mirror of
https://github.com/gohugoio/hugo.git
synced 2024-11-14 20:37:55 -05:00
41bc6f702a
2c0125b52 Remove .Site.Author 2cf8841b3 Update partialCached.md (#1924) 385487191 Update data-templates.md (#1926) ce207e141 Remove redundant markdown and fix a few typos (#1936) 3687c2953 Make heading id linkable, take 2 45c79bea7 Make heading id linkable b22079344 Delete duplicates the lines 557-569 and 570-582. (#1934) 0a90dc122 Rework the taxonomy variables page (#1935) 7f8979c50 Update theme 26e682a3a Update multilingual.md d40e7693f Update postcss.md 375d75c01 Update postcss npm instructions (#1931) 63020094a Emphasize Window shell selection (#1930) 56824be2c Update configuration.md b7b8f16b3 Docu 'Theme components': minor fix (#1929) 09dc81a05 Remove Docker from BSD page (#1927) 205fea204 netlify: Hugo 0.108.0 6abe49c28 Merge commit 'da670c38ee63a7fef25e2b9f42519232055b60dc' 12b59a4c5 docs: Add basic doc for wrapStandAloneImageWithinParagraph etc. ba07bd970 dartsass: Add sourceMapIncludeSources option git-subtree-dir: docs git-subtree-split: 2c0125b5290494d49334606c451446ebd9df3c21
4.9 KiB
4.9 KiB
title | linktitle | description | date | publishdate | categories | keywords | menu | weight | sections_weight | aliases | toc | ||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Directory Structure | Directory Structure | Hugo's CLI scaffolds a project directory structure and then takes that single directory and uses it as the input to create a complete website. | 2017-01-02 | 2017-02-01 |
|
|
|
50 | 50 |
|
true |
New Site Scaffolding
{{< youtube sB0HLHjgQ7E >}}
Running hugo new site example
from the command line creates a directory structure with the following elements:
example/
├── archetypes/
│ └── default.md
├── assets/
├── content/
├── data/
├── layouts/
├── public/
├── static/
├── themes/
└── config.toml
Directory Structure Explained
The following is a high-level overview of each of the directories with links to each of their respective sections within the Hugo docs.
archetypes
- You can create new content files in Hugo using the
hugo new
command. By default, Hugo will create new content files with at leastdate
,title
(inferred from the filename), anddraft = true
. This saves time and promotes consistency for sites using multiple content types. You can create your own archetypes with custom preconfigured front matter fields as well. assets
- Stores all the files which need be processed by Hugo Pipes. Only the files whose
.Permalink
or.RelPermalink
are used will be published to thepublic
directory. config
- Hugo ships with a large number of configuration directives.
The config directory is where those directives are stored as JSON, YAML, or TOML files. Every root setting object can stand as its own file and structured by environments.
Projects with minimal settings and no need for environment awareness can use a single
config.toml
file at its root.
Many sites may need little to no configuration, but Hugo ships with a large number of configuration directives for more granular directions on how you want Hugo to build your website. Note: config directory is not created by default.
content
- All content for your website will live inside this directory. Each top-level folder in Hugo is considered a content section. For example, if your site has three main sections---
blog
,articles
, andtutorials
---you will have three directories atcontent/blog
,content/articles
, andcontent/tutorials
. Hugo uses sections to assign default content types. data
- This directory is used to store configuration files that can be used by Hugo when generating your website. You can write these files in YAML, JSON, or TOML format. In addition to the files you add to this folder, you can also create data templates that pull from dynamic content.
layouts
- Stores templates in the form of
.html
files that specify how views of your content will be rendered into a static website. Templates include list pages, your homepage, taxonomy templates, partials, single page templates, and more. static
- Stores all the static content: images, CSS, JavaScript, etc. When Hugo builds your site, all assets inside your static directory are copied over as-is. A good example of using the
static
folder is for verifying site ownership on Google Search Console, where you want Hugo to copy over a complete HTML file without modifying its content.
{{% note %}} From Hugo 0.31 you can have multiple static directories. {{% /note %}}
resources
- Caches some files to speed up generation. Can be also used by template authors to distribute built Sass files, so you don't have to have the preprocessor installed. Note: resources directory is not created by default.