Command Line Usage #
These examples assume local project installation instead of global installation.
# Searches the current directory, outputs to ./_site
npx @11ty/eleventy
If you’re using a global install of Eleventy, remove npx @11ty/
from the beginning of each command, like so:
# Global installation
eleventy
# `npx @11ty/eleventy` is the same as:
--input=. --output=_site
Read more about --input
and --output
.
A hypothetical template.md
in the current directory would be rendered to _site/template/index.html
. Read more at Permalinks.
# Use only a subset of template types
--formats=md,html,ejs
# Find out the most up-to-date list of commands (there are more)
--help
Re-run Eleventy when you save #
# Boot up a Browsersync web server to apply changes and
# refresh automatically. We’ll also --watch for you.
--serve
# Change the web server’s port—use localhost:8081
--serve --port=8081
Important Note: Browsersync requires a
<body>
tag in your template for live-reload to work properly.# Automatically run when input template files change.
# Useful if you have your own web server.
--watch
--quiet
if the Output is Too Noisy #
# Shhhhh—Don’t log so much to the console
--quiet
--dryrun
to do a Little Testing #
Runs without writing to the file system. Useful when debugging.
# Run Eleventy but don’t write any files
--dryrun
--config
to Change the Config file name #
# Override the default eleventy project config filename (.eleventy.js)
--config=myeleventyconfig.js
Examples #
Using the Same Input and Output #
Yes, you can use the same input
and output
directories, like so:
# Parse and write Markdown to HTML, respecting directory structure.
--input=. --output=. --formats=md
Careful with
--formats=html
here! If you run eleventy more than once, it’ll try to process the output files too. Read more at the HTML template docs.