Hugo CMS

Update: I stopped using Hugo. I still like the idea of a static website, but it had some downsides that did not work well for me:

  • These kinds of static site generators require a local repo, and you generate/build the site. I use too many computers between work/home and things got stale rather easily. I would forget details of the setup all the time.
  • Every time I make an update, I had to re-build the complete site. This required that I had to upload the entire site via FTP for every single thing I updated. As time went on it took longer and longer to make an update.
  • In short – as with most things – maintenance killed it

Hugo

The following is my summary about how I setup Hugo for a website. If you are looking for basic information, please refer to the official documentation. Sometimes it helps to view the same content in someone else’s words.

This page represents a quick summary of my notes. I am not an expert in Hugo, nor do I know all its features. If you are here looking for help doing something, you should read this and other sources to gain a good understanding of what you want to do.

Quick Summary

Setup a new hugo site:

  hugo new site mywebsite
  • Don’t forget to download a theme from their website
  • The site’s main configuration file: config.toml (you set the theme here)

Create a page:

  hugo new posts/my-first-post.md
  • Notice you include the location of where to create the file

Run a test server:

  hugo server -D`   
  • -D means to show all pages marked as draft
  • Leave the -D off if you want to only see published content (i.e. pages not marked as draft)

Build the final site:

  1. Remove anything in the /public folder
  2. Run command hugo
  3. Copy everything in /public folder to your web host

Themes

Browse and download a theme from Hugo’s website.
I choose a theme called Minimal

  • A good theme has a good README on their github page explaining how best to customize it
  • Themes want you to git clone their project. This hasn’t been the greatest experience for me. Instead I download the theme myself and place it in the theme folder

Customize your theme

With Hugo you can override any file in the theme by making a corresponding file under the /layouts folder.

For example, to change the theme’s footer file:

  1. Find the file in the theme: /themes/minimal/layouts/partials/footer.html
  2. Copy it to your layouts folder: /layouts/partials/footer.html
  3. Edit the copy in the layouts folder
  4. You’re done!

Pages

Each page in Hugo defaults as a list type.

  • If you create one file in a folder, then it’s the only one and acts like the index.html file.
  • As soon as you create 2 files, the index of that folder changes and it lists all files in the folder in blog-like fashion

All pages have a small section at the top for settings and variables called “Front Matter”

  • All new pages have a draft: true. The page will not show on your published site until you change it to false.

Customizations

An About page with no date

I created an About page. I noticed that a single page in Hugo (with theme Minimal) still shows the date. I thought that looked rather silly so I made some modifications. This might not be the best way to achieve what I wanted.

  1. Hugo as a section called “archetypes”, which are default settings for the type of pages you can build. I modified my /archetypes/default.md to include a new variable: showthedate: true. Every new page I make has this variable in it.
  2. I found the file in the theme that was displaying the date. In my case it was a file called /themes/minimal/layouts/partials/list-item.html. I copied the file into my layouts folder: /layouts/partials/list-item.html
  3. I made this change in the file itself:
  {{ if .Params.showthedate }}
  {{ .Date.Format (.Site.Params.dateFormat | default "January 2, 2006") | $.Scratch.Set "subtitle" }}
  {{ end }}
  • All this does is hide the date if my page has my showthedate variable set to false
  1. In my about.md page, I set the variable:
  ---
  title: "About"
  date: 2017-10-20T21:56:50-07:00
  draft: false
  showthedate: false
  ---

  I have been making...

Open Header icons in new tab

(instead of in the same page)

I wanted all icons in my header, such as Twitter, Stacked Overflow, etc, to open in a new tab (or window). This is another example of finding the file in the theme, and overriding it by placing a modified copy in the /layouts folder

  1. I found the spot where the theme generates the icon links: /themes/minimal/layouts/partials/header.html
  2. I copied it to my local layouts folder: /layouts/partials/header.html
  3. I added a target="_blank" parameter to the link tag (super simple MVP-like stuff)
  <li class="navbar-icon"><a target="_blank" href="{{ .URL }}"><i class="fa fa-{{ .Name }}"></i></a></li>

Create a static landing page

By default the theme shows your blog posts on the main landing page (i.e. http://www.jjerome.com/). I wanted my main landing page to just show a welcome message. Again, fairly easy to do by overriding the theme.

  1. I found the spot in the theme: /themes/minimal/layouts/index.html
  2. I copied it to my layouts folder: /layouts/index.html

This page is a little weird, because it’s not a markdown file like the rest of the site. I didn’t dwell on that fact for too long. I just made my changes and moved on.




You can see all my code in my github repo