All config variables starts with low-case and uses camelCase.
If there is abbreviation at the beginning of the name, the whole
abbreviation will be written in low-case.
If there is abbreviation at the end of the name, the
whole abbreviation will be written in upper-case.
For example, rssURI.
Also refactor the rendering pages test to accept more than one page source per test run, which wasn't really needed for this issue, but may be in the future.
Closes#2586Fixes#2538
In a multi-language setup, before this commit the Node's Translations() method
would return some "dummy nodes" that would point to the correct page (Permalink),
but would not be the same as the node it points to -- it would not have the translated
title etc.
The node creation is, however, so mingled with rendering, whihc is too early to have any global state,
so the nodes has to be split in a prepare and a render phase. This commits does that with as small
a change as possible. This implementation is a temp solution until we fix#2297.
Updates #2309
The current "rendering language" is needed outside of Site. This commit moves the Language type to the helpers package, and then used to get correct correct language configuration in the markdownify template func.
This commit also adds two new template funcs: relLangURL and absLangURL.
See #2309
This is needed to make shortcode users happy with the new multilanguage support,
but it will also solve many other related posts about "stuff not available in the shortcode".
We will have to revisit this re the handler chain at some point, but that will be easier
now as the integration test story has improved so much.
As part of this commit, the site-building tests in page_test.go is refreshed, they now
tests for all the rendering engines (when available), and all of them now uses the
same code-path as used in production.
Fixes#1229Fixes#2323
Fixes ##1076
Work In Progress!
This commit makes a rework of the build and rebuild process to better suit a multi-site setup.
This also includes a complete overhaul of the site tests. Previous these were a messy mix that
were testing just small parts of the build chain, some of it testing code-paths not even used in
"real life". Now all tests that depends on a built site follows the same and real production code path.
See #2309Closes#2211Closes#477Closes#1744