Content configuration
Configure Git Sync with extra functionalities
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Configure Git Sync with extra functionalities
Last updated
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If you’d like to configure Git Sync further, you can add a .gitbook.yaml file at the root of your repository to tell GitBook how to parse your Git repository.
root: ./
​structure:
readme: README.md
summary: SUMMARY.md​
redirects:
previous/page: new-folder/page.mdThe path to lookup for your documentation defaults to the root directory of the repository. Here’s how you can tell GitBook to look into a ./docs folder:
root: ./docs/All other options that specify paths will be relative to this root folder. So if you define root as ./docs/ and then structure.summary as ./product/SUMMARY.md, GitBook will actually look for a file in ./docs/product/SUMMARY.md.‌
The structure accepts two properties:‌
readme: Your documentation’s first page. Its default value is ./README.md
summary: Your documentation’s table of contents. Its default value is ./SUMMARY.md
The value of those properties is a path to the corresponding files. The path is relative to the “root” option. For example, here’s how you can tell GitBook to look into a ./product folder for the first page and summary:
structure:
readme: ./product/README.md
summary: ./product/SUMMARY.mdWhen Git Sync is enabled, remember not to create or modify readme files through GitBook's UI. The readme file should be managed exclusively in your GitHub/GitLab repository to avoid conflicts and duplication issues.
The summary file is a Markdown file (.md) that should have the following structure:
‌# Summary​
## Use headings to create page groups like this one​
* [First page’s title](page1/README.md)
* [Some child page](page1/page1-1.md)
* [Some other child page](part1/page1-2.md)
* [Second page’s title](page2/README.md)
* [Some child page](page2/page2-1.md)
* [Some other child page](part2/page2-2.md)
## A second-page group​
* [Another page](another-page.md)Providing a custom summary file is optional. By default, GitBook will look for a file named SUMMARY.md in your root folder if specified in your config file, or at the root of the repository otherwise.
If you don’t specify a summary, and GitBook does not find a SUMMARY.md file at the root of your docs, GitBook will infer the table of contents from the folder structure and the Markdown files below.‌
Redirects allow you to define redirects in your .gitbook.yaml configuration file. The path is relative to the “root” option. For example, here’s how you can tell GitBook to redirect users accessing a past url /help to a new url /support
root: ./
redirects:
help: support.mdWith Git, when a file is moved many times, the file is removed and a new one is created. This makes it impossible for GitBook to know that a folder has been renamed, for example. Make sure to double-check and add redirects where needed.