The method I'm currently using (if other want to help) is:
* Add fmt.Println(b.DumpTxtar()) after the Build step
* Add that to a files var and pass that to Test(t, files) or similar
* Then, if possible, try to reduce the files/content down to what's needed in test.
Note that if the test is small, it's probably faster just to manually re-create the test.
There are some breaking changes in this commit, see #11455.
Closes#11455Closes#11549
This fixes a set of bugs (see issue list) and it is also paying some technical debt accumulated over the years. We now build with Staticcheck enabled in the CI build.
The performance should be about the same as before for regular sized Hugo sites, but it should perform and scale much better to larger data sets, as objects that uses lots of memory (e.g. rendered Markdown, big JSON files read into maps with transform.Unmarshal etc.) will now get automatically garbage collected if needed. Performance on partial rebuilds when running the server in fast render mode should be the same, but the change detection should be much more accurate.
A list of the notable new features:
* A new dependency tracker that covers (almost) all of Hugo's API and is used to do fine grained partial rebuilds when running the server.
* A new and simpler tree document store which allows fast lookups and prefix-walking in all dimensions (e.g. language) concurrently.
* You can now configure an upper memory limit allowing for much larger data sets and/or running on lower specced PCs.
We have lifted the "no resources in sub folders" restriction for branch bundles (e.g. sections).
Memory Limit
* Hugos will, by default, set aside a quarter of the total system memory, but you can set this via the OS environment variable HUGO_MEMORYLIMIT (in gigabytes). This is backed by a partitioned LRU cache used throughout Hugo. A cache that gets dynamically resized in low memory situations, allowing Go's Garbage Collector to free the memory.
New Dependency Tracker: Hugo has had a rule based coarse grained approach to server rebuilds that has worked mostly pretty well, but there have been some surprises (e.g. stale content). This is now revamped with a new dependency tracker that can quickly calculate the delta given a changed resource (e.g. a content file, template, JS file etc.). This handles transitive relations, e.g. $page -> js.Build -> JS import, or $page1.Content -> render hook -> site.GetPage -> $page2.Title, or $page1.Content -> shortcode -> partial -> site.RegularPages -> $page2.Content -> shortcode ..., and should also handle changes to aggregated values (e.g. site.Lastmod) effectively.
This covers all of Hugo's API with 2 known exceptions (a list that may not be fully exhaustive):
Changes to files loaded with template func os.ReadFile may not be handled correctly. We recommend loading resources with resources.Get
Changes to Hugo objects (e.g. Page) passed in the template context to lang.Translate may not be detected correctly. We recommend having simple i18n templates without too much data context passed in other than simple types such as strings and numbers.
Note that the cachebuster configuration (when A changes then rebuild B) works well with the above, but we recommend that you revise that configuration, as it in most situations should not be needed. One example where it is still needed is with TailwindCSS and using changes to hugo_stats.json to trigger new CSS rebuilds.
Document Store: Previously, a little simplified, we split the document store (where we store pages and resources) in a tree per language. This worked pretty well, but the structure made some operations harder than they needed to be. We have now restructured it into one Radix tree for all languages. Internally the language is considered to be a dimension of that tree, and the tree can be viewed in all dimensions concurrently. This makes some operations re. language simpler (e.g. finding translations is just a slice range), but the idea is that it should also be relatively inexpensive to add more dimensions if needed (e.g. role).
Fixes#10169Fixes#10364Fixes#10482Fixes#10630Fixes#10656Fixes#10694Fixes#10918Fixes#11262Fixes#11439Fixes#11453Fixes#11457Fixes#11466Fixes#11540Fixes#11551Fixes#11556Fixes#11654Fixes#11661Fixes#11663Fixes#11664Fixes#11669Fixes#11671Fixes#11807Fixes#11808Fixes#11809Fixes#11815Fixes#11840Fixes#11853Fixes#11860Fixes#11883Fixes#11904Fixes#7388Fixes#7425Fixes#7436Fixes#7544Fixes#7882Fixes#7960Fixes#8255Fixes#8307Fixes#8863Fixes#8927Fixes#9192Fixes#9324
The page images selection order as follows:
1. Page's images parameter, image resources are supported.
2. Page's image resources that naming in *feature*, *cover* or *thumbnail* pattern.
3. If no page images specified, then the first one of site's images will be used as the fallback, supports site resources.
