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URL management | Control the structure and appearance of URLs through front matter entries and settings in your site configuration. |
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Overview
By default, when Hugo renders a page, the resulting URL matches the file path within the content
directory. For example:
content/posts/post-1.md → https://example.org/posts/post-1/
You can change the structure and appearance of URLs with front matter values and site configuration options.
Front matter
slug
Set the slug
in front matter to override the last segment of the path. The slug
value does not affect section pages.
{{< code-toggle file=content/posts/post-1.md fm=true >}} title = 'My First Post' slug = 'my-first-post' {{< /code-toggle >}}
The resulting URL will be:
https://example.org/posts/my-first-post/
url
Set the url
in front matter to override the entire path. Use this with either regular pages or section pages.
With this front matter:
{{< code-toggle file=content/posts/post-1.md fm=true >}} title = 'My First Article' url = '/articles/my-first-article' {{< /code-toggle >}}
The resulting URL will be:
https://example.org/articles/my-first-article/
If you include a file extension:
{{< code-toggle file=content/posts/post-1.md fm=true >}} title = 'My First Article' url = '/articles/my-first-article.html' {{< /code-toggle >}}
The resulting URL will be:
https://example.org/articles/my-first-article.html
In a monolingual site, a url
value with or without a leading slash is relative to the baseURL
.
In a multilingual site:
- A
url
value with a leading slash is relative to thebaseURL
. - A
url
value without a leading slash is relative to thebaseURL
plus the language prefix.
Site type | Front matter url |
Resulting URL |
---|---|---|
monolingual | /about |
https://example.org/about/ |
monolingual | about |
https://example.org/about/ |
multilingual | /about |
https://example.org/about/ |
multilingual | about |
https://example.org/de/about/ |
If you set both slug
and url
in front matter, the url
value takes precedence.
Site configuration
Permalinks
In your site configuration, define a URL pattern for each top-level section. Each URL pattern can target a given language and/or page kind.
Front matter url
values override the URL patterns defined in the permalinks
section of your site configuration.
Monolingual examples
With this content structure:
content/
├── posts/
│ ├── bash-in-slow-motion.md
│ └── tls-in-a-nutshell.md
├── tutorials/
│ ├── git-for-beginners.md
│ └── javascript-bundling-with-hugo.md
└── _index.md
Render tutorials under "training", and render the posts under "articles" with a date-base hierarchy:
{{< code-toggle file=hugo >}} [permalinks.page] posts = '/articles/:year/:month/:slug/' tutorials = '/training/:slug/' [permalinks.section] posts = '/articles/' tutorials = '/training/' {{< /code-toggle >}}
The structure of the published site will be:
public/
├── articles/
│ ├── 2023/
│ │ ├── 04/
│ │ │ └── bash-in-slow-motion/
│ │ │ └── index.html
│ │ └── 06/
│ │ └── tls-in-a-nutshell/
│ │ └── index.html
│ └── index.html
├── training/
│ ├── git-for-beginners/
│ │ └── index.html
│ ├── javascript-bundling-with-hugo/
│ │ └── index.html
│ └── index.html
└── index.html
To create a date-based hierarchy for regular pages in the content root:
{{< code-toggle file=hugo >}} [permalinks.page] "/" = "/:year/:month/:slug/" {{< /code-toggle >}}
Use the same approach with taxonomy terms. For example, to omit the taxonomy segment of the URL:
{{< code-toggle file=hugo >}} [permalinks.term] 'tags' = '/:slug/' {{< /code-toggle >}}
Multilingual example
Use the permalinks
configuration as a component of your localization strategy.
With this content structure:
content/
├── en/
│ ├── books/
│ │ ├── les-miserables.md
│ │ └── the-hunchback-of-notre-dame.md
│ └── _index.md
└── es/
├── books/
│ ├── les-miserables.md
│ └── the-hunchback-of-notre-dame.md
└── _index.md
And this site configuration:
{{< code-toggle file=hugo >}} defaultContentLanguage = 'en' defaultContentLanguageInSubdir = true
[languages.en] contentDir = 'content/en' languageCode = 'en-US' languageDirection = 'ltr' languageName = 'English' weight = 1
[languages.en.permalinks.page] books = "/books/:slug/"
[languages.en.permalinks.section] books = "/books/"
[languages.es] contentDir = 'content/es' languageCode = 'es-ES' languageDirection = 'ltr' languageName = 'Español' weight = 2
[languages.es.permalinks.page] books = "/libros/:slug/"
[languages.es.permalinks.section] books = "/libros/" {{< /code-toggle >}}
The structure of the published site will be:
public/
├── en/
│ ├── books/
│ │ ├── les-miserables/
│ │ │ └── index.html
│ │ ├── the-hunchback-of-notre-dame/
│ │ │ └── index.html
│ │ └── index.html
│ └── index.html
├── es/
│ ├── libros/
│ │ ├── les-miserables/
│ │ │ └── index.html
│ │ ├── the-hunchback-of-notre-dame/
│ │ │ └── index.html
│ │ └── index.html
│ └── index.html
└── index.html
Tokens
Use these tokens when defining the URL pattern. The date
field in front matter determines the value of time-related tokens.
