Codeberg Pages is currently provided with a best effort approach. To be exact, the software behind this feature is currently in maintenance mode.
Please do not rely on it for critical websites, as we can't guarantee high availability like some other providers do.
Codeberg Pages allows you to easily publish static websites with a human-friendly address ({username}.codeberg.page
)
via Git on Codeberg.
Follow these simple steps below to get started, or check out the advanced usage below.
- Create a public repository named 'pages' in your user account or organization.
- Create static content, HTML, stylesheets, fonts or images. Name the homepage file
index.html
. - Push your content to the default branch of the new repository.
- You should now be able to access your content by visiting
{username}.codeberg.page
.
This project is developed "in-house" by Codeberg. You can find the source code in our repository.
See also:
Find out more in this section: |
---|
Using Custom Domains |
Troubleshooting |
Example: Docs as Code with Sphinx |
Pushing output from SSGs into Codeberg Pages |
Redirects |
Advanced Usage: Canonical URLs
The Codeberg Pages server responds to four different URLs:
https://raw.codeberg.page/username/reponame/
: raw content, uses correct MIME types (HTML is forbidden though) and is accessible with CORS.https://username.codeberg.page
: user page, points the default branch of a user's or organization'spages
repositoryhttps://username.codeberg.page/reponame/
: repo page, points to thepages
branch of the repositoryhttps://example.org
: custom domain, points to a repo of choice as outlined below
In all cases, you can append a branch using an @
(e.g. https://username.codeberg.page/@develop/README.md
).
If the branch name contains a slash (/
), they need to be replaced with a tilde (~
) (e.g. the branch docs/develop
can be accessed via https://username.codeberg.page/@docs~develop/README.md
).
Advanced Usage: Custom error page for 404s
You can replace the default 404 error page that Codeberg Pages will show for missing pages with your own version if you prefer. To do so start by writing your own HTML file that you want to serve instead.
After creating the HTML with your custom error message, save it as 404.html
in the root of your repository that you use to serve your Codeberg Page.
From then on, your 404.html
file will be served when the error is encountered.
Do you have questions, feedback or have you found a bug?
The source code for Codeberg Pages is maintained over at the Pages Server repository; feel free to head there to provide some feedback, suggestions, bug reports or even patches. If you need general community support or have questions, Codeberg/Community is a better place to ask, as more people will be watching there to help you out! We really appreciate your contribution.
Installing Pages for your own Forgejo instance
Codeberg Pages works with any Forgejo host out there. So if you are running your own Forgejo, you can absolutely run it yourself and help with the development. Check out the Pages Server repository for more information.