Cobra, the CLI commander in use in Hugo, has some long awaited improvements in the error handling department.
This enables a more centralized error handling approach.
This commit introduces that by changing all the command funcs to `RunE`:
* The core part of the error logging, usage logging and `os.Exit(-1)` is now performed in one place and that one place only.
* The usage text is now only shown on invalid arguments etc. (user errors)
Fixes#1502
Add validation before creating aliases:
* Prevent creating aliases outside webroot (public/ dir)
* Skip empty "" alias
* Skip "/" → "/index.html", which gets overwritten anyway
* Refuse to create Windows-invalid filenames on Windows;
warn on other platforms
* In case of invalid aliases, after skipping them,
return `err = nil` to prevent the error passing up
all the way to `hugolib.Render()` and causing Hugo to abort.
* Update alias tests.
Fixes#701: Add support for alias with whitespace
Fixes#1418: Add validation for alias
I could be wrong here, but it looks to me like .Site.Social.facebook is used in tpl/template_embedded.go, but the variable is never set. I've added a line to initializeSiteInfo to map the info from config into this variable.
Before this commit, taxonomy names were hyphenated, lower-cased and normalized -- then fixed and titleized on the archive page.
So what you entered in the front matter isn't necessarily what you got in the final site.
To preserve backwards compability, `PreserveTaxonomyNames` is default `false`.
Setting it to `true` will preserve what you type (the first characters is made toupper for titles), but normalized in URLs.
This also means that, if you manually construct URLs to the archive pages, you will have to pass the Taxonomy names through the `urlize` func.
Fixes#1180
Section names are also used as the title of the list pages, but naming section folders as `Fish and Chips` and similar didn't work very well.
This commit fixes that.
This commit also changes the title casing of the section titles. Some may argue that this is a breaking change, but the old behaviour was also pretty broken,
even for languages that use title capitalizations, as it didn't follow any particular style guide, `fish and chips` became `Fish And Chips` etc.
Now it just turns the first letter into upper case, so `Fish and Chips` will be left as `Fish and Chips`.
People wanting the good old behaviour can use the `title` template func.
Fixes#1176
To determine if a page is the "Home Page" has inspired lots of creativity in the template department.
This commit makes it simpler: IsHome will tell the truth.