Developing the website

Last updated:

|Edit this page

You can contribute to the PostHog documentation, handbook, and blog in two ways:

  1. You can create a pull request in GitHub for any page that has an Edit this page link on it. In this situation you must edit the page using the GitHub web editor interface. This method is suitable for text-only edits and basic file manipulation, such as renaming.

  2. You can run the posthog.com website locally and make changes there by creating a branch of the master codebase, committing changes to that branch and raising a pull request to merge those changes. This is the recommended method as it allows you to quickly preview your changes, as well as perform more complex changes easily.

Below, we'll explain how to set up option two.

Editing posthog.com locally

Before you begin

In order to run the PostHog website locally, you need the following installed:

  • Git – version control system
  • Node.js – server runtime
  • Yarn (version 1.x) – package manager for Node.js
  • Apple Rosetta (version 2) – dynamic binary translator for Apple silicon

If you are unfamiliar with using Git from the command line (or just prefer graphical interfaces), use the GitHub Desktop app.

You may also want to familiarize yourself with these resources:

Cloning the posthog.com repository

The posthog.com codebase is on GitHub at https://github.com/PostHog/posthog.com. To work on it locally, first you need to clone it to your disk:

  • via the command line

    You can clone the codebase from the command line using the following command:

    Terminal
    git clone git@github.com:PostHog/posthog.com.git
  • via GitHub Desktop

    You can also clone the repository with GitHub Desktop installed, from the posthog.com repository page, click the Code button and select Open with GitHub Desktop from the dropdown that appears.

    Open in GitHub Desktop

    You will then be prompted by the browser to confirm if you want to open the GitHub Desktop application. Select the affirmative action that has text such as Open GitHub Desktop.

    Once GitHub Desktop has opened you will be prompted to confirm the repository that is being cloned and the location on disk where you wish the code to be stored.

    GitHub Desktop clone to dialog

    Click Clone to clone the posthog.com repository to your local disk.

    GitHub Desktop cloning to disk

    Once the clone has completed the GitHub Desktop interface will change to the following:

    GitHub Desktop cloned successfully

    To view the code for the website click Open in Visual Studio Code. Dialogs may appear around permissions and trust as you open Visual Studio Code.

    Once you have Visual Studio Code open, select the Terminal menu option. Within the dropdown select New Terminal. This will open a new terminal window within Visual Studio Code:

    Visual Studio Code terminal

    Don't worry! We only need to run a few commands in the command line.

Running posthog.com locally

If you're using an Apple Silicon Mac (M1) then you'll need to run the following commands before using yarn:

Terminal
rm -rf ./node_modules
brew install vips

Type the following into the command line and press return:

Terminal
yarn

This runs the Yarn tool. When run standalone like this, it installs the dependency packages used by posthog.com. This may take a few minutes.

Once this command has finished executing, run the following:

Terminal
yarn start

This runs the local clone of the website, which you can use to preview changes you make before pushing them live. It takes a bit of time for some file processing and compilation to take place, but once it's completed you can access the locally running version of posthog.com via by visiting http://localhost:8001 in your web browser.

Any time you want to preview changes you are making to the local version of the website, all you have to do is run the yarn start again, wait for the command to finish running and then open http://localhost:8001 in your web browser.

Environment variables

Our website uses various APIs to pull in data from sites like GitHub (for contributors) and Ashby (our applicant tracking system). Without setting these environment variables, you may see various errors when building the site. Most of these errors are dismissible, and you can continue to edit the website.

If you're a core team member and need this data locally, you can:

  1. Ask the Website & Docs team for access to our Vercel account
  2. Install the Vercel CLI
  3. Run vercel pull
  4. Open .vercel/.env.development.local
  5. Copy a value and run in your terminal like: export VARIABLE_NAME=VALUE

Finding the content to edit

Once you have cloned the repo, the contents/ directory contains a few key areas:

  • docs/ = all of the documentation for PostHog's platform
  • handbook/ = the PostHog company handbook
  • blog/ = our blog posts

Inside each of these are a series of markdown files for you to edit.

