Clippy is returning some warnings. Let's fix or explicitly ignore
them. In particular:
- In `components/imageproc/src/lib.rs`, we implement `Hash` explicitly
but derive `PartialEq`. We need to maintain the property that two
keys being equal implies the hashes of those two keys are equal.
Our `Hash` implementations preserve this, so we'll explicitly ignore
the warnings.
- In `components/site/src/lib.rs`, we were calling `.into()` on some
values that are already of the correct type.
- In `components/site/src/lib.rs`, we were using `.map(|x| *x)` in
iterator chains to remove a level of indirection; we can instead say
`.copied()` (introduced in Rust v1.36) or `.cloned()`. Using
`.copied` here is better from a type-checking point of view, but
we'll use `.cloned` for now as Rust v1.36 was only recently
released.
- In `components/templates/src/filters.rs` and
`components/utils/src/site.rs`, we were taking `HashMap`s as
function arguments but not generically accepting alternate `Hasher`
implementations.
- In `src/cmd/check.rs`, we use `env::current_dir()` as a default
value, but our use of `unwrap_or` meant that we would always
retrieve the current directory even when not needed.
- In `components/errors/src/lib.rs`, we can use `if let` rather than
`match`.
- In `components/library/src/content/page.rs`, we can collapse a
nested conditional into `else if let ...`.
- In `components/library/src/sorting.rs`, a function takes `&&Page`
arguments. Clippy warns about this for efficiency reasons, but
we're doing it here to match a particular sorting API, so we'll
explicitly ignore the warning.
* Add hard_link_static config option.
* Copy or hardlink file depending on an argument.
Modify the call sites for `copy_file` to account for the extra argument.
* Plug the config setting through to copy_file.
Don't apply the config option to theme's static directory.
* Update documentation.
* Backticks make no sense in this comment.
* Addressing PR comments.
* Be consistent with argument naming.
* chore: Update glob to 0.3
Signed-off-by: Igor Gnatenko <i.gnatenko.brain@gmail.com>
* chore: Update ws to 0.8
Signed-off-by: Igor Gnatenko <i.gnatenko.brain@gmail.com>
* Add check subcommand
* Add some brief documentation for the check subcommand
* Start working on parallel link checks
* Check all external links in Site
* Return *all* dead links in site
Justification for this feature is added in the docs.
Precedent for the precise syntax: Hugo.
Hugo puts this syntax behind a preference named headerIds, and automatic
header ID generation behind a preference named autoHeaderIds, with both
enabled by default. I have not implemented a switch to disable this.
My suggestion for a workaround for the improbable case of desiring a
literal “{#…}” at the end of a header is to replace `}` with `}`.
The algorithm I have used is not identical to [that
which Hugo uses][0], because Hugo’s looks to work at the source level,
whereas here we work at the pulldown-cmark event level, which is
generally more sane, but potentially limiting for extremely esoteric
IDs.
Practical differences in implementation from Hugo (based purely on
reading [blackfriday’s implementation][0], not actually trying it):
- I believe Hugo would treat `# Foo {#*bar*}` as a heading with text
“Foo” and ID `*bar*`, since it is working at the source level; whereas
this code turns it into a heading with HTML `Foo {#<em>bar</em>}`, as
it works at the pulldown-cmark event level and doesn’t go out of its
way to make that work (I’m not familiar with pulldown-cmark, but I get
the impression that you could make it work Hugo’s way on this point).
The difference should be negligible: only *very* esoteric hashes would
include magic Markdown characters.
- Hugo will automatically generate an ID for `{#}`, whereas what I’ve
coded here will yield a blank ID instead (which feels more correct to
me—`None` versus `Some("")`, and all that).
In practice the results should be identical.
Fixes#433.
[0]: a477dd1646/block.go (L218-L234)
* Change the behavior of the template rendering:
* Check if the template bare name is present
* Check if the template is part of a theme
* Fallback to defaults
* Change the behavior of the shortcode rendering:
* Call the template rendering function
* Prepend `__zola_builtins/` to most of the default elements in `ZOLA_TERA`
* Add a test to verify the presence and content of a `404.html` page
from a theme's template