Re-add the additional environment checks to determine if its Netlify. Seems that Cloudflare also sets `NETLIFY=true`.
This makes it look, basically, like a variant of the conditional we had before we started fixing this, but I have checked this logic on Netlify now and it should work.
Fixes#8714
The main motivation behind this is simplicity and correctnes, but the new small config library is also faster:
```
BenchmarkDefaultConfigProvider/Viper-16 252418 4546 ns/op 2720 B/op 30 allocs/op
BenchmarkDefaultConfigProvider/Custom-16 450756 2651 ns/op 1008 B/op 6 allocs/op
```
Fixes#8633Fixes#8618Fixes#8630
Updates #8591Closes#6680Closes#5192
This change is mostly motivated to get a more stable CI build (we're building the Hugo site there, with Instagram and Twitter shortcodes sometimes failing).
Fixes#7866
This commit solves the relative path problem with asciidoctor tooling. An include will resolve relatively, so you can refer easily to files in the same folder.
Also `asciidoctor-diagram` and PlantUML rendering works now, because the created temporary files will be placed in the correct folder.
This patch covers just the Ruby version of asciidoctor. The old AsciiDoc CLI EOLs in Jan 2020, so this variant is removed from code.
The configuration is completely rewritten and now available in `config.toml` under the key `[markup.asciidocext]`:
```toml
[markup.asciidocext]
extensions = ["asciidoctor-html5s", "asciidoctor-diagram"]
workingFolderCurrent = true
trace = true
[markup.asciidocext.attributes]
my-base-url = "https://example.com/"
my-attribute-name = "my value"
```
- backends, safe-modes, and extensions are now whitelisted to the popular (ruby) extensions and valid values.
- the default for extensions is to not enable any, because they're all external dependencies so the build would break if the user didn't install them beforehand.
- the default backend is html5 because html5s is an external gem dependency.
- the default safe-mode is safe, explanations of the modes: https://asciidoctor.org/man/asciidoctor/
- the config is namespaced under asciidocext_config and the parser looks at asciidocext to allow a future native Go asciidoc.
- `uglyUrls=true` option and `--source` flag are supported
- `--destination` flag is required
Follow the updated documentation under `docs/content/en/content-management/formats.md`.
This patch would be a breaking change, because you need to correct all your absolute include pathes to relative paths, so using relative paths must be configured explicitly by setting `workingFolderCurrent = true`.
In the internal Radix we stored the directory based nodes without a traling slash, e.g. `/blog`.
The original motivation was probably to make it easy to do prefix searching: Give me all ancestors.
This, however have lead to some ambigouty with overlapping directory names.
This particular problem was, however, not possible to work around in an easy way, so from now we store these as `/blog/`.
Fixes#7301
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 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
The org mode renderer supports including other files [1]. We don't want to
allow reading of arbitrary files (go-org defaults to ioutil.ReadFile [2]) but want
to make use of the FileSystem abstractions hugo provides. For starters we will
allow reading from the content directory only
[1]: e.g. `#+INCLUDE: ./foo.py src python` includes `foo.py` as a python source
block.
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
Sadly, goorgeous has not been updated in over a year and still has a lot of
open issues (e.g. no support for nested lists).
go-org fixes most of those issues and supports a larger subset of Org mode
syntax.
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
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
This avoids double parsing the page content when `enableEmoji=true`.
This commit also adds some general improvements to the parser, making it in general much faster:
```bash
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkShortcodeLexer-4 90258 101730 +12.71%
BenchmarkParse-4 148940 15037 -89.90%
benchmark old allocs new allocs delta
BenchmarkShortcodeLexer-4 456 700 +53.51%
BenchmarkParse-4 28 33 +17.86%
benchmark old bytes new bytes delta
BenchmarkShortcodeLexer-4 69875 81014 +15.94%
BenchmarkParse-4 8128 8304 +2.17%
```
Running some site benchmarks with Emoji support turned on:
```bash
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkSiteBuilding/TOML,num_langs=3,num_pages=5000,tags_per_page=5,shortcodes,render-4 924556797 818115620 -11.51%
benchmark old allocs new allocs delta
BenchmarkSiteBuilding/TOML,num_langs=3,num_pages=5000,tags_per_page=5,shortcodes,render-4 4112613 4133787 +0.51%
benchmark old bytes new bytes delta
BenchmarkSiteBuilding/TOML,num_langs=3,num_pages=5000,tags_per_page=5,shortcodes,render-4 426982864 424363832 -0.61%
```
Fixes#5534
This commit adds support for a configuration directory (default `config`). The different pieces in this puzzle are:
* A new `--environment` (or `-e`) flag. This can also be set with the `HUGO_ENVIRONMENT` OS environment variable. The value for `environment` defaults to `production` when running `hugo` and `development` when running `hugo server`. You can set it to any value you want (e.g. `hugo server -e "Sensible Environment"`), but as it is used to load configuration from the file system, the letter case may be important. You can get this value in your templates with `{{ hugo.Environment }}`.
* A new `--configDir` flag (defaults to `config` below your project). This can also be set with `HUGO_CONFIGDIR` OS environment variable.
If the `configDir` exists, the configuration files will be read and merged on top of each other from left to right; the right-most value will win on duplicates.
Given the example tree below:
If `environment` is `production`, the left-most `config.toml` would be the one directly below the project (this can now be omitted if you want), and then `_default/config.toml` and finally `production/config.toml`. And since these will be merged, you can just provide the environment specific configuration setting in you production config, e.g. `enableGitInfo = true`. The order within the directories will be lexical (`config.toml` and then `params.toml`).
```bash
config
├── _default
│ ├── config.toml
│ ├── languages.toml
│ ├── menus
│ │ ├── menus.en.toml
│ │ └── menus.zh.toml
│ └── params.toml
├── development
│ └── params.toml
└── production
├── config.toml
└── params.toml
```
Some configuration maps support the language code in the filename (e.g. `menus.en.toml`): `menus` (`menu` also works) and `params`.
Also note that the only folders with "a meaning" in the above listing is the top level directories below `config`. The `menus` sub folder is just added for better organization.
We use `TOML` in the example above, but Hugo also supports `JSON` and `YAML` as configuration formats. These can be mixed.
Fixes#5422
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
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
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