4.1 KiB
Victor Hugo
A Hugo boilerplate for creating truly epic websites
This is a boilerplate for using Hugo as a static site generator and Gulp + Webpack as your asset pipeline.
Victor Hugo setup to use PostCSS and Babel for CSS and JavaScript compiling/transpiling.
This project is released under the MIT license. Please make sure you understand its implications and guarantees.
Usage
Prerequisites
You need to have the latest/LTS node and npm versions installed in order to use Victor Hugo.
Next step, clone this repository and run:
npm install
This will take some time and will install all packages necessary to run Victor Hugo and it's tasks.
Development
While developing your website, use:
npm start
or
gulp server
Then visit http://localhost:3000/ - or a new browser windows popped-up already - to preview your new website. BrowserSync will automatically reload the CSS or refresh the whole page, when stylesheets or content changes.
Static build
To build a static version of the website inside the /dist
folder, run:
npm run build
To get a preview of posts or articles not yet published, run:
npm run build-preview
See package.json or the included gulp file for all tasks.
Structure
|--site // Everything in here will be built with hugo
| |--content // Pages and collections - ask if you need extra pages
| |--data // YAML data files with any data for use in examples
| |--layouts // This is where all templates go
| | |--partials // This is where includes live
| | |--index.html // The index page
| |--static // Files in here ends up in the public folder
|--src // Files that will pass through the asset pipeline
| |--css // CSS files in the root of this folder will end up in /css/...
| |--js // app.js will be compiled to /app.js with babel
Basic Concepts
You can read more about Hugo's template language in their documentation here:
https://gohugo.io/templates/overview/
The most useful page there is the one about the available functions:
https://gohugo.io/templates/functions/
For assets that are completely static and don't need to go through the asset pipeline,
use the site/static
folder. Images, font-files, etc, all go there.
Files in the static folder ends up in the web root. So a file called site/static/favicon.ico
will end up being available as /favicon.ico
and so on...
The src/js/app.js
file is the entrypoint for webpack and will be built to /dist/app.js
.
You can use ES6 and use both relative imports or import libraries from npm.
Any CSS file directly under the src/css/
folder will get compiled with PostCSS Next
to /dist/css/{filename}.css
. Import statements will be resolved as part of the build
Environment variables
To separate the development and production - aka build - stages, all gulp tasks run with a node environment variable named either development
or production
.
You can access the environment variable inside the theme files with getenv "NODE_ENV"
. See the following example for a conditional statement:
{{ if eq (getenv "NODE_ENV") "development" }}You're in development!{{ end }}
All tasks starting with build set the environment variable to production
- the other will set it to development
.
Deploying to Netlify
- Push your clone to your own GitHub repository.
- Create a new site on Netlify and link the repository.
Now Netlify will build and deploy your site whenever you push to git.
You can also click this button: