Added a Vimeo EnableDNT privacy option to the Hugo config. This will enable the Vimeo 'Do Not Track' flag when either Vimeo shortcode tempalte options are used. When enabled, it will force the Vimeo player to be blocked from tracking any session data, including all cookies and stats.
Fixes#7700
* Fix change detection when .GetPage/site.GetPage is used from shortcode
* Fix stale content for GetPage results with short name lookups on server reloads
Fixes#7623Fixes#7624Fixes#7625
The rss templates had some tab characters mixed in with the spaces.
Additionally there would end up being trailing whitespace in output
rss feeds, which looks red in git diff.
.Lastmod is the time at which the website was most recently updated,
rather than .Date which is the time at which the website content file
was created.
Add a new pipe called TranspileJS which uses the Babel cli. This makes it possible for users to write ES6 JavaScript code and transpile it to ES5 during website generation so that the code still works with older browser versions.
Fixes#5764
This means that any HTML file inside /content will be treated as a regular file.
If you want it processes with shortcodes and a layout, add front matter.
The defintion of an HTML file here is:
* File with extension .htm or .html
* With first non-whitespace character "<" that isn't a HTML comment.
This is in line with the documentation.
Fixes#7030Fixes#7028
See #6789
This more or less completes the simplification of the template handling code in Hugo started in v0.62.
The main motivation was to fix a long lasting issue about a crash in HTML content files without front matter.
But this commit also comes with a big functional improvement.
As we now have moved the base template evaluation to the build stage we now use the same lookup rules for `baseof` as for `list` etc. type of templates.
This means that in this simple example you can have a `baseof` template for the `blog` section without having to duplicate the others:
```
layouts
├── _default
│ ├── baseof.html
│ ├── list.html
│ └── single.html
└── blog
└── baseof.html
```
Also, when simplifying code, you often get rid of some double work, as shown in the "site building" benchmarks below.
These benchmarks looks suspiciously good, but I have repeated the below with ca. the same result. Compared to master:
```
name old time/op new time/op delta
SiteNew/Bundle_with_image-16 13.1ms ± 1% 10.5ms ± 1% -19.34% (p=0.029 n=4+4)
SiteNew/Bundle_with_JSON_file-16 13.0ms ± 0% 10.7ms ± 1% -18.05% (p=0.029 n=4+4)
SiteNew/Tags_and_categories-16 46.4ms ± 2% 43.1ms ± 1% -7.15% (p=0.029 n=4+4)
SiteNew/Canonify_URLs-16 52.2ms ± 2% 47.8ms ± 1% -8.30% (p=0.029 n=4+4)
SiteNew/Deep_content_tree-16 77.9ms ± 1% 70.9ms ± 1% -9.01% (p=0.029 n=4+4)
SiteNew/Many_HTML_templates-16 43.0ms ± 0% 37.2ms ± 1% -13.54% (p=0.029 n=4+4)
SiteNew/Page_collections-16 58.2ms ± 1% 52.4ms ± 1% -9.95% (p=0.029 n=4+4)
name old alloc/op new alloc/op delta
SiteNew/Bundle_with_image-16 3.81MB ± 0% 2.22MB ± 0% -41.70% (p=0.029 n=4+4)
SiteNew/Bundle_with_JSON_file-16 3.60MB ± 0% 2.01MB ± 0% -44.20% (p=0.029 n=4+4)
SiteNew/Tags_and_categories-16 19.3MB ± 1% 14.1MB ± 0% -26.91% (p=0.029 n=4+4)
SiteNew/Canonify_URLs-16 70.7MB ± 0% 69.0MB ± 0% -2.40% (p=0.029 n=4+4)
SiteNew/Deep_content_tree-16 37.1MB ± 0% 31.2MB ± 0% -15.94% (p=0.029 n=4+4)
SiteNew/Many_HTML_templates-16 17.6MB ± 0% 10.6MB ± 0% -39.92% (p=0.029 n=4+4)
SiteNew/Page_collections-16 25.9MB ± 0% 21.2MB ± 0% -17.99% (p=0.029 n=4+4)
name old allocs/op new allocs/op delta
SiteNew/Bundle_with_image-16 52.3k ± 0% 26.1k ± 0% -50.18% (p=0.029 n=4+4)
SiteNew/Bundle_with_JSON_file-16 52.3k ± 0% 26.1k ± 0% -50.16% (p=0.029 n=4+4)
SiteNew/Tags_and_categories-16 336k ± 1% 269k ± 0% -19.90% (p=0.029 n=4+4)
SiteNew/Canonify_URLs-16 422k ± 0% 395k ± 0% -6.43% (p=0.029 n=4+4)
SiteNew/Deep_content_tree-16 401k ± 0% 313k ± 0% -21.79% (p=0.029 n=4+4)
SiteNew/Many_HTML_templates-16 247k ± 0% 143k ± 0% -42.17% (p=0.029 n=4+4)
SiteNew/Page_collections-16 282k ± 0% 207k ± 0% -26.55% (p=0.029 n=4+4)
```
Fixes#6716Fixes#6760Fixes#6768Fixes#6778
You can turn off this behaviour:
```toml
[markup]
[markup.goldmark]
[markup.goldmark.parser]
autoHeadingIDAsciiOnly = true
```
Note that the `anchorize` now adapts its behaviour depending on the default Markdown handler.
Fixes#6616
This commit also
* revises the change detection for templates used by content files in server mode.
* Adds a Page.RenderString method
Fixes#6545Fixes#4663Closes#6043
This is a big commit, but it deletes lots of code and simplifies a lot.
* Resolving the template funcs at execution time means we don't have to create template clones per site
* Having a custom map resolver means that we can remove the AST lower case transformation for the special lower case Params map
Not only is the above easier to reason about, it's also faster, especially if you have more than one language, as in the benchmark below:
```
name old time/op new time/op delta
SiteNew/Deep_content_tree-16 53.7ms ± 0% 48.1ms ± 2% -10.38% (p=0.029 n=4+4)
name old alloc/op new alloc/op delta
SiteNew/Deep_content_tree-16 41.0MB ± 0% 36.8MB ± 0% -10.26% (p=0.029 n=4+4)
name old allocs/op new allocs/op delta
SiteNew/Deep_content_tree-16 481k ± 0% 410k ± 0% -14.66% (p=0.029 n=4+4)
```
This should be even better if you also have lots of templates.
Closes#6594
This commit adds the fast and CommonMark compliant Goldmark as the new default markdown handler in Hugo.
If you want to continue using BlackFriday as the default for md/markdown extensions, you can use this configuration:
```toml
[markup]
defaultMarkdownHandler="blackfriday"
```
Fixes#5963Fixes#1778Fixes#6355
This commmit prepares for the addition of Goldmark as the new Markdown renderer in Hugo.
This introduces a new `markup` package with some common interfaces and each implementation in its own package.
See #5963
Add an optional "title" attribute to the iframe in the vimeo shortcode. If one is not given, the title attribute will default to "vimeo video". It is imperative for iframes to have a non-empty "title" attribute in order to meet WCAG2.0 accessibility guidelines https://www.w3.org/TR/WCAG20-TECHS/H64.
Modified the messages functions after, first, and last threw on being passed invalid parameters (index or limit) to be more standardised and resemble what Go compiler would throw.
Fixes#6415
Modified the if conditional because of which last threw an error if 0 was passed as limit. The function now returns an empty slice if it is called with 0 as limit. The behavior of first and last is now the same when 0 is passed as limit. Also added tests to test the new behavior.
Fixes#6419
Modified the if conditional because of which after threw an error if called with 0 as index. The function now returns the whole original slice if 0 is passed as an index. Also added tests to test the new behavior.
Fixes#6388
To add support for new emojis in Hugo, we need to upgrade our internal
dependency on the emoji package.
Note that we also need to update our tests, as the underlying emoji that
is rendered has changed.
Follow-up to #6391. (170f18d935 and
2df5d202c6)
This means that you now can do:
{{< vidur 9KvBeKu false true 32 3.14 >}}
And the boolean and numeric values will be converted to `bool`, `int` and `float64`.
If you want these to be strings, they must be quoted:
{{< vidur 9KvBeKu "false" "true" "32" "3.14" >}}
Fixes#6371
This commit pulls most of the image related logic into its own package, to make it easier to reason about and extend.
This is also a rewrite of the transformation logic used in Hugo Pipes, mostly to allow constructs like the one below:
{{ ($myimg | fingerprint ).Width }}
Fixes#5903Fixes#6234Fixes#6266
This is preparation for #6041.
For historic reasons, the code for bulding the section tree and the taxonomies were very much separate.
This works, but makes it hard to extend, maintain, and possibly not so fast as it could be.
This simplification also introduces 3 slightly breaking changes, which I suspect most people will be pleased about. See referenced issues:
This commit also switches the radix tree dependency to a mutable implementation: github.com/armon/go-radix.
Fixes#6154Fixes#6153Fixes#6152
This is in line with how it behaved before, but it was lifted a little for the project mount for Hugo Modules,
but that could create hard-to-detect loops.
This commit implements Hugo Modules.
This is a broad subject, but some keywords include:
* A new `module` configuration section where you can import almost anything. You can configure both your own file mounts nd the file mounts of the modules you import. This is the new recommended way of configuring what you earlier put in `configDir`, `staticDir` etc. And it also allows you to mount folders in non-Hugo-projects, e.g. the `SCSS` folder in the Bootstrap GitHub project.
* A module consists of a set of mounts to the standard 7 component types in Hugo: `static`, `content`, `layouts`, `data`, `assets`, `i18n`, and `archetypes`. Yes, Theme Components can now include content, which should be very useful, especially in bigger multilingual projects.
* Modules not in your local file cache will be downloaded automatically and even "hot replaced" while the server is running.
* Hugo Modules supports and encourages semver versioned modules, and uses the minimal version selection algorithm to resolve versions.
* A new set of CLI commands are provided to manage all of this: `hugo mod init`, `hugo mod get`, `hugo mod graph`, `hugo mod tidy`, and `hugo mod vendor`.
All of the above is backed by Go Modules.
Fixes#5973Fixes#5996Fixes#6010Fixes#5911Fixes#5940Fixes#6074Fixes#6082Fixes#6092
When using a html link checker with Hugo, this template consistently causes errors, as it renders `href=""` attributes when next/previous is disabled.
This change makes it so that the `href` attribute is not rendered at all if `HasNext` is false - which is better semantically, and makes link checking far easier.
Hugo `0.55.0` introduced some new interface types for `Page` etc.
This worked great in general, but there were cases where this would fail in `where` and `sort`.
One such example would be sorting by `MenuItem.Page.Date` where `Page` on `MenuItem` was a small subset of the bigger `page.Page` interface.
This commit fixes that by unwrapping such interface values.
Fixes#5989
The `safeHTMLAttr` function operates on a full attribute definition, not
just within the attribute value.
Docs: https://gohugo.io/functions/safehtmlattr/
For `opengraph.html`, run the whole `content` HTML attribute through
`safeHTMLAttr`. That will preserve `+` signs in formatted dates.
For `vimeo_simple.html`, `safeHTMLAttr` was in the context of an
attribute value, thus having no effect. In this case we could replace it
with `safeURL`, but since the code is coming from an API it is safer to
just let Go's template engine sanitize the value as it already does with
`provider_url`.
Fixes#5236 (no need to change Go upstream)
Related to #5246
* Rewind paginator for server mode
* Add some more related tests.
