49809a03 Merge commit '20a631b4964fc0ab9137cce1e41774cbc17de044' 20a631b4 Squashed 'themes/gohugoioTheme/' changes from b8202f539..dafc91ff1 8b58f565 Re-generate CLI docs 4653a724 Add Netlify deployment badge 2d6246bc Remove some deprecated site variables e6777153 Improve Algolia Search Display Styling 1570999f Add missing "." in front of gitlab-ci.yaml example b922ae7d This adds documentation to the new configDir/Environment logic from .53 (#729) 7cff379f Correctly escape multi-word taxonomy terms in example 2dfeeda4 fix typo by removing stray paren 0870bd9a Fix typo in `paginate` description 91e8be85 Fixes https://github.com/gohugoio/hugo/issues/5609 c1db65ec Make the dummy URL more obvious b4589ff0 Fix a link b73dcb9a Consistently use "posts" as section name in examples 7a56abbc Format definitions a9c6fd9b Minor clarification over the last commit 5c86bdc8 Add alternative instructions for Quick Start for non-git users dafe7ee9 Add Visual Studio Code plug-ins 110ed19e Update HUGO_VERSION 2abd031a Update page.md b332f7b9 Update page.md f5a8c9d4 Update static-files.md 6d0c155c Add note about relative protocol URLs a13751ac Theme Warning: Remove note about unquoted URLs 4c8f7d68 Incorporate feedback 6f2b9cf0 Update Creating Themes Warning 40d88d98 Fix ToC example to use binary true/false 4a11f3f1 Fix typo 2dbfc0a4 Fix a typo in taxonomies d63790ef Do not mark UndocumentedFeature issues as stale d7aff095 Regenerate docs.json 71c0826f Update transform.Unmarshal.md git-subtree-dir: docs git-subtree-split: 49809a038b2691637bab7f3f2e385dde654a88b8
9.2 KiB
title | linktitle | description | date | publishdate | lastmod | categories | keywords | menu | weight | draft | aliases | toc | ||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Content Organization | Organization | Hugo assumes that the same structure that works to organize your source content is used to organize the rendered site. | 2017-02-01 | 2017-02-01 | 2017-02-01 |
|
|
|
10 | false |
|
true |
Page Bundles
Hugo 0.32
announced page-relative images and other resources packaged into Page Bundles
.
These terms are connected, and you also need to read about [Page Resources]({{< relref "/content-management/page-resources" >}}) and [Image Processing]({{< relref "/content-management/image-processing" >}}) to get the full picture.
{{% imgproc 1-featured Resize "300x" %}} The illustration shows 3 bundles. Note that the home page bundle cannot contain other content pages, but other files (images etc.) are fine. {{% /imgproc %}}
{{% note %}} The bundle documentation is work in progress. We will publish more comprehensive docs about this soon. {{% /note %}}
Organization of Content Source
In Hugo, your content should be organized in a manner that reflects the rendered website.
While Hugo supports content nested at any level, the top levels (i.e. content/<DIRECTORIES>
) are special in Hugo and are considered the content type used to determine layouts etc. To read more about sections, including how to nest them, see sections.
Without any additional configuration, the following will just work:
.
└── content
└── about
| └── _index.md // <- https://example.com/about/
├── posts
| ├── firstpost.md // <- https://example.com/posts/firstpost/
| ├── happy
| | └── ness.md // <- https://example.com/posts/happy/ness/
| └── secondpost.md // <- https://example.com/posts/secondpost/
└── quote
├── first.md // <- https://example.com/quote/first/
└── second.md // <- https://example.com/quote/second/
Path Breakdown in Hugo
The following demonstrates the relationships between your content organization and the output URL structure for your Hugo website when it renders. These examples assume you are using pretty URLs, which is the default behavior for Hugo. The examples also assume a key-value of baseurl = "https://example.com"
in your site's configuration file.
Index Pages: _index.md
_index.md
has a special role in Hugo. It allows you to add front matter and content to your list templates. These templates include those for section templates, taxonomy templates, taxonomy terms templates, and your homepage template.
{{% note %}}
Tip: You can get a reference to the content and metadata in _index.md
using the .Site.GetPage
function.