Making edits

Creating a new Git branch

When editing locally, changes should be made on a new Git branch. Branches should be given an "at a glance" informative name. For example, posthog-website-contribution.

  • via the command line You can create a new Git branch from the command line by running:

    Terminal
    git checkout -b [new-branch-name]

    For example:

    Terminal
    git checkout -b posthog-website-contribution
  • via GitHub Desktop

    You can also create a new branch in GitHub Desktop by selecting the dropdown next to the Current Branch name and clicking New Branch.

    GitHub Desktop - new branch dropdown

    Then, in the dialog that follows, entering the new branch name.

    GitHub Desktop - new branch dialog

    Once you have a new branch, you can make changes.

Markdown details

Frontmatter

Most PostHog pages utilize frontmatter as a way of providing additional data to the page. Available frontmatter varies based on the template the page uses. Templates are determined based on the folder the file resides in:

Blog

Markdown files located in `/contents/blog``

markdown
---
date: 2021-11-16
title: The state of plugins on PostHog
rootPage: /blog
author: ["yakko-majuri"]
featuredVideo: https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/TCyCryTiTbQ
featuredImage: ../images/blog/running-content.png
featuredImageType: full
category: Guides
tags: ["Using PostHog", "Privacy"]
---
  • date: the date the blog was posted
  • title: the title that appears at the top of the blog post and on the blog listing page
  • rootPage: necessary for listing all blog posts on /blog. should always be set to /blog
  • author: the author(s) of the post. correlates to your handle located in /src/data/authors.json
  • featuredVideo: the iframe src of the video that appears at the top of the post. replaces the featured image on post pages.
  • featuredImage: the URL of the image that appears at the top of the post and on the blog listing page
  • featuredImageType: standard | full - determines the width of the featured image on the blog post
  • category: the broader category the post belongs to. one of the following:
      • CEO diaries
      • Engineering
      • General
      • Inside PostHog
      • PostHog news
      • Product growth
      • Startups
      • Using PostHog
  • tags: the more specific tag(s) the post belongs to. an array containing any number of the following:
      • ClickHouse
      • Comparisons
      • Explainers
      • Feature flags
      • Guides
      • Launch week
      • Marketing
      • Offsites
      • Open source
      • Privacy
      • Product analytics
      • Product engineers
      • Product metrics
      • Product updates
      • Release notes
      • Startups
      • Y Combinator
Tutorials

Markdown files located in /contents/tutorials

markdown
---
date: 2022-02-14
title: How to filter out internal users
author: ["joe-martin"]
featuredTutorial: false
featuredVideo: https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/2bptTniYPGc
tags: ['filters', 'settings']
---
  • date: the date the tutorial was posted
  • title: the title that appears at the top of the tutorial and on the tutorial listing page
  • author: the author(s) of the tutorial. Ccrrelates to your handle located in /src/data/authors.json
  • featuredTutorial: determines if tutorial should be featured on the homepage
  • featuredVideo: the iframe src of the video that appears at the top of the tutorial
  • featuredImage: the URL of the image that appears at the top of the tutorial and on the tutorial listing page
  • tags: the tag(s) the tutorial belongs to. an array containing any number of the following:
      • actions
      • apps
      • cdp
      • cohorts
      • configuration
      • correlation analysis
      • dashboards
      • data management
      • events
      • experimentation
      • feature flags
      • feature-flags
      • filters
      • funnels
      • group analytics
      • heatmaps
      • hogql
      • insights
      • lifecycle
      • paths
      • persons
      • product analytics
      • product os
      • retention
      • sentry
      • session replay
      • sessions
      • settings
      • site-apps
      • stickiness
      • subscriptions
      • surveys
      • toolbar
      • trends
      • user paths
      • zapier
Docs & Handbook

Markdown files located in /contents/docs and /contents/handbook

markdown
---
title: Contribute to the website: documentation, handbook, and blog
---
  • title: the title that appears at the top of the handbook / doc page
Comparison pages

Create a table on a "PostHog vs..." page with the following components. (You can see examples of how this is used in this pull request.)