* Replace the clumsy scratch constructs in internal paginator template with variables
See #5825
Add the ability to have a `summary` page variable that overrides
the auto-generated summary. Logic for obtaining summary becomes:
* if summary divider is present in content, use the text above it
* if summary variables is present in page metadata, use that
* auto-generate summary from first _x_ words of the content
Fixes#5800
This commit adds support for return values in partials.
This means that you can now do this and similar:
{{ $v := add . 42 }}
{{ return $v }}
Partials without a `return` statement will be rendered as before.
This works for both `partial` and `partialCached`.
Fixes#5783
The main motivation of this commit is to add a `page.Page` interface to replace the very file-oriented `hugolib.Page` struct.
This is all a preparation step for issue #5074, "pages from other data sources".
But this also fixes a set of annoying limitations, especially related to custom output formats, and shortcodes.
Most notable changes:
* The inner content of shortcodes using the `{{%` as the outer-most delimiter will now be sent to the content renderer, e.g. Blackfriday.
This means that any markdown will partake in the global ToC and footnote context etc.
* The Custom Output formats are now "fully virtualized". This removes many of the current limitations.
* The taxonomy list type now has a reference to the `Page` object.
This improves the taxonomy template `.Title` situation and make common template constructs much simpler.
See #5074Fixes#5763Fixes#5758Fixes#5090Fixes#5204Fixes#4695Fixes#5607Fixes#5707Fixes#5719Fixes#3113Fixes#5706Fixes#5767Fixes#5723Fixes#5769Fixes#5770Fixes#5771Fixes#5759Fixes#5776Fixes#5777Fixes#5778
Before this commit, due to a bug in Go's `text/template` package, this would print different output for typed nil interface values:
```
{{ if .AuthenticatedUser }}User is authenticated!{{ else }}{{ end }}
{{ if not .AuthenticatedUser }}{{ else }}}User is authenticated!{{ end }}
```
This commit works around this by wrapping every `if` and `with` with a custom `getif` template func with truth logic that matches `not`, `and` and `or`.
Those 3 template funcs from Go's stdlib are now pulled into Hugo's source tree and adjusted to support custom zero values, e.g. types that implement `IsZero`.
This means that you can now do:
```
{{ with .Date }}{{ . }}{{ end }}
```
And it would work as expected.
Fixes#5738
Before this commit `where` would produce an error and bail building the
site. Now, `where` simply skips an element of a collection and does not
add it to the final result.
Closes#5637Closes#5416
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
In the newly consolidated file cache implementation, we forgot that we also look in the theme(s) for assets (SCSS transformations etc.), which is not good for Netlify and the demo sites.
Fixes#5460
This commits reworks how file caching is performed in Hugo. Now there is only one way, and it can be configured.
This is the default configuration:
```toml
[caches]
[caches.getjson]
dir = ":cacheDir"
maxAge = -1
[caches.getcsv]
dir = ":cacheDir"
maxAge = -1
[caches.images]
dir = ":resourceDir/_gen"
maxAge = -1
[caches.assets]
dir = ":resourceDir/_gen"
maxAge = -1
```
You can override any of these cache setting in your own `config.toml`.
The placeholders explained:
`:cacheDir`: This is the value of the `cacheDir` config option if set (can also be set via OS env variable `HUGO_CACHEDIR`). It will fall back to `/opt/build/cache/hugo_cache/` on Netlify, or a `hugo_cache` directory below the OS temp dir for the others.
`:resourceDir`: This is the value of the `resourceDir` config option.
`maxAge` is the time in seconds before a cache entry will be evicted, -1 means forever and 0 effectively turns that particular cache off.
This means that if you run your builds on Netlify, all caches configured with `:cacheDir` will be saved and restored on the next build. For other CI vendors, please read their documentation. For an CircleCI example, see 6c3960a8f4/.circleci/config.ymlFixes#5404
When run under gccgo, the test looks for the name that gccgo gives to
a thunk method. This name is not normally visible, but can be seen
when using reflect.FuncForPC as this code does. That name changed in
https://golang.org/cl/89555. Change the test to work with both the
old name "$thunk0" and the new name "thunk0".
