo-build-deploy-to-nginx