This avoids having to execute these expensive operations for sites not using these values.
This commit sums up a set of wordcounting and autosummary related performance improvements.
The effect of these kind of depends on what features your site use, but a benchmark from 4 Hugo sites in the wild shows promise:
```
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkHugo-4 21293005843 20032857342 -5.92%
benchmark old allocs new allocs delta
BenchmarkHugo-4 65290922 65186032 -0.16%
benchmark old bytes new bytes delta
BenchmarkHugo-4 9771213416 9681866464 -0.91%
```
Closes#2378
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
This commit also consolidates URLs on Node vs Page, so now .Permalink should be interoperable.
Note that this implementations should be fairly short-livded, waiting for #2297, but the API should be stable.
And a Hugo global variable which contains the site under build.
This is really needed to get some level of control of the "multiple languages" in play.
There are still work related to this scattered around, but that will come.
With this commit, the multilingual feature is starting to work.
Implements:
* support to render:
* content/post/whatever.en.md to /en/2015/12/22/whatever/index.html
* content/post/whatever.fr.md to /fr/2015/12/22/whatever/index.html
* gets enabled when `Multilingual:` is specified in config.
* support having language switchers in templates, that know
where the translated page is (with .Page.Translations)
(when you're on /en/about/, you can have a "Francais" link pointing to
/fr/a-propos/)
* all translations are in the `.Page.Translations` map, including the current one.
* easily tweak themes to support Multilingual mode
* renders in a single swift, no need for two config files.
Adds a couple of variables useful for multilingual sites
Adds documentation (content/multilingual.md)
Added language prefixing for all URL generation/permalinking see in the
code base.
Implements i18n. Leverages the great github.com/nicksnyder/go-i18n lib.. thanks Nick.
* Adds "i18n" and "T" template functions..
This also includes a refactor of the hugofs package and its usage.
The motivation for that is:
The Afero filesystems are brilliant. Hugo's way of adding a dozen of global variables for the different filesystems was a mistake. In readFile (and also in some other places in Hugo today) we need a way to restrict the access inside the working dir. We could use ioutil.ReadFile and implement the path checking, checking the base path and the dots ("..") etc. But it is obviously better to use an Afero BasePathFs combined witha ReadOnlyFs. We could create a use-once-filesystem and handle the initialization ourselves, but since this is also useful to others and the initialization depends on some other global state (which would mean to create a new file system on every invocation), we might as well do it properly and encapsulate the predefined set of filesystems. This change also leads the way, if needed, to encapsulate the file systems in a struct, making it possible to have several file system sets in action at once (parallel multilanguage site building? With Moore's law and all...)
Fixes#1551
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
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.