Commit graph

15 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Christian Oliff
06bd013641 Update alias.go
less markup :-)
2018-08-07 09:42:49 +02:00
Bjørn Erik Pedersen
789ef8c639
Add support for minification of final output
Hugo Pipes added minification support for resources fetched via ´resources.Get` and similar.

This also adds support for minification of the final output for supported output formats: HTML, XML, SVG, CSS, JavaScript, JSON.

To enable, run Hugo with the `--minify` flag:

```bash
hugo --minify
```

This commit is also a major spring cleaning of the `transform` package to allow the new minification step fit into that processing chain.

Fixes #1251
2018-08-06 19:58:41 +02:00
Bjørn Erik Pedersen
dea71670c0
Add Hugo Piper with SCSS support and much more
Before this commit, you would have to use page bundles to do image processing etc. in Hugo.

This commit adds

* A new `/assets` top-level project or theme dir (configurable via `assetDir`)
* A new template func, `resources.Get` which can be used to "get a resource" that can be further processed.

This means that you can now do this in your templates (or shortcodes):

```bash
{{ $sunset := (resources.Get "images/sunset.jpg").Fill "300x200" }}
```

This also adds a new `extended` build tag that enables powerful SCSS/SASS support with source maps. To compile this from source, you will also need a C compiler installed:

```
HUGO_BUILD_TAGS=extended mage install
```

Note that you can use output of the SCSS processing later in a non-SCSSS-enabled Hugo.

The `SCSS` processor is a _Resource transformation step_ and it can be chained with the many others in a pipeline:

```bash
{{ $css := resources.Get "styles.scss" | resources.ToCSS | resources.PostCSS | resources.Minify | resources.Fingerprint }}
<link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ $styles.RelPermalink }}" integrity="{{ $styles.Data.Digest }}" media="screen">
```

The transformation funcs above have aliases, so it can be shortened to:

```bash
{{ $css := resources.Get "styles.scss" | toCSS | postCSS | minify | fingerprint }}
<link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ $styles.RelPermalink }}" integrity="{{ $styles.Data.Digest }}" media="screen">
```

A quick tip would be to avoid the fingerprinting part, and possibly also the not-superfast `postCSS` when you're doing development, as it allows Hugo to be smarter about the rebuilding.

Documentation will follow, but have a look at the demo repo in https://github.com/bep/hugo-sass-test

New functions to create `Resource` objects:

* `resources.Get` (see above)
* `resources.FromString`: Create a Resource from a string.

New `Resource` transformation funcs:

* `resources.ToCSS`: Compile `SCSS` or `SASS` into `CSS`.
* `resources.PostCSS`: Process your CSS with PostCSS. Config file support (project or theme or passed as an option).
* `resources.Minify`: Currently supports `css`, `js`, `json`, `html`, `svg`, `xml`.
* `resources.Fingerprint`: Creates a fingerprinted version of the given Resource with Subresource Integrity..
* `resources.Concat`: Concatenates a list of Resource objects. Think of this as a poor man's bundler.
* `resources.ExecuteAsTemplate`: Parses and executes the given Resource and data context (e.g. .Site) as a Go template.

Fixes #4381
Fixes #4903
Fixes #4858
2018-07-06 11:46:12 +02:00
Bjørn Erik Pedersen
3cdf19e9b7
Implement Page bundling and image handling
This commit is not the smallest in Hugo's history.

Some hightlights include:

* Page bundles (for complete articles, keeping images and content together etc.).
* Bundled images can be processed in as many versions/sizes as you need with the three methods `Resize`, `Fill` and `Fit`.
* Processed images are cached inside `resources/_gen/images` (default) in your project.
* Symbolic links (both files and dirs) are now allowed anywhere inside /content
* A new table based build summary
* The "Total in nn ms" now reports the total including the handling of the files inside /static. So if it now reports more than you're used to, it is just **more real** and probably faster than before (see below).

A site building  benchmark run compared to `v0.31.1` shows that this should be slightly faster and use less memory:

```bash
▶ ./benchSite.sh "TOML,num_langs=.*,num_root_sections=5,num_pages=(500|1000),tags_per_page=5,shortcodes,render"

benchmark                                                                                                         old ns/op     new ns/op     delta
BenchmarkSiteBuilding/TOML,num_langs=1,num_root_sections=5,num_pages=500,tags_per_page=5,shortcodes,render-4      101785785     78067944      -23.30%
BenchmarkSiteBuilding/TOML,num_langs=1,num_root_sections=5,num_pages=1000,tags_per_page=5,shortcodes,render-4     185481057     149159919     -19.58%
BenchmarkSiteBuilding/TOML,num_langs=3,num_root_sections=5,num_pages=500,tags_per_page=5,shortcodes,render-4      103149918     85679409      -16.94%
BenchmarkSiteBuilding/TOML,num_langs=3,num_root_sections=5,num_pages=1000,tags_per_page=5,shortcodes,render-4     203515478     169208775     -16.86%

benchmark                                                                                                         old allocs     new allocs     delta
BenchmarkSiteBuilding/TOML,num_langs=1,num_root_sections=5,num_pages=500,tags_per_page=5,shortcodes,render-4      532464         391539         -26.47%
BenchmarkSiteBuilding/TOML,num_langs=1,num_root_sections=5,num_pages=1000,tags_per_page=5,shortcodes,render-4     1056549        772702         -26.87%
BenchmarkSiteBuilding/TOML,num_langs=3,num_root_sections=5,num_pages=500,tags_per_page=5,shortcodes,render-4      555974         406630         -26.86%
BenchmarkSiteBuilding/TOML,num_langs=3,num_root_sections=5,num_pages=1000,tags_per_page=5,shortcodes,render-4     1086545        789922         -27.30%

benchmark                                                                                                         old bytes     new bytes     delta
BenchmarkSiteBuilding/TOML,num_langs=1,num_root_sections=5,num_pages=500,tags_per_page=5,shortcodes,render-4      53243246      43598155      -18.12%
BenchmarkSiteBuilding/TOML,num_langs=1,num_root_sections=5,num_pages=1000,tags_per_page=5,shortcodes,render-4     105811617     86087116      -18.64%
BenchmarkSiteBuilding/TOML,num_langs=3,num_root_sections=5,num_pages=500,tags_per_page=5,shortcodes,render-4      54558852      44545097      -18.35%
BenchmarkSiteBuilding/TOML,num_langs=3,num_root_sections=5,num_pages=1000,tags_per_page=5,shortcodes,render-4     106903858     86978413      -18.64%
```

