The main use case for this is to use with resources.PostProcess and resources.PostCSS with purgecss.
You would normally set it up to extract keywords from your templates, doing it from the full /public takes forever for bigger sites.
Doing the template thing misses dynamically created class names etc., and it's hard/impossible to set up in when using themes.
You can enable this in your site config:
```toml
[build]
writeStats = true
```
It will then write a `hugo_stats.json` file to the project root as part of the build.
If you're only using this for the production build, you should consider putting it below `config/production`.
You can then set it up with PostCSS like this:
```js
const purgecss = require('@fullhuman/postcss-purgecss')({
content: [ './hugo_stats.json' ],
defaultExtractor: (content) => {
let els = JSON.parse(content).htmlElements;
return els.tags.concat(els.classes, els.ids);
}
});
module.exports = {
plugins: [
require('tailwindcss'),
require('autoprefixer'),
...(process.env.HUGO_ENVIRONMENT === 'production' ? [ purgecss ] : [])
]
};
```
Fixes#6999
This means that the current `.Site` and ´.Hugo` is available as a globals, so you can do `site.IsServer`, `hugo.Version` etc.
Fixes#5470Fixes#5467Fixes#5503
Before this commit, you would have to use page bundles to do image processing etc. in Hugo.
This commit adds
* A new `/assets` top-level project or theme dir (configurable via `assetDir`)
* A new template func, `resources.Get` which can be used to "get a resource" that can be further processed.
This means that you can now do this in your templates (or shortcodes):
```bash
{{ $sunset := (resources.Get "images/sunset.jpg").Fill "300x200" }}
```
This also adds a new `extended` build tag that enables powerful SCSS/SASS support with source maps. To compile this from source, you will also need a C compiler installed:
```
HUGO_BUILD_TAGS=extended mage install
```
Note that you can use output of the SCSS processing later in a non-SCSSS-enabled Hugo.
The `SCSS` processor is a _Resource transformation step_ and it can be chained with the many others in a pipeline:
```bash
{{ $css := resources.Get "styles.scss" | resources.ToCSS | resources.PostCSS | resources.Minify | resources.Fingerprint }}
<link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ $styles.RelPermalink }}" integrity="{{ $styles.Data.Digest }}" media="screen">
```
The transformation funcs above have aliases, so it can be shortened to:
```bash
{{ $css := resources.Get "styles.scss" | toCSS | postCSS | minify | fingerprint }}
<link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ $styles.RelPermalink }}" integrity="{{ $styles.Data.Digest }}" media="screen">
```
A quick tip would be to avoid the fingerprinting part, and possibly also the not-superfast `postCSS` when you're doing development, as it allows Hugo to be smarter about the rebuilding.
Documentation will follow, but have a look at the demo repo in https://github.com/bep/hugo-sass-test
New functions to create `Resource` objects:
* `resources.Get` (see above)
* `resources.FromString`: Create a Resource from a string.
New `Resource` transformation funcs:
* `resources.ToCSS`: Compile `SCSS` or `SASS` into `CSS`.
* `resources.PostCSS`: Process your CSS with PostCSS. Config file support (project or theme or passed as an option).
* `resources.Minify`: Currently supports `css`, `js`, `json`, `html`, `svg`, `xml`.
* `resources.Fingerprint`: Creates a fingerprinted version of the given Resource with Subresource Integrity..
* `resources.Concat`: Concatenates a list of Resource objects. Think of this as a poor man's bundler.
* `resources.ExecuteAsTemplate`: Parses and executes the given Resource and data context (e.g. .Site) as a Go template.
Fixes#4381Fixes#4903Fixes#4858
This commit adds a work flow aroung GoReleaser to get the Hugo release process automated and more uniform:
* It can be run fully automated or in two steps to allow for manual edits of the relase notes.
* It supports both patch and full releases.
* It fetches author, issue, repo info. etc. for the release notes from GitHub.
* The file names produced are mainly the same as before, but we no use tar.gz as archive for all Unix versions.
* There isn't a fully automated CI setup in place yet, but the release tag is marked in the commit message with "[ci deploy]"
Fixes#3358
There are currently several Params and case related issues floating around in Hugo.
This is very confusing for users and one of the most common support questions on the forum.
And while there have been done some great leg work in Viper etc., this is of limited value since this and similar doesn't work:
`Params.myCamelCasedParam`
Hugo has control over all the template method invocations, and can take care of all the lower-casing of the map lookup keys.
But that doesn't help with direct template lookups of type `Site.Params.TWITTER_CONFIG.USER_ID`.
This commit solves that by doing some carefully crafted modifications of the templates' AST -- lowercasing the params keys.
This is low-level work, but it's not like the template API wil change -- and this is important enough to defend such "bit fiddling".
Tests are added for all the template engines: Go templates, Ace and Amber.
Fixes#2615Fixes#1129Fixes#2590
This commit replaces the multuple `bytes.Containts` and `bytes.Replace` with a custom replacer that does one pass through the document and exploits the fact that there are two common prefixes we search for, `src=` and `href=`.
This is both faster and consumes less memory. There may be even better algos to use here, but we must leave some room for improvements for future versions.
This should also make it possible to solve #816.
```
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkAbsUrl 25795 22597 -12.40%
BenchmarkXmlAbsUrl 17187 11166 -35.03%
benchmark old allocs new allocs delta
BenchmarkAbsUrl 60 33 -45.00%
BenchmarkXmlAbsUrl 30 16 -46.67%
benchmark old bytes new bytes delta
BenchmarkAbsUrl 5844 4167 -28.70%
BenchmarkXmlAbsUrl 3754 2069 -44.89%
```
Fixes#894