This fixes the behavior of .Truncated that was introduced with commit
bef496b97e which was later broken. The
desired behavior is that .Truncated would evaluate to false when there
was nothing after the user defined summary marker.
This also adds a simple unit test to ensure that this feature isn't
broken again. The check for content after the user defined summary
marker is done on the raw content instead of the working copy because
some of the markup renderers add elements after the marker, making it
difficult to determine if there is actually any content.
The behavior (evaluating to false when there is no content, just
summary) is also now documented.
Note that this looks like overkill for just the logger, and that is correct,
but this will make sense once we start with the template handling etc.
Updates #2701
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.
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
This uses the Emoji map from https://github.com/kyokomi/emoji -- but with a custom replacement implementation.
The built-in are fine for most use cases, but in Hugo we do care about pure speed.
The benchmarks below are skewed in Hugo's direction as the source and result is a byte slice,
Kyokomi's implementation works best with strings.
Curious: The easy-to-use `strings.Replacer` is also plenty fast.
```
BenchmarkEmojiKyokomiFprint-4 20000 86038 ns/op 33960 B/op 117 allocs/op
BenchmarkEmojiKyokomiSprint-4 20000 83252 ns/op 38232 B/op 122 allocs/op
BenchmarkEmojiStringsReplacer-4 100000 21092 ns/op 17248 B/op 25 allocs/op
BenchmarkHugoEmoji-4 500000 5728 ns/op 624 B/op 13 allocs/op
```
Fixes#1891
Currently a `[]byte` copy is returned. In most cases this is the safe thing to do, but we should just modify/grow the slice as needed.
This is faster and consumes less memory:
```
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkReplaceShortcodeTokens-4 7350 4419 -39.88%
benchmark old allocs new allocs delta
BenchmarkReplaceShortcodeTokens-4 5 1 -80.00%
benchmark old bytes new bytes delta
BenchmarkReplaceShortcodeTokens-4 4816 1152 -76.08%
```
This commit is aso a small spring cleaning of duplicated code in the different `PageConvert` methods.
Fixes#1516
This commit replaces the regexp driven `replaceShortcodeTokens` with a handwritten one.
It wasnt't possible to handle the p-tags case without breaking performance.
This fix actually improves in that area:
```
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkParsePage 142738 142667 -0.05%
BenchmarkReplaceShortcodeTokens 665590 575645 -13.51%
BenchmarkShortcodeLexer 176038 181074 +2.86%
benchmark old allocs new allocs delta
BenchmarkParsePage 87 87 +0.00%
BenchmarkReplaceShortcodeTokens 9631 9424 -2.15%
BenchmarkShortcodeLexer 274 274 +0.00%
benchmark old bytes new bytes delta
BenchmarkParsePage 141830 141830 +0.00%
BenchmarkReplaceShortcodeTokens 52275 35219 -32.63%
BenchmarkShortcodeLexer 30177 30178 +0.00%
```
Fixes#1148
Commit 358dcce supposedly added ".adoc" extension recognition
for AsciiDoc, but one place was missed.
Thanks to @sjfloat for reporting the bug!
See discussions at #470.
See #470
* Based on existing support for reStructuredText files
* Handles content files with extensions `.asciidoc` and `.ad`
* Pipes content through `asciidoctor --safe -`.
If `asciidoctor` is not installed, then `asciidoc --safe -`.
* To make sure `asciidoctor` or `asciidoc` is found, after adding
a piece of AsciiDoc content, run `hugo` with the `-v` flag
and look for this message:
INFO: 2015/01/23 Rendering with /usr/bin/asciidoctor ...
Caveats:
* The final "Last updated" timestamp is currently not stripped.
* When `hugo` is run with `-v`, you may see a lot of these messages
INFO: 2015/01/23 Rendering with /usr/bin/asciidoctor ...
if you have lots of `*.ad`, `*.adoc` or `*.asciidoc` files.
* Some versions of `asciidoc` may have trouble with its safe mode.
To test if you are affected, try this:
$ echo "Hello" | asciidoc --safe -
asciidoc: ERROR: unsafe: ifeval invalid
asciidoc: FAILED: ifeval invalid safe document
If so, I recommend that you install `asciidoctor` instead.
Feedback and patches welcome!
Ideally, we should be using https://github.com/VonC/asciidocgo,
@VonC's wonderful Go implementation of Asciidoctor. However,
there is still a bit of work needed for asciidocgo to expose
its API so that Hugo can actually use it.
Until then, hope this "experimental AsciiDoc support through external
helpers" can serve as a stopgap solution for our community. :-)
2015-01-30: Updated for the replaceShortcodeTokens() syntax change
2015-02-21: Add `.adoc` extension as suggested by @Fale
Conflicts:
helpers/content.go
(Experimental) reStructuredText support was working in v0.12,
but was no longer handled after some refactoring in v0.13-DEV.
That experimental support is now restored.
Furthermore, check for both rst2html and rst2html.py in the PATH,
and execute whichever is found.
See #472 for more information.