Import the components at the top of the post content (after frontmatter):

import { ComparisonTable } from 'components/ComparisonTable'
import { ComparisonRow } from 'components/ComparisonTable/row'
import { ComparisonHeader } from 'components/ComparisonTable/header'

Create a table like:

<ComparisonTable column1="Company name 1" column2="Company name 2">
<ComparisonHeader category="Optional header row" />
<ComparisonRow column1={true} column2="Text" feature="Feature name" description="Feature descrpition" />
</ComparisonTable>

In ComparisonRow:

  • Values for column1 and column2 can be: {true} | {false} | "Text string"
  • feature is required but description can be omitted (only if not using that column for the entire table)
Customers

Markdown files located in /contents/customers

markdown
---
title: How Hasura improved conversion rates by 10-20% with PostHog
customer: Hasura
logo: ../images/customers/hasura/logo.svg
featuredImage: ../images/customers/hasura/featured.jpg
industries:
- Developer tool
users:
- Engineering
- UI
- UX
- Marketing teams
toolsUsed:
- Funnel Analysis
- Session Recording
- Self-Hosting
---
  • title: the title of the case study
  • customer: the name of the customer
  • logo: the customer logo
  • featuredImage: the image that appears in the card on the customers listing page
  • industries: a list of industries that apply to the company
  • users: a list of user types that use the company's product
  • toolsUsed: a list of highlighted PostHog tools used by the company
Plain

If the file doesn't reside in one of the above folders, it uses the plain template.

markdown
---
title: Example Components
showTitle: false
width: lg
noindex: true
---
  • title: the title that appears at the top of the page
  • showTitle: true | false - determines whether to show / hide the title at the top of the page
  • width: sm | md | lg | full - determines the width of the page
  • noindex: true | false - determines whether to index the page or not

You can often refer to the source of existing pages for more examples, but if in doubt, you can always ask for help.

Images/GIFs

For our Markdown, we use gatsby-remark-copy-linked-files.

This copies local files linked to/from Markdown files to the root directory.

If you need to upload images, you can place them in contents/images/. We recommend creating or using existing subfolders to keep images organized.

To include an image in a markdown file, you can use nice local references, like so:

markdown
![Twin Peaks](../images/02/IMG_4294-scaled.jpg)

In this case, Twin Peaks is the alt-text applied to the image.

Note that it may be necessary to change the folder depending on your file structure. For example, if you needed to go up two directories, this could be:

markdown
![Twin Peaks](../../../images/02/IMG_4294-scaled.jpg)

Notice the extra ../.

For most images, this plugin will automatically generate a range of sizes to optimize for the device and they'll even have a blurry low filesize loading image created to hold the place. Pretty cool.

Once you've made a new markdown file, you should link to it from the sidebar where appropriate.

The sidebar is generated from src/navs/index.js.

Redirects

Redirects are managed in vercel.json which is located in the root folder.

To declare a new redirect, open vercel.json and add an entry to the redirects list:

{ "source": "/docs/contributing/stack", "destination": "/docs/contribute/stack" }

The default HTTP status code is 308 (permanent), but if the redirect should be temporary (307), it can be updated like this:

{ "source": "/docs/contributing/stack", "destination": "/docs/contribute/stack", "permanent": false }

Committing changes

It's best to create commits that are focused on one specific area. For example, create one commit for textual changes and another for functional ones. Another example is creating a commit for changes to a section of the handbook and a different commit for updates to the documentation. This helps the pull request review process and also means specific commits can be cherry picked.

