…`map[string]string` to `map[string]interface{}`.
This allows values other than `string` values to be saved to Author,
such as:
```toml
# config.toml
…
[Author]
name = "Austin Ziegler"
social-site = [ "Facebook", "Twitter", "GitHub" ]
```
My specific use-case is that I’m trying to make something work similar
whether it’s specified in `.Params.Author` or in `.Site.Author` without
introducing `.Site.Params.Author`.
Prior to this commit, `HasMenuCurrent` and `IsMenuCurrent` on `Node` always returned false.
This made it hard (if possible at all) to mark the currently selected menu item/group for non-Page content (home page, category pages etc.), i.e. for menus defined in the site configuration.
This commit provides an implementation of these two methods.
Notable design choices:
* These menu items have a loose coupling to the the resources they navigate to; the `Url` is the best common identificator. To facilitate a consistent matching, and to get it in line with the menu items connected to `Page`, relative Urls (Urls starting with '/') for menu items in the site configuration are converted to permaLinks using the same rules used for others’.
* `IsMenuCurrent` only looks at the children of the current node; this is in line with the implementation on `Page`.
* Due to this loose coupling, `IsMenuCurrent` have to search downards in the tree to make sure that the node is inside the current menu. This could have been made simpler if it could answer `yes` to any match of any menu item matching the current resource.
This commit also adds a set of unit tests for the menu system.
Fixes#367
Node.Site.Recent is not really just recent pages, but all pages, so I figured it was better to add a new parameter with a more informative name.
I also changed the code slightly so that all pages are added to the list of pages before we start rendering shortcodes... this way you can use a shortcode to refer to another page. Previosuly, this had been broken, because the list ofg pages would not be fully populated while the shortcodes were being processed. The code that does this is not reading from disk or doing any rendering, so it shouldn't take any more time to do.
This fixes#450. There are two problems:
1.) We're creating a new goroutine for every page.
2.) We're calling s.Pages = append(s.Pages, page) inside each goroutine.
1 is a problem if in that if you have a ton of pages, that's a ton of goroutines. It's not really useful to have more than a few goroutines at a time, and lots can actually make your code much slower, and, evidently, crash.
2 is a problem in that append is not thread safe. Sometimes it returns a new slice with a larger capacity, when the original slice isn't large enough. This can cause problems if two goroutines do this at the same time.
The solution for 1 is to use a limited number of workers (I chose 2*GOMAXPROCS as a nice guess).
The solution for 2 is to serialize access to s.Pages, which I did by doing it in a single goroutine.
git bisect identified 62dd1d4 as the breaking commit; when
github.com/spf13/viper was introduced, the Params field was always
empty.
Given a map in YAML in Viper, the return type is
`map[interface{}]interface{}`, _not_ `map[string]interface{}`, even if
`.SetDefault()` has been called with an item of
`map[string]interface{}{}` so the cast assertion on the `.Get("Params")`
always failed.
Viper stores Permalinks as a map[string]interface{}, so the type assertion
to PermalinkOverrides (map[string]PathPattern) will always fail.
We can, however, get Permalinks as a map[string]string, and convert each
value to a PathPattern.