This introduces a more automatic way of increasing the log levels for deprecation log statements based on the version it was deprecated.
The thresholds are a little arbitrary, but
* We log INFO for 6 releases
* We log WARN for another 6 releases
* THen ERROR (failing the build)
This should give theme authors plenty of time to catch up without having the log filled with warnings.
Removes emoji code conversion from the page and shortcode parsers. Emoji
codes in markdown are now passed to Goldmark, where the goldmark-emoji
extension converts them to decimal numeric character references.
This disables emoji rendering for the alternate content formats: html,
asciidoc, org, pandoc, and rst.
Fixes#7332Fixes#11587Closes#11598
Which supports all the existing actions: resize, crop, fit, fill.
But it also allows plain format conversions:
```
{{ $img = $img.Process "webp" }}
```
Which will be a simple re-encoding of the source image.
Fixes#11483
A common pattern for Tailwind 3 is to mount that file to get it on the server watch list.
A common pattern is also to add hugo_stats.json to .gitignore.
This has meant that the first time you start the server (no hugo_stats.json), it just doesn't work as expected.
Fixes#11264
Before this change, data files from Hugo modules were always mounted at the
root of the `data` directory. The File and FileMetaInfo structs for modules
are different from 'native' data directories.
This changes how the keyParts for data files are generated so that data
from modules or native directories are treated the same.
1 .Create sitemapindex in root of publishDir (will contain link to sitemap.xml in defaultContentLanguage site)
2. Create index.html in root of publishDir (will redirect to defaultContentLanguage site)
Fixes#11229
We could reset and rerun it on server rebuilds, but that report needs a full build to make sense.
Also clean up the config vs flags in this area: Make all config settings match the flags e.g. `printPathWarnings`, but set up aliases for the
old.
Fixes#11187
* Move config loading to the page package
* Fix a lower bound panic for the `:sections` slice syntax.
* Always return the `:title`
* Add some permalinks integration tests
* Also see issues below
Fixes#9448Fixes#11184
See #8523
Allows using permalink configuration for sections (branch bundles) and
also for taxonomy pages. Extends the current permalink configuration to
be able to specified per page kind while also staying backward compatible:
all permalink patterns not dedicated to a certain kind, get automatically
added for both normal pages and term pages.
Fixes#8523
Primary motivation is documentation, but it will also hopefully simplify the code.
Also,
* Lower case the default output format names; this is in line with the custom ones (map keys) and how
it's treated all the places. This avoids doing `stringds.EqualFold` everywhere.
Closes#10896Closes#10620
This applies two related fixes/improvements:
* The --gc now keeps empty `_resources/_gen/images` etc folders, even if empty. This should have been the behaviour
from the start.
* Also, if removal of an empty dir on Windows fails with the "used by another process" error, just ignore it for now.
Fixes#10781
This also speeds up situations where you only need the fragments/toc and not the rendered content, e.g. Related
with fragments type indexing:
```bash
name old time/op new time/op delta
RelatedSite-10 12.3ms ± 2% 10.7ms ± 1% -12.95% (p=0.029 n=4+4)
name old alloc/op new alloc/op delta
RelatedSite-10 38.6MB ± 0% 38.2MB ± 0% -1.08% (p=0.029 n=4+4)
name old allocs/op new allocs/op delta
RelatedSite-10 117k ± 0% 115k ± 0% -1.36% (p=0.029 n=4+4)
```
Fixes#10750
The main topic of this commit is that you can now index fragments (content heading identifiers) when calling `.Related`.
You can do this by:
* Configure one or more indices with type `fragments`
* The name of those index configurations maps to an (optional) front matter slice with fragment references. This allows you to link
page<->fragment and page<->page.
* This also will index all the fragments (heading identifiers) of the pages.
It's also possible to use type `fragments` indices in shortcode, e.g.:
```
{{ $related := site.RegularPages.Related .Page }}
```
But, and this is important, you need to include the shortcode using the `{{<` delimiter. Not doing so will create infinite loops and timeouts.
This commit also:
* Adds two new methods to Page: Fragments (can also be used to build ToC) and HeadingsFiltered (this is only used in Related Content with
index type `fragments` and `enableFilter` set to true.
* Consolidates all `.Related*` methods into one, which takes either a `Page` or an options map as its only argument.
* Add `context.Context` to all of the content related Page API. Turns out it wasn't strictly needed for this particular feature, but it will
soon become usefil, e.g. in #9339.
Closes#10711
Updates #9339
Updates #10725
Note that this is backed by a LRU cache (which we soon shall see more usage of), so if you're a heavy user of cached partials it may be evicted and
refreshed if needed. But in most cases every partial is only invoked once.
This commit also adds a timeout (the global `timeout` config option) to make infinite recursion in partials
easier to reason about.
```
name old time/op new time/op delta
IncludeCached-10 8.92ms ± 0% 8.48ms ± 1% -4.87% (p=0.016 n=4+5)
name old alloc/op new alloc/op delta
IncludeCached-10 6.65MB ± 0% 5.17MB ± 0% -22.32% (p=0.002 n=6+6)
name old allocs/op new allocs/op delta
IncludeCached-10 117k ± 0% 71k ± 0% -39.44% (p=0.002 n=6+6)
```
Closes#4086
Updates #9588
Both will of course work, but hugo.toml will win if both are set.
We should have done this a long time ago, of course, but the reason I'm picking this up now is that my VS Code setup by default picks up some
JSON config schema from some random other software which also names its config files config.toml.
Fixes#8979
So you can do `process.env.HUGO_PUBLISHDIR` in your `postcss.config.js` to figure out where Hugo publishes
its files.
Note that the value will always be an absolute file path and will point to a directory on disk even when running `hugo server` in memory mode.
If you write to this folder from PostCSS when running the server, you could run the server with one of these flags:
```
hugo server --renderToDisk
hugo server --renderStaticToDisk
```
Fixes#10554
We do lazy initialization and (potentially) reuse of an output format's rendered content. We do this evaluation when we
start a new rendering a new output format. There are, however, situation where these borders gets crossed (e.g.
accessing content from another output format). We have a check for this in place for most cases, but not the content
rendering of inner markdown blocks inside shortcodes. This patch applies that same logic to the newly introduced
RenderContent method (which is not available from the templates).
Fixes#10391
In `v0.103.0` we added support for `resources.PostProcess` for all file types, not just HTML. We had benchmarks that said we were fine in that department, but those did not consider the static file syncing.
This fixes that by:
* Making sure that the /static syncer always gets its own file system without any checks for the post process token.
* For dynamic files (e.g. rendered HTML files) we add an additional check to make sure that we skip binary files (e.g. images)
Fixes#10328
This issue was introduced in `v0.102.0`.
In 223bf28004 we removed the byte source from the parsed page result, which
meant we had to preserve exact positioning for all elements. This introduced some new `TypeIgnore` tokens
which we, wrongly, assumed didn't matter where we put in the result slice (they should be ignored anyway).
But it seems that this broke the logic where we determine if it's positional or named params in the case
where the paramater value contains escaped quoutes.
This commit makes sure that these ignore tokens (the back slashes) are never sent back to the client, which is how it was before `v0.102.0`.
This commit also fixes some lost error information in that same commit.
Fixes#10236
Note that this has only been a problem with "raw dates" in TOML files in /data and similar. The predefined front matter
dates `.Date` etc. are converted to a Go Time and has worked fine even after upgrading to v2 of the go-toml lib.
Fixes#9979
This commit adds a new `.InnerDeindent` method to the shortcode context, which is `.Inner` with any
indendation removed. This is then used in the built-in `highlight` shortcode to prevent the extra
whitespace getting hightlighted.
Fixes#4717
* Record the leading whitespace (tabs, spaces) before the shortcode when parsing the page.
* Apply that indentation to the rendered result of shortcodes without inner content (where the user will apply indentation).
Fixes#9946
The motivation behind this is not to make it easier to publish Markdown files, as that sounds unusual.
This is mainly meant for shortcodes that produces Markdown to be inlined.
You would do this by creating shortcodes with `*.md` suffix (e.g. `layouts/shortcodes/myshortcode.md`).
This output format is defined as plain text, and will use Go's much more lenient text template parser.
Updates #9821
It has been deprecated for a long time, its v1 version is not maintained anymore, and there are many known issues. Goldmark should be
a mature replacement by now.
Closes#9934
There may be sites in the wild that depends on the faulty behaviour of IsDescendant/IsAncestor when comparing to itself, but
* The documentation and common sense says that a thing cannot be descendant or ancestor to itself.
* The bug introduced in `HasMenuCurrent` comes directly from that confusion.
Fixes#9846
This commit replaces the main part of `helpers.StripHTML` with Go's implementation in its html/template package.
It's a little slower, but correctness is more important:
```bash
BenchmarkStripHTMLOld-10 680316 1764 ns/op 728 B/op 4 allocs/op
BenchmarkStripHTMLNew-10 384520 3099 ns/op 2089 B/op 10 allocs/op
```
Fixes#9199Fixes#9909Closes#9410
Note that we will now fail if `inlineImports` is enabled and we cannot resolve an import.
You can work around this by either:
* Use url imports or imports with media queries.
* Set `skipInlineImportsNotFound=true` in the options
Also get the argument order in the different NewFileError* funcs in line.
Fixes#9895
* Redo the server error template
* Always add the content file context if relevant
* Remove some now superflous error string matching
* Move the server error template to _server/error.html
* Add file context (with position) to codeblock render blocks
* Improve JS build errors
Fixes#9892Fixes#9891Fixes#9893
* Add file context to minifier errors when publishing
* Misc fixes (see issues)
* Allow custom server error template in layouts/server/error.html
To get to this, this commit also cleans up and simplifies the code surrounding errors and files. This also removes the usage of `github.com/pkg/errors`, mostly because of https://github.com/pkg/errors/issues/223 -- but also because most of this is now built-in to Go.
Fixes#9852Fixes#9857Fixes#9863
These are not documented, and they don't belong on Page. We should consider having author a first class citizen of Hugo, but as it is not it's better modelled as a taxonomy.
And make both .Resources and resources implement it.
This gets us 2 new methods/functions, so you can now also do:
* .Resources.Get
* resources.ByType
Note that GetRemote is not covered by this interface, as that is only available as a global template function.
Fixes#8653
This commit adds a .Data object (a map with `Body`, `StatusCode` etc.) to the .Err returned from `resources.GetRemote`, which means you can now do:
```
{{ with .Err }}
{{ range $k, $v := .Data }}
{{ end }}
{{ end }}
```
Fixes#9708
* @warn and Sass deprecations are printed as WARN
* @debug is currently logged as INFO (needs the `--verbose` flag). We may adjust this if it gets too chatty.
Fixes#9683
This commit prevents the most commons case of infinite recursion in link render hooks when the `linkify` option is enabled (see below). This is always a user error, but getting a `stack overflow` (the current stack limit in Go is 1 GB on 64-bit, 250 MB on 32-bit) error isn't very helpful. This fix will not prevent all such errors, though, but we may do better once #9570 is in place.
So, these will fail:
```
<a href="{{ .Destination | safeURL }}" >{{ .Text | markdownify }}</a>
<a href="{{ .Destination | safeURL }}" >{{ .Text | .Page.RenderString }}</a>
```
`.Text` is already rendered to `HTML`. The above needs to be rewritten to:
```
<a href="{{ .Destination | safeURL }}" >{{ .Text | safeHTML }}</a>
<a href="{{ .Destination | safeURL }}" >{{ .Text | safeHTML }}</a>
```
Fixes#8959
For the Position in code blocks we try to match the .Inner with the original source. This isn't always possible.
This commits avoids panics in these situations.
Fixes#9627
You can now create custom hook templates for code blocks, either one for all (`render-codeblock.html`) or for a given code language (e.g. `render-codeblock-go.html`).
We also used this new hook to add support for diagrams in Hugo:
* Goat (Go ASCII Tool) is built-in and enabled by default; just create a fenced code block with the language `goat` and start draw your Ascii diagrams.
* Another popular alternative for diagrams in Markdown, Mermaid (supported by GitHub), can also be implemented with a simple template. See the Hugo documentation for more information.
Updates #7765Closes#9538Fixes#9553Fixes#8520Fixes#6702Fixes#9558