--- title: Command Line Usage permalink: /docs/usage/ --- The Jekyll gem makes a `jekyll` executable available to you in your terminal. The `jekyll` program has several commands but the structure is always: ``` jekyll command [argument] [option] [argument_to_option] Examples: jekyll new site/ --blank jekyll serve --config _alternative_config.yml ``` Typically you'll use `jekyll serve` while developing locally and `jekyll build` when you need to generate the site for production. For a full list of options and their argument, see [Build Command Options](/docs/configuration/options/#build-command-options). Here are some of the most common commands: * `jekyll new PATH` - Creates a new Jekyll site with default gem-based theme at specified path. The directories will be created as necessary. * `jekyll new PATH --blank` - Creates a new blank Jekyll site scaffold at specified path. * `jekyll build` or `jekyll b` - Performs a one off build your site to `./_site` (by default). * `jekyll serve` or `jekyll s` - Builds your site any time a source file changes and serves it locally. * `jekyll clean` - Removes all generated files: destination folder, metadata file, Sass and Jekyll caches. * `jekyll help` - Shows help, optionally for a given subcommand, e.g. `jekyll help build`. * `jekyll new-theme` - Creates a new Jekyll theme scaffold. * `jekyll doctor` - Outputs any deprecation or configuration issues. To change Jekyll's default build behavior have a look through the [configuration options](/docs/configuration/).