Troubleshooting
If you ever run into problems installing or using Jekyll, here are a few tips that might be of help. If the problem you’re experiencing isn’t covered below, please check out our other help resources as well.
- Installation Problems
- Problems running Jekyll
- Base-URL Problems
- Configuration problems
- Markup Problems
Installation Problems
If you encounter errors during gem installation, you may need to install the header files for compiling extension modules for Ruby 2.0.0. This can be done on Ubuntu or Debian by running:
On Red Hat, CentOS, and Fedora systems you can do this by running:
On NearlyFreeSpeech you need to run the following commands before installing Jekyll:
To install RubyGems on Gentoo:
On Windows, you may need to install RubyInstaller DevKit.
On Mac OS X, you may need to update RubyGems (using sudo
only if necessary):
If you still have issues, you can download and install new Command Line
Tools (such as gcc
) using the command
which may allow you to install native gems using this command (again using
sudo
only if necessary):
Note that upgrading Mac OS X does not automatically upgrade Xcode itself (that can be done separately via the App Store), and having an out-of-date Xcode.app can interfere with the command line tools downloaded above. If you run into this issue, upgrade Xcode and install the upgraded Command Line Tools.
Jekyll & Mac OS X 10.11
With the introduction of System Integrity Protection, several directories
that were previously writable are now considered system locations and are no
longer available. Given these changes, there are a couple of simple ways to get
up and running. One option is to change the location where the gem will be
installed (again using sudo
only if necessary):
Alternatively, Homebrew can be installed and used to set up Ruby. This can be done as follows:
Once Homebrew is installed, the second step is easy:
Advanced users (with more complex needs) may find it helpful to choose one of a number of Ruby version managers (RVM, rbenv, chruby, etc.) in which to install Jekyll.
If you elect to use one of the above methods to install Ruby, it might be
necessary to modify your $PATH
variable using the following command:
GUI apps can modify the $PATH
as follows:
Either of these approaches are useful because /usr/local
is considered a
“safe” location on systems which have SIP enabled, they avoid potential
conflicts with the version of Ruby included by Apple, and it keeps Jekyll and
its dependencies in a sandboxed environment. This also has the added
benefit of not requiring sudo
when you want to add or remove a gem.
Could not find a JavaScript runtime. (ExecJS::RuntimeUnavailable)
This error can occur during the installation of jekyll-coffeescript
when
you don’t have a proper JavaScript runtime. To solve this, either install
execjs
and therubyracer
gems, or install nodejs
. Check out
issue #2327 for more info.
Problems running Jekyll
On Debian or Ubuntu, you may need to add /var/lib/gems/1.8/bin/
to your path
in order to have the jekyll
executable be available in your Terminal.
Base-URL Problems
If you are using base-url option like:
… then make sure that you access the site at:
It won’t work to just access:
Configuration problems
The order of precedence for conflicting configuration settings is as follows:
- Command-line flags
- Configuration file settings
- Defaults
That is: defaults are overridden by options specified in _config.yml
,
and flags specified at the command-line will override all other settings
specified elsewhere.
Markup Problems
The various markup engines that Jekyll uses may have some issues. This page will document them to help others who may run into the same problems.
Liquid
The latest version, version 2.0, seems to break the use of {{
in
templates. Unlike previous versions, using {{
in 2.0 triggers the
following error:
Excerpts
Since v1.0.0, Jekyll has had automatically-generated post excerpts. Since
v1.1.0, Jekyll also passes these excerpts through Liquid, which can cause
strange errors where references don’t exist or a tag hasn’t been closed. If you
run into these errors, try setting excerpt_separator: ""
in your
_config.yml
, or set it to some nonsense string.
Please report issues you encounter!
If you come across a bug, please create an issue on GitHub describing the problem and any work-arounds you find so we can document it here for others.