Add validation before creating aliases:
* Prevent creating aliases outside webroot (public/ dir)
* Skip empty "" alias
* Skip "/" → "/index.html", which gets overwritten anyway
* Refuse to create Windows-invalid filenames on Windows;
warn on other platforms
* In case of invalid aliases, after skipping them,
return `err = nil` to prevent the error passing up
all the way to `hugolib.Render()` and causing Hugo to abort.
* Update alias tests.
Fixes#701: Add support for alias with whitespace
Fixes#1418: Add validation for alias
It currently handles --baseUrl to --baseURL, and --uglyUrls to --uglyURLs.
Special thanks to Eric Paris (@eparis) for writing the
"normalized name" support in Cobra, and for showing us
how it is used in Kubernetes.
See Issue #959
Increases clarity on the different between `section` and `type`.
The current `section` information here is wrong (sections can *not* be specified in front matter). This caused quite the headache. This change fixes this and also adds `type`, since it *can* be specified in front matter.
A new "published" setting that is the opposite of "draft" is added and
left intentionally undocumented.
This setting comes from jekyll and eases the transition to hugo
greatly. We leave it undocumented so that folks don't rely on it, but
also don't shoot themselves in the foot during a jekyll migration.
The foot-shooting occurs if they have only a few documents that were
drafts ("published: false") in the jekyll version of their site and
don't notice that they were published in the migration to hugo.
Simple ioutil.ReadFile is used for reading file contents but it reads
all of the file contents and copies them into the memory and is run in a
single goroutine. It causes much memory consumption at copying media
files in content directory to publish directory and it is not good at
performance.
This improves the both issue by replacing ReadFile with LazyFileReader.
It postpones reading the file contents until it is really needed. As the
result, actual file read is run in parallelized goroutine. It improves
performance especially in a really big site.
In addition, if this reader is called from io.Copy, it does not copy the
file contents into the memory but just copies them into destination
file. It improves much memory consumption issue when the site has many
media files.
Fix#1181