As documented in commit 30eea3915b,
some filenames have changed due to cache busting of PNG and Webp images.
This resolves recent TestImageOperationsGolden failure on arm64, ppc64le
and s390x.
See #6387 and #8729
`go-toml/v2`'s unmarshaler does not specify zone name even if value has
offset explicitly.
To make time-formatting behaviour consistent, convert them into string
in hugo.
Close#8895
The old implementation had some issues, mostly related to the context (e.g. name, file paths) passed to the template.
This new implementation is using the exact same code path for evaluating the pages as in a regular build.
This also makes it more robust and easier to reason about in a multilingual setup.
Now, if you are explicit about the target path, Hugo will now always pick the correct mount and language:
```bash
hugo new content/en/posts/my-first-post.md
```
Fixes#9032Fixes#7589Fixes#9043Fixes#9046Fixes#9047
Original regexp used a char class which caused the regexp to only
check 1 symbol instead of a substring like "See" and "Closes".
So it would match `e #x` instead of `See #x` and many other
weird combinations.
Tests were passing as they never checked against an input that
would confuse that regexp.
Found with go-critic static analyzer, `badRegexp` checker.
* This now uses the `golang:1.17.2-buster` Docker image which runs GLIBC 2.28-10.
* Also added a build hook to warn us if this happens again in the future.
Fixes#8955
Previously, *minifyTransformation.Transform suppressed the
error returned by t.m.Minify. This meant that when minification
returned an error, the error would not reach the user. Instead,
minification would silently fail. For example, if a JavaScript
file included a call to the Date constructor with:
new Date(2020, 04, 02)
The package that the minification library uses to parse JS files,
github.com/tdewolff/parse would return an error, since "04" would
be parsed as a legacy octal. However, the JS file would remain
un-minified with no error.
Fixing this is not as simple as replacing "_" with an "err" in
*minifyTransformation.Transform, however (though this is
necessary). If we only returned this error from Transform,
then hugolib.TestResourceMinifyDisabled would fail. Instead of
being a no-op, as TestResourceMinifyDisabled expects, using the
"minify" template function with a "disableXML=true" config
setting instead returns the error, "minifier does not exist for
mimetype."
The "minifier does not exist" error is returned because of the
way minifiers.New works. If the user's config disables
minification for a particular MIME type, minifiers.New does
not add it to the resulting Client's *minify.M. However, this
also means that when the "minify" template function is executed,
a *resourceAdapter's transformations still add a minification.
When it comes time to call the minify.Minifier for a specific
MIME type via *M.MinifyMimetype, the github.com/tdewolff/minify
library throws the "does not exist" error for the missing MIME
type.
The solution was to change minifiers.New so, instead of skipping
a minifier for each disabled MIME type, it adds a NoOpMinifier,
which simply copies the source to the destination without
minification. This means that when the "minify" template
function is used for a particular resource, and that resource's
MIME type has minification disabled, minification is genuinely
skipped, and does not result in an error.
In order to add this, I've fixed a possibly unwanted interaction
between minifiers.TestConfigureMinify and
hugolib.TestResourceMinifyDisabled. The latter disables
minification and expects minification to be a no-op. The former
disables minification and expects it to result in an error. The
only reason hugolib.TestResourceMinifyDisabled passes in the
original code is that the "does not exist" error is suppressed.
However, we shouldn't suppress minification errors, since they
can leave users perplexed. I've changed the test assertion in
minifiers.TestConfigureMinify to expect no errors and a no-op
if minification is disabled for a particular MIME type.
Fixes#8954
The documentation of the FormatAccounting and FormatCurrency
functions could be clearer in terms of how the precision param
works. This commit makes it more explicit that adding a precision
of < 2 will not format the return values to include fewer decimals.
Resolves#8858
Note that this commit has nothing to do with "Hugo not working with Go 1.17", but this is the simplest fix of some build related issues in Hugo 0.88.0.
Updates #8952
Updates #8955