Fixes #3651
Closes #3158
Fixes #1014
Closes #2021
Fixes #1240
Updates #3757
2017-12-27 18:44:47 +01:00
Bjørn Erik Pedersen
d8717cd4c7 all: Update import paths to gohugoio/hugo 2017-06-13 18:42:45 +02:00
Alexandros
d5ab7f087d Add noindex tag to HTML generated by Hugo Aliases
So that Googlebot can stop keeping the old URLs in the SERPs.
2017-06-08 23:12:39 +02:00
Bjørn Erik Pedersen
8a49c0b3b8 tpl/collections: Make it a package that stands on its own
See #3042
2017-05-01 15:13:41 +02:00
Bjørn Erik Pedersen
8b5b558bb5 tpl: Rework to handle both text and HTML templates
Before this commit, Hugo used `html/template` for all Go templates.

While this is a fine choice for HTML and maybe also RSS feeds, it is painful for plain text formats such as CSV, JSON etc.

This commit fixes that by using the `IsPlainText` attribute on the output format to decide what to use.

A couple of notes:

* The above requires a nonambiguous template name to type mapping. I.e. `/layouts/_default/list.json` will only work if there is only one JSON output format, `/layouts/_default/list.mytype.json` will always work.
* Ambiguous types will fall back to HTML.
* Partials inherits the text vs HTML identificator of the container template. This also means that plain text templates can only include plain text partials.
* Shortcode templates are, by definition, currently HTML templates only.

Fixes #3221
2017-04-02 23:13:10 +02:00
Bjørn Erik Pedersen
7eb71ee064 Revert "tpl: Rework to handle both text and HTML templates"
Will have to take another stab at this ...

This reverts commit 5c5efa03d2.

Closes #3260
2017-04-02 14:20:34 +02:00
Bjørn Erik Pedersen
5c5efa03d2 tpl: Rework to handle both text and HTML templates
Before this commit, Hugo used `html/template` for all Go templates.

While this is a fine choice for HTML and maybe also RSS feeds, it is painful for plain text formats such as CSV, JSON etc.

This commit fixes that by using the `IsPlainText` attribute on the output format to decide what to use.

A couple of notes:

* The above requires a nonambiguous template name to type mapping. I.e. `/layouts/_default/list.json` will only work if there is only one JSON output format, `/layouts/_default/list.mytype.json` will always work.
* Ambiguous types will fall back to HTML.
* Partials inherits the text vs HTML identificator of the container template. This also means that plain text templates can only include plain text partials.
* Shortcode templates are, by definition, currently HTML templates only.

Fixes #3221
2017-04-02 11:37:30 +02:00
Bjørn Erik Pedersen
87188496fb hugolib, output: Handle aliases for all HTML formats 2017-03-27 15:43:56 +02:00
Bjørn Erik Pedersen
c7c6b47ba8 hubolib: Pick layout per output format 2017-03-27 15:43:56 +02:00
Bjørn Erik Pedersen
a49bf8707b hugolib: Remove siteWriter 2017-03-27 15:43:56 +02:00
Bjørn Erik Pedersen
d76e5f36b4 hugolib: Pull all alias handling into one file 2017-03-27 15:43:56 +02:00
Bjørn Erik Pedersen
e52e2a70e5 hugolib, target: Rework/move the target package
This relates to #3123.

The interfaces and types in `target` made sense at some point, but now this package is too restricted to a hardcoded set of media types.

The overall current logic:

* Create a file path based on some `Translator` with some hardcoded logic handling uglyURLs, hardcoded html suffix etc.
* In in some cases (alias), a template is applied to create the alias file.
* Then the content is written to destination.

One could argue that it is the last bullet that is the actual core responsibility.

This commit fixes that by moving the `hugolib`-related logic where it belong, and simplify the code, i.e. remove the abstractions.

This code will most certainly evolve once we start on #3123, but now it is at least possible to understand where to start.

Fixes #3123
2017-03-04 23:33:35 +01:00