This script purges relevant pages from the cache on Cloudflare when adding a new post to a Jekyll repository. In addition to the tag pages matching the tags of the latest post and the post itself, it purges the following hardcoded pages:
- .
- . /feed.xml
- . /sitemap.xml
- ./archive
sitemap.xml
is also submitted to Google so that the new content is crawled quicker.
$ dotnet script main.csx -- path_to_jekyll_repo
$ dotnet script https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Sankra/cloudflare-cache-purger/master/main.csx -- path_to_jekyll_repo
Caution, do not run scripts from the Internet that you do not fully understand.
The script takes one argument. This is the path to the Jekyll repo
.
If a config.json
file is added to the same directory, the script will try to actually purge the cache. If this file is missing, the script only prints what it would’ve done.
config.json
should look like this:
{
"baseAddress": "[baseAdress]",
"cloudflareApiKey": "[cloudflareApiKey]",
"cloudflareEmail": "[cloudflareEmail]",
"cloudflareZoneId": "[cloudflareZoneId]"
}
baseAdress
is the URL to your site.cloudflareApiKey
is your Cloudflare API key. You can see this on your profile.cloudflareEmail
is the email to your user on Cloudflare.cloudflareZoneId
is the id of this site on Cloudflare. You can see this in the overview tab for your site.
If the script cannot find config.json
, the generated paths will only be written to standard out. The default site is https://hjerpbakk.com
, but this can easily be changed to your domain within the script.
A dry run can also be forced by using a second argument:
$ dotnet script main.csx -- path_to_jekyll_repo dry_run
To use this with Cloudflare, clone the repo, create config.json
from config.default.json
and input your configuration values.
Running the script now will call the Cloudflare API and do the needful.