:year
- the 4-digit year
:month
- the 2-digit month
:monthname
- the name of the month
:day
- the 2-digit day
:weekday
- the 1-digit day of the week (Sunday = 0)
:weekdayname
- the name of the day of the week
:yearday
- the 1- to 3-digit day of the year
:section
- the content's section
:sections
- the content's sections hierarchy. You can use a selection of the sections using slice syntax:
:sections[1:]
includes all but the first,:sections[:last]
includes all but the last,:sections[last]
includes only the last,:sections[1:2]
includes section 2 and 3. Note that this slice access will not throw any out-of-bounds errors, so you don't have to be exact. :title
- the content's title
:slug
- the content's slug (or title if no slug is provided in the front matter)
:slugorfilename
- the content's slug (or file name if no slug is provided in the front matter)
:filename
- the content's file name (without extension)
For time-related values, you can also use the layout string components defined in Go's time package. For example:
{{< code-toggle file=hugo >}} permalinks: posts: /:06/:1/:2/:title/ {{< /code-toggle >}}
Appearance
The appearance of a URL is either ugly or pretty.
Type | Path | URL |
---|---|---|
ugly | content/about.md | https://example.org/about.html |
pretty | content/about.md | https://example.org/about/ |
By default, Hugo produces pretty URLs. To generate ugly URLs, change your site configuration:
{{< code-toggle file=hugo >}} uglyURLs = true {{< /code-toggle >}}
Post-processing
Hugo provides two mutually exclusive configuration options to alter URLs after it renders a page.
Canonical URLs
{{% note %}} This is a legacy configuration option, superseded by template functions and markdown render hooks, and will likely be removed in a future release.
{{% /note %}}
If enabled, Hugo performs a search and replace after it renders the page. It searches for site-relative URLs (those with a leading slash) associated with action
, href
, src
, srcset
, and url
attributes. It then prepends the baseURL
to create absolute URLs.
<a href="/about"> → <a href="https://example.org/about/">
<img src="/a.gif"> → <img src="https://example.org/a.gif">
This is an imperfect, brute force approach that can affect content as well as HTML attributes. As noted above, this is a legacy configuration option that will likely be removed in a future release.
To enable:
{{< code-toggle file=hugo >}} canonifyURLs = true {{< /code-toggle >}}
Relative URLs
{{% note %}} Do not enable this option unless you are creating a serverless site, navigable via the file system. {{% /note %}}
If enabled, Hugo performs a search and replace after it renders the page. It searches for site-relative URLs (those with a leading slash) associated with action
, href
, src
, srcset
, and url
attributes. It then transforms the URL to be relative to the current page.
For example, when rendering content/posts/post-1
:
<a href="/about"> → <a href="../../about">
<img src="/a.gif"> → <img src="../../a.gif">
This is an imperfect, brute force approach that can affect content as well as HTML attributes. As noted above, do not enable this option unless you are creating a serverless site.
To enable:
{{< code-toggle file=hugo >}} relativeURLs = true {{< /code-toggle >}}
Aliases
Create redirects from old URLs to new URLs with aliases:
- An alias with a leading slash is relative to the
baseURL
- An alias without a leading slash is relative to the current directory
Examples
Change the file name of an existing page, and create an alias from the previous URL to the new URL:
{{< code-toggle file=content/posts/new-file-name.md >}} aliases = ['/posts/previous-file-name'] {{< /code-toggle >}}
Each of these directory-relative aliases is equivalent to the site-relative alias above:
previous-file-name
./previous-file-name
../posts/previous-file-name
You can create more than one alias to the current page:
{{< code-toggle file=content/posts/new-file-name.md >}} aliases = ['previous-file-name','original-file-name'] {{< /code-toggle >}}
In a multilingual site, use a directory-relative alias, or include the language prefix with a site-relative alias:
{{< code-toggle file=content/posts/new-file-name.de.md >}} aliases = ['/de/posts/previous-file-name'] {{< /code-toggle >}}
How aliases work
Using the first example above, Hugo generates the following site structure:
public/
├── posts/
│ ├── new-file-name/
│ │ └── index.html
│ ├── previous-file-name/
│ │ └── index.html
│ └── index.html
└── index.html
The alias from the previous URL to the new URL is a client-side redirect:
{{< code file=posts/previous-file-name/index.html >}}
<html lang="en-us"> <head> </head> </html> {{< /code >}}Collectively, the elements in the head
section:
- Tell search engines that the new URL is canonical
- Tell search engines not to index the previous URL
- Tell the browser to redirect to the new URL
Hugo renders alias files before rendering pages. A new page with the previous file name will overwrite the alias, as expected.
Customize
Create a new template (layouts/alias.html
) to customize the content of the alias files. The template receives the following context:
- Permalink
- the link to the page being aliased
- Page
- the Page data for the page being aliased