When a template calls the .Translations function and a
Hugo environment is using multiple output formats,
a template that calls methods like .Summary and .Len on
each translation will unexpectedly show empty return
values for these methods.
This is because each pageOutput's ContentProvider is
assigned to a page.NopPage in newPageOutput. When
*HugoSites.render assigns pageContentOutputs to
pageOutputs in *pageState.shiftToOutputFormat, it
reuses pageContentOutputs from other pageOutputs,
leaving some pageContentOutputs as NopPages. While this
approach conserves resources, sometimes it means that
a template will unexpectedly call a method on a
pageContentOutput that is actually a NopPage.
In the case of ContentProvider methods called on
translations for alternative output formats, the methods
were called on NopPages.
This change introduces LazyContentProvider, which
performs late initialization when one of its methods is
called. This way, we can reuse content in "normal" cases
but ensure that ContentProvider methods work as expected
when a pageOutput is not assigned a pageContentOutput
during the initial pre-render phase.
Fixes#8919
In page.NewOutputFormat, we take an output.Format f and use it to
create a page.OutputFormat. If the format is canonical, we assign
the final OutputFormat's Rel to "canonical" rather than using
f.Rel. However, this leads to unexpected behavior for custom
output formats, where a user can define a "rel" for a format
via the config file.
For example, the standard for "humans.txt" files requires using
rel="author" in HTML "link" elements. Meanwhile, humans.txt is
usually the only format used for its content. As a result, for
Hugo configurations that define a humans.txt custom output format,
Hugo will render "link" elements to content in this format with
rel="canonical," rather than "author" as required by the standard.
This commit changes page.NewOutputFormat to check whether a given
format is user defined and, if so, skips assigning Rel to
"canonical," even if isCanonical is true.
Fixes#8030
* Before this commit, when you had static files in the root of /content and no /public folder, that folder would not be created unless the /static syncer had already run.
* So, with a common pattern doing `rm -rf public && hugo` would the fail now and then because /static and /content are processed in parallel (unless you have cleanDestinationDir=true)
* This was even worse before commit 0b918e131f – a frozen build.
Closes#8166
This was introduced in Go 1.15. We do set the GOPATH, which should be enough, but #9309 indicate that's not the case on every platform (GitHub Actions).
Closes#9309
This is a security hardening measure; don't trust the URL extension or any `Content-Type`/`Content-Disposition` header on its own, always look at the file content using Go's `http.DetectContentType`.
This commit also adds ttf and otf media type definitions to Hugo.
Fixes#9302Fixes#9301
In Hugo 0.89 we added remote support to `resources.Get`.
In hindsight that was not a great idea, as a poll from many Hugo users showed. See Issue #9285 for more details.
After this commit `resources.Get` only supports local resource lookups. If you want to support both, you need to use a construct similar to:
Also improve some option case handling.
```
{{ resource := "" }}
{{ if (urls.Parse $url).IsAbs }}
{{ $resource = resources.GetRemote $url }}
{{ else }}
{{ $resource = resources.Get $url }}
{{ end }}
```
Fixes#9285Fixes#9296
Partials with returns values are parsed, then inserted into a
partial return wrapper via wrapInPartialReturnWrapper in order
to assign the return value via *contextWrapper.Set. The
predefined wrapper template for partials inserts a partial's nodes
into a "with" template action in order to set dot to a
*contextWrapper within the partial. However, because "with" is
skipped if its argument is falsy, partials with falsy arguments
were not being evaluated.
This replaces the "with" action in the partial wrapper with a
"range" action that isn't skipped if .Arg is falsy.
Fixes#7528