  • via the command line

    First, stage your changes:

    Terminal
    git add [path-to-file]

    For example:

    Terminal
    git add contents/docs/contribute/updating-documentation.md

    Once all the files that have been changed are staged, you can perform the commit:

    Terminal
    git commit -m '[short commit message]'

    For example:

    Terminal
    git commit -m 'Adding details on how to commit'
  • via GitHub Desktop

    Files that have been changed can be viewed within GitHub Desktop along with a diff of the specific change.

    Viewing changes in GitHub Desktop

    Select the files that you want to be part of the commit by ensuring the checkbox to the left of the file is checked within GitHub Desktop. Then, write a short descriptive commit message and click the Commit to... button.

    Making a commit in GitHub Desktop

Push changes to GitHub

In order to request that the changes you have made are merged into the main website branch you must first push them to GitHub.

  • via the command line

    Terminal
    git push origin [branch-name]

    For example:

    Terminal
    git push origin posthog-website-contribution

    When this is done, the command line will show output similar to the following:

    Terminal
    posthog-website-contribution $ git push origin posthog-website-contribution
    Total 0 (delta 0), reused 0 (delta 0), pack-reused 0
    remote:
    remote: Create a pull request for 'posthog-website-contribution' on GitHub by visiting:
    remote: https://github.com/PostHog/posthog.com/pull/new/posthog-website-contribution
    remote:
    To github.com:PostHog/posthog.com.git
    * [new branch] posthog-website-contribution -> posthog-website-contribution

    This output tells you that you can create a pull request by visiting a link. In the case above, the link is https://github.com/PostHog/posthog.com/pull/new/posthog-website-contribution. Follow the link to complete your pull request.

  • via GitHub Desktop

    Once you have committed the changes you want to push to GitHub, click the Push origin button.

    Push to origin from GitHub Desktop

Create a pull request

Create a pull request to request that your changes be merged into the main branch of the repository.

  • via the command line

    Navigate to the link shown when you push your branch to GitHub. For example, https://github.com/PostHog/posthog.com/pull/new/posthog-website-contribution shown below:

    Terminal
    posthog-website-contribution $ git push origin posthog-website-contribution
    Total 0 (delta 0), reused 0 (delta 0), pack-reused 0
    remote:
    remote: Create a pull request for 'posthog-website-contribution' on GitHub by visiting:
    remote: https://github.com/PostHog/posthog.com/pull/new/posthog-website-contribution
    remote:
    To github.com:PostHog/posthog.com.git
    * [new branch] posthog-website-contribution -> posthog-website-contribution
  • via GitHub Desktop

    With the branch published, click the Create pull request button.

    pull request from GitHub Desktop

    This will open up a page on github.com in your default web browser.

If you are pushing to an existing branch, navigate to the posthog.com repo and switch to the new branch using the dropdown:

GitHub branch switcher

Then, open the Contribute dropdown and click the Open pull request button.

Make the pull request title descriptive name and complete the detail requested in the body.

If you know who you would like to review the pull request, select them in the Reviewers dropdown.

Preview branch

After a series of checks are run (to ensure nothing in your pull request breaks the website), Vercel will generate a preview link available in the Vercel bot comment. This includes all of your changes, so you can preview before your pull request is merged.

Preview branch

Note: Checks are run automatically for PostHog org members and previous contributors. First time contributors will require authorization for checks to be run by a PostHog org member.

Deployment

To get changes into production, the website deploys automatically from master. The build takes 5-10 minutes.

Acknowledgements

This website is based on Gatsby and is hosted with Vercel.

Questions?

Was this page useful?

Next article

How PostHog.com works

PostHog.com is built and maintained in-house by the Website & Docs team . Service Purpose Vercel Hosting Gatsby Static site framework GitHub Source code repository Ashby (API) Applicant tracking system Algolia (API) Site search Strapi Headless CMS PostHog Analytics, feature flags Website content is stored in two places: Markdown/MDX files (in the GitHub repo ) - most website content Docs, handbook, most pages Strapi - user-generated content Community forum posts, community profiles

Read next article