{{% /note %}}
You can keep one _index.md
for your homepage and one in each of your content sections, taxonomies, and taxonomy terms. The following shows typical placement of an _index.md
that would contain content and front matter for a posts
section list page on a Hugo website:
. url
. ⊢--^-⊣
. path slug
. ⊢--^-⊣⊢---^---⊣
. filepath
. ⊢------^------⊣
content/posts/_index.md
At build, this will output to the following destination with the associated values:
url ("/posts/")
⊢-^-⊣
baseurl section ("posts")
⊢--------^---------⊣⊢-^-⊣
permalink
⊢----------^-------------⊣
https://example.com/posts/index.html
The sections can be nested as deeply as you need. The important part to understand is, that to make the section tree fully navigational, at least the lower-most section needs a content file. (i.e. _index.md
).
Single Pages in Sections
Single content files in each of your sections are going to be rendered as single page templates. Here is an example of a single post
within posts
:
path ("posts/my-first-hugo-post.md")
. ⊢-----------^------------⊣
. section slug
. ⊢-^-⊣⊢--------^----------⊣
content/posts/my-first-hugo-post.md
At the time Hugo builds your site, the content will be output to the following destination:
url ("/posts/my-first-hugo-post/")
⊢------------^----------⊣
baseurl section slug
⊢--------^--------⊣⊢-^--⊣⊢-------^---------⊣
permalink
⊢--------------------^---------------------⊣
https://example.com/posts/my-first-hugo-post/index.html
Paths Explained
The following concepts will provide more insight into the relationship between your project's organization and the default behaviors of Hugo when building the output website.
section
A default content type is determined by a piece of content's section. section
is determined by the location within the project's content
directory. section
cannot be specified or overridden in front matter.
slug
A content's slug
is either name.extension
or name/
. The value for slug
is determined by
- the name of the content file (e.g.,
lollapalooza.md
) OR - front matter overrides
path
A content's path
is determined by the section's path to the file. The file path
- is based on the path to the content's location AND
- does not include the slug
url
The url
is the relative URL for the piece of content. The url
- is based on the content's location within the directory structure OR
- is defined in front matter and overrides all the above
Override Destination Paths via Front Matter
Hugo believes that you organize your content with a purpose. The same structure that works to organize your source content is used to organize the rendered site. As displayed above, the organization of the source content will be mirrored in the destination.
There are times where you may need more control over your content. In these cases, there are fields that can be specified in the front matter to determine the destination of a specific piece of content.
The following items are defined in this order for a specific reason: items explained further down in the list will override earlier items, and not all of these items can be defined in front matter:
filename
This isn't in the front matter, but is the actual name of the file minus the extension. This will be the name of the file in the destination (e.g., content/posts/my-post.md
becomes example.com/posts/my-post/
).
slug
When defined in the front matter, the slug
can take the place of the filename for the destination.
{{< code file="content/posts/old-post.md" >}}
title: New Post slug: "new-post"
{{< /code >}}
This will render to the following destination according to Hugo's default behavior:
example.com/posts/new-post/
section
section
is determined by a content's location on disk and cannot be specified in the front matter. See sections for more information.
type
A content's type
is also determined by its location on disk but, unlike section
, it can be specified in the front matter. See types. This can come in especially handy when you want a piece of content to render using a different layout. In the following example, you can create a layout at layouts/new/mylayout.html
that Hugo will use to render this piece of content, even in the midst of many other posts.
{{< code file="content/posts/my-post.md" >}}
title: My Post type: new layout: mylayout
{{< /code >}}
url
A complete URL can be provided. This will override all the above as it pertains to the end destination. This must be the path from the baseURL (starting with a /
). url
will be used exactly as it provided in the front matter and will ignore the --uglyURLs
setting in your site configuration:
{{< code file="content/posts/old-url.md" >}}
title: Old URL url: /blog/new-url/
{{< /code >}}
Assuming your baseURL
is configured to https://example.com
, the addition of url
to the front matter will make old-url.md
render to the following destination:
https://example.com/blog/new-url/
You can see more information on how to control output paths in URL Management.