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Description
Learn one of the easiest ways to deploy your personal site to the distributed web using Foresty, Hugo, Fleek, and IPFS with your host, Molly Mackinlay!
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A
I've
made
a
kind
of
a
walkthrough
of
how
to
go
about
deploying
a
personal
website
built
off
like
just
a
normal
static.
You
know,
templating
blog
templating
tool
and
I'd
made
it
and
figured.
This
might
be
a
good
opportunity
for
folks
who
are
excited
about
ipfs
want
to
get
involved
with
it,
putting
their
own
website
or
creating
a
really
easy
static,
personal
webpage
for
the
Deep
Web
and
get
it
up
on
ipfs.
Just
just
see
what
that
process
is.
A
It's
like
I,
don't
know,
20
slides
of
like
point-and-click
I
thought
it
would
be
it'd,
be
a
fun
place
for
people
to
see
that
awesome.
So
here
is
my
handy
dandy.
Little
walkthrough
on
deploying
your
personal
website
using
forestry,
Hugo,
fleek
and
ipfs.
The
real
main
heavy
lifters
in
this
are
forestry
in
fleek
and
starting
with
forestry.
This
is
kind
of
how
you
go
about
it's
a
great
tool
that
you
can
use
for
finding
an
aesthetic
website
templates,
and
so
it's
really
really
easy.
A
You
have
over
there
click
start
select
a
starter
template
you
can
filter
by,
like
you
know
which,
which
of
the
many
things
you
want
to
use.
There's
many
options:
I
chose
Hugo
just
because
we
use
Hugo
a
lot
for
various
different
IP
fess
websites
and
chose
one
of
their
kind
of
portfolio.
Starter
templates.
The
nice
thing
about
these
is
that
you
know
it's
all
it's
all
static
and
you
know
you
can
preview
it.
A
You
can
decide
if
you
like
it
and
then
you
can
copy
it
to
github,
and
so
voila
I
got
the
copy
of
the
Hugo
forestry
template
in
github.
The
one
like
a
little
trick
with
with
Hugo
and
putting
Hugo
signs
up
on
ipfs
is
to
make
sure
that
you
have
relative
links,
and
so
the
most
important
piece
here
is
hopping
into
the
the
config
file
and
making
sure
you
add
relative,
URLs
equal
true,
and
this
will
will
make
your
Hugo
site
work
really
well
on
ipfs
by
default.
A
So
little
one-line
change
to
the
config,
and
this
will
be
ready
to
go.
You
can
preview,
it
run
it
locally.
Voila!
Here's
my
local
machine
running
this
you
know
kind
of
this
is
now
like
three
clicks.
I
think
and
I
have
a
low
goal.
Version
of
the
little
static
website
that
I'm
gonna
want
to
launch
on
ipfs
from
here
now.
I
know
that
I
have
a
static
version.
I
want
to
get
it
up
on
IDF
s4.
A
That
I
used
fleek
since,
like
is
super
super
easy
from
UX
perspective,
and
if
the
aim
here
is
to
make
this
as
accessible
to
kind
of
people
who
are
getting
started
as
possible,
that's
a
great
example.
They
actually
literally
have
a
guide
for
using
Hugo
and
fleek
with
each
other.
It's
really
useful.
The
definitely
take
a
look
at
that
because
it
has
the
one
kind
of
little
trick.
A
You
need
to
do
in
terms
of
setting
your
build
settings,
but
for
me,
I'd
already
deployed
previous
sites
with
leak,
and
so
I
was
able
to
just
sign
in
connect.
This
to
my
github
choose
the
repo
that
forestry
had
already
created
for
me
with
with
my
Hugo
template
in
it,
select
that
and
then
I
was
kind
of
pretty
much
ready
to
go.
The
one
trick
I
had
to
do
here
was
instead
of
using
the
normal
Hugo
build
command.
A
But
here
I
actually
have
like
an
IP
FS,
enabled
local
node
and
success
within
like
I.
Don't
know
how
many
clicks
that
was
I
think
I
should
go
back
and
count
it's
like
20
or
so,
and
like
a
one-line
text
or
two
lines
of
text,
entry,
you're
able
to
go
from
static,
static
site
creation
to
running
it
on
IP
of
s,
and
so
definitely
it's.
A
The
the
Deep
log
is
I
think
another
example
of
how
quick
and
easy
it
can
be
unstoppable
domains
also
has
a
kind
of
template
websites
for
getting
up
and
running
on
the
d
website,
and
so
lots
of
different
ways
to
do
this.
But
I
thought
this
was
a
particularly
slick
and
an
easy
to
plug
these
two
tools,
together
with
each
other.