/Red-Teaming-Notes

Notion to Hugo Transition

Primary LanguageTypeScriptGNU General Public License v3.0GPL-3.0

Notion-Hugo

image

Notion-Hugo allows you to use Notion as your CMS and deploy your pages as a static website with Hugo. So you have the full power of Notion for creating new content, with Hugo and its wonderful ecosystem of themes take care of the rest for you.

Get Started

Create a new GitHub repository from this template

Click the green "Use this template" button in the upper-right corner to create your repo from this template. Choose "public" for the repository visibility.

Use this template button

Create a Notion integration

Visit my integrations and login with your Notion account.

Click on "Create new integration" to create a new internal integration.

Create new integration

In the capabilities section, select "Read Content" and "Read user information including email address". The "Read Content" permission is necessary for Notion-Hugo to pull your Notion content, and the "Read user information including email address" permission is used to fill front matters with author information. Notion-Hugo does not collect any of your information.

Setup capabilities

Click the submit button to finish creating the Notion integration.

Setup secrets for GitHub Action

Copy the Internal Integration Token.

Copy the Internal Integration Token

Navigate to the GitHub repo you just created, click on Settings -> Secrets -> Actions.

Click the "New Repository Secret" button on the top right.

Setup secrets for GitHub Action

Add a new secret with name NOTION_TOKEN, paste the copied token into the secret field. Click the green "Add secret" button to save the change.

Add secret NOTION_TOKEN

Duplicate the Notion Template

Duplicate this Notion Template into your own workspace.

Add connection to the Notion Page

Visit the page you just duplicated, click the ellipsis button on the top right and add the integration you just created as a connection.

Add connection to the Notion Page

Configure you Hugo site

On the page you just shared with the integration, click on the "share" button again, then click the "copy link" button on the bottom right to copy the link to this page.

Copy link

Now navigate back to your GitHub repository, open the notion-hugo.config.ts file, click to edit the file.

Edit the file on GitHub

Replace the page_url with the link you just copied.

Replace page_url

Click the commit changes button at the bottom to save the file.

Commit changes

Navigate to Settings -> Pages to enable GitHub Pages for your repository.

Enable GitHub Pages

There is one final step to make your website work correctly. Copy the url of your new website, then go to file config/_default/config.toml and change the baseURL from https://example.org/ to the url you just copied. Commit the changes and wait for your website to be deployed.

Now, visit your website and you will see your content from Notion is rendered into static webpages successfully.

Next Step

Visit the wiki to learn more about how to

  • Pick a different Hugo theme
  • Deploy to other platforms
  • Configure Notion-DoIt

FAQ

Will the notion-hugo blog be synced with me Notion?

Yes. By default, the notion-hugo blog will be re-generated every 1 hour through CD action in Github Actions. You can change this in .github/workflows/cd.yml using cron option:

name: CD

on:
  ...

  schedule:
    - cron: '0 * * * *' # run every hour

Be aware that Github will allow you to re-run the job no more often than once per 5 minutes.

What if I want to re-deploy immediately as Notion database updates?

This repo at the moment supports only cron option.

But, as an idea or direction - you could look for ways to listen for updates in Notion database and trigger Github Action when Notion database is updated. Usually webhooks are used for that purpose - but at the moment Notion has no official webhook support. So you would need to find a work around.

License

This project is open sourced under the GNU GPL license v3, you may use the project under the terms if you are creating an open source project under a license compatible with it.

Consider purchasing a commercial license if your project is not compatible with GPLv3.