This function was essentially only operating on data from HtmlConfig. It
wasn't really a "filesystem" function. So this moves it to be more
logically associated with the data it works on.
This removes the macro_use for clap just because I'm not a big fan of
glob-style imports like this. I think being a little more explicit here
makes it a little clearer where these macros come from.
This switches to using the tracing crate instead of log. Tracing
provides a lot of nice features which we can take advantage of moving
forward.
This also adjusts the output fairly significantly. This includes:
- Switched the environment variable from RUST_LOG to MDBOOK_LOG.
- Dropped the timestamp. I experimented with various different time
displays, but ultimately decided to omit it for now. I don't think
I've ever found it to be useful, and it takes up a very significant
amount of space. It could potentially be useful for basic profiling,
but I think there are other, better mechanisms for that. We could
consider leveraging tracing itself for doing some basic profiling
(like using something like tracing-chrome).
- Dropped the target unless MDBOOK_LOG is set. The target tends to be
pretty noisy, and doesn't really convey much information unless you
are debugging or otherwise trying to adjust the log output.
- Added color.
- Slightly reworked the way the error cause trace is displayed.
- Slightly changed the way html5ever filtering is done, as well as add
handlebars to the list since they both are very noisy. You can
override this now by explicitly listing them as targets.
I still expect that mdbook will eventually change how it displays things
to the console, possibly switching away from tracing and printing things
itself. However, that is a larger project for the future.
This changes the `--dest-dir` flag so that it is relative to the current
directory, not the book root. This has been a source of confusion for
several people.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/mdBook/issues/698
This removes the `--dest-dir` flag from the `mdbook test` subcommand
because it is unused. The test command does not generate output, so it
doesn't need an output directory.
This changes it so that it is an error if there is ever an unknown
configuration field. This is intended to help avoid things like typos,
or using an outdated version of mdbook. Although it is possible that new
fields could potentially safely be ignored, setting up a warning system
is a bit more of a hassle. I don't think mdbook needs to have the same
kind of multi-version support as something like cargo does. However, if
this ends up being too much of a pain point, we can try to add a warning
system instead.
There are a variety of changes here:
- The top-level config namespace is now closed so that it only accepts
the keys defined in `Config`.
- All config tables now reject unknown fields.
- Added `Config::outