Named segments can be defined in `hugo.toml`.
* Eeach segment consists of zero or more `exclude` filters and zero or more `include` filters.
* Eeach filter consists of one or more field Glob matchers.
* Eeach filter in a section (`exclude` or `include`) is ORed together, each matcher in a filter is ANDed together.
The current list of fields that can be filtered are:
* path as defined in https://gohugo.io/methods/page/path/
* kind
* lang
* output (output format, e.g. html).
It is recommended to put coarse grained filters (e.g. for language and output format) in the excludes section, e.g.:
```toml
[segments.segment1]
[[segments.segment1.excludes]]
lang = "n*"
[[segments.segment1.excludes]]
no = "en"
output = "rss"
[[segments.segment1.includes]]
term = "{home,term,taxonomy}"
[[segments.segment1.includes]]
path = "{/docs,/docs/**}"
```
By default, Hugo will render all segments, but you can enable filters by setting the `renderSegments` option or `--renderSegments` flag, e.g:
```
hugo --renderSegments segment1,segment2
```
For segment `segment1` in the configuration above, this will:
* Skip rendering of all languages matching `n*`, e.g. `no`.
* Skip rendering of the output format `rss` for the `en` language.
* It will render all pages of kind `home`, `term` or `taxonomy`
* It will render the `/docs` section and all pages below.
Fixes#10106
* Add --pprof flag to server to enable profile debugging.
* Don't cache the resource content, it seem to eat memory on bigger sites.
* Keep --printMemoryUsag running in server
Fixes#11974
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
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.
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
Change the default cache directory to `$TMPDIR/hugo_cache_$USER`, so
that multi-user systems do not have caches that interfere with each
other. The other cache-choosing logic (e.g. Netlify exceptions,
configuration options) are not affected.
Fixes#7391
* commands: Add TLS/HTTPS support to hugo server
The "auto cert" handling in this PR is backed by mkcert (see link below).
To get this up and running on a new PC, you can:
```
hugo server trust
hugo server --tlsAuto
```
When `--tlsAuto` (or `--tlsCertFile` and `--tlsKeyFile`) is set and no `--baseURL` is provided as a flag, the server is
started with TLS and `https` as the protocol.
Note that you only need to run `hugo server trust` once per PC.
If you already have the key and the cert file (e.g. by using mkcert directly), you can do:
```
hugo server --tlsCertFile mycert.pem --tlsKeyFile mykey.pem
```
See https://github.com/FiloSottile/mkcertFixes#11064
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
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
* 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