hugo/docs/content/about/new-in-032/index.md
2018-04-16 07:45:38 +02:00

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Hugo 0.32 HOWTO About page bundles, image processing and more. 2017-12-28
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{{% note %}} This documentation belongs in other places in this documentation site, but is put here first ... to get something up and running fast. {{% /note %}}

Also see this demo project from bep, the clever Norwegian behind these new features:

Page Resources

Organize Your Content

{{< figure src="/images/hugo-content-bundles.png" title="Pages with image resources" >}}

The content folder above shows a mix of content pages (md (i.e. markdown) files) and image resources.

{{% note %}} You can use any file type as a content resource as long as it is a MIME type recognized by Hugo (json files will, as one example, work fine). If you want to get exotic, you can define your own media type. {{% /note %}}

The 3 page bundles marked in red explained from top to bottom:

  1. The home page with one image resource (1-logo.png)
  2. The blog section with two images resources and two pages resources (content1.md, content2.md). Note that the _index.md represents the URL for this section.
  3. An article (hugo-is-cool) with a folder with some images and one content resource (cats-info.md). Note that the index.md represents the URL for this article.

The content files below blog/posts are just regular standalone pages.

{{% note %}} Note that changes to any resource inside the content folder will trigger a reload when running in watch (aka server or live reload mode), it will even work with --navigateToChanged. {{% /note %}}

Sort Order

  • Pages are sorted according to standard Hugo page sorting rules.
  • Images and other resources are sorted in lexicographical order.

Handle Page Resources in Templates

List all Resources

{{ range .Resources }}
<li><a href="{{ .RelPermalink }}">{{ .ResourceType | title }}</a></li>
{{ end }}

For an absolute URL, use .Permalink.

Note: The permalink will be relative to the content page, respecting permalink settings. Also, included page resources will not have a value for RelPermalink.

List All Resources by Type

{{ with .Resources.ByType "image" }}
{{ end }}

Type here is page for pages, else the main type in the MIME type, so image, json etc.

Get a Specific Resource

{{ $logo := .Resources.GetByPrefix "logo" }}
{{ with $logo }}
{{ end }}

Include Page Resource Content

{{ with .Resources.ByType "page" }}
{{ range . }}
<h3>{{ .Title }}</h3>
{{ .Content }}
{{ end }}
{{ end }}

Image Processing

The image resource implements the methods Resize, Fit and Fill:

Resize
Resize to the given dimension, {{ $logo.Resize "200x" }} will resize to 200 pixels wide and preserve the aspect ratio. Use {{ $logo.Resize "200x100" }} to control both height and width.
Fit
Scale down the image to fit the given dimensions, e.g. {{ $logo.Fit "200x100" }} will fit the image inside a box that is 200 pixels wide and 100 pixels high.
Fill
Resize and crop the image given dimensions, e.g. {{ $logo.Fill "200x100" }} will resize and crop to width 200 and height 100

{{% note %}} Image operations in Hugo currently do not preserve EXIF data as this is not supported by Go's image package. This will be improved on in the future. {{% /note %}}

Image Processing Examples

The photo of the sunset used in the examples below is Copyright Bjørn Erik Pedersen (Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license)

{{< imgproc sunset Resize "300x" />}}

{{< imgproc sunset Fill "90x120 left" />}}

{{< imgproc sunset Fill "90x120 right" />}}

{{< imgproc sunset Fit "90x90" />}}

{{< imgproc sunset Resize "300x q10" />}}

This is the shortcode used in the examples above:

{{< code file="layouts/shortcodes/imgproc.html" >}} {{< readfile file="layouts/shortcodes/imgproc.html" >}}
{{< /code >}}

And it is used like this:

{{</* imgproc sunset Resize "300x" */>}}

Image Processing Options

In addition to the dimensions (e.g. 200x100) where either height or width can be omitted, Hugo supports a set of additional image options:

Anchor
Only relevant for Fill. This is useful for thumbnail generation where the main motive is located in, say, the left corner. Valid are Center, TopLeft, Top, TopRight, Left, Right, BottomLeft, Bottom, BottomRight. Example: {{ $logo.Fill "200x100 BottomLeft" }}
JPEG Quality
Only relevant for JPEG images, values 1 to 100 inclusive, higher is better. Default is 75. {{ $logo.Resize "200x q50" }}
Rotate
Rotates an image by the given angle counter-clockwise. The rotation will be performed first to get the dimensions correct. {{ $logo.Resize "200x r90" }}. The main use of this is to be able to manually correct for EXIF orientation of JPEG images.
Resample Filter
Filter used in resizing. Default is Box, a simple and fast resampling filter appropriate for downscaling. See https://github.com/disintegration/imaging for more. If you want to trade quality for faster processing, this may be a option to test.

Performance

Processed images are stored below <project-dir>/resources (can be set with resourceDir config setting). This folder is deliberately placed in the project, as it is recommended to check these into source control as part of the project. These images are not "Hugo fast" to generate, but once generated they can be reused.

If you change your image settings (e.g. size), remove or rename images etc., you will end up with unused images taking up space and cluttering your project.

To clean up, run:

hugo --gc

{{% note %}} GC is short for Garbage Collection. {{% /note %}}

Configuration

Default Image Processing Config

You can configure an imaging section in config.toml with default image processing options:

[imaging]
# Default resample filter used for resizing. Default is Box,
# a simple and fast averaging filter appropriate for downscaling.
# See https://github.com/disintegration/imaging
resampleFilter = "box"

# Defatult JPEG quality setting. Default is 75.
quality = 68