Fixesgolang/go#28669
This commit also pulls down the log level for a set of WARN statements to INFO. There should be no ERRORs or WARNINGs in a regular Hugo build. That is the story about the Boy Who Cried Wolf.
Since the WARN log is now more visible, this commit also improves on some of them, most notable the "layout not found", which now would look something like this:
```bash
WARN 2018/11/02 09:02:18 Found no layout for "home", language "en", output format "CSS": create a template below /layouts with one of these filenames: index.en.css.css, home.en.css.css, list.en.css.css, index.css.css, home.css.css, list.css.css, index.en.css, home.en.css, list.en.css, index.css, home.css, list.css, _default/index.en.css.css, _default/home.en.css.css, _default/list.en.css.css, _default/index.css.css, _default/home.css.css, _default/list.css.css, _default/index.en.css, _default/home.en.css, _default/list.en.css, _default/index.css, _default/home.css, _default/list.css
```
Fixes#5203
Long identifiers will give errors on the format:
```bash
_default/single.html:5:14: executing "main" at <.ThisIsAVeryLongTitl...>: can't evaluate field ThisIsAVeryLongTitle
```
Hugo use this value to match the "base template or not", so we need to strip the "...".
Fixes#5346
`*json.UnmarshalTypeError` and `*json.SyntaxError` has a byte `Offset`, so use that.
This commit also reworks/simplifies the errror line matching logic. This also makes the file reading unbuffered, but that should be fine in this error case.
See #5324
The main item in this commit is showing of errors with a file context when running `hugo server`.
This can be turned off: `hugo server --disableBrowserError` (can also be set in `config.toml`).
But to get there, the error handling in Hugo needed a revision. There are some items left TODO for commits soon to follow, most notable errors in content and config files.
Fixes#5284Fixes#5290
See #5325
See #5324
This commit consolidates the reflective collections handling in `.Scratch` vs the `tpl` package so they use the same code paths.
This commit also adds support for a corner case where a typed slice is appended to a nil or empty `[]interface{}`.
Fixes#5275
In Hugo `0.49` we improved type support in `slice`. This has an unfortunate side effect in that `resources.Concat` now expects something that can resolve to `resource.Resources`.
This worked for most situations, but when you try to `slice` different `Resource` objects, you would be getting `[]interface {}` and not `resource.Resources`. And `concat` would fail:
```bash
error calling Concat: slice []interface {} not supported in concat.
```
This commit fixes that by simplifying the type checking logic in `Slice`:
* If the first item implements the `Slicer` interface, we try that
* If the above fails or the first item does not implement `Slicer`, we just return the `[]interface {}`
Fixes#5269
The original implementation of NumFmt did not take into account that the
options delimiter (a space) could be a valid option. Adding a delim
parameter seems like the simplest, safest, and most flexible way to
solve this oversight in a backwards-compatible way.
Fixes#5260
Before this commit you would typically use `.Scratch.Add` to manually create slices in a loop.
With variable overwrite in Go 1.11, we can do better. This commit adds the `append` template func.
A made-up example:
```bash
{{ $p1 := index .Site.RegularPages 0 }}{{ $p2 := index .Site.RegularPages 1 }}
{{ $pages := slice }}
{{ if true }}
{{ $pages = $pages | append $p2 $p1 }}
{{ end }}
```
Note that with 2 slices as arguments, the two examples below will give the same result:
```bash
{{ $s1 := slice "a" "b" | append (slice "c" "d") }}
{{ $s2 := slice "a" "b" | append "c" "d" }}
```
Both of the above will give `[]string{a, b, c, d}`.
This commit also improves the type handling in the `slice` template function. Now `slice "a" "b"` will give a `[]string` slice. The old behaviour was to return a `[]interface{}`.
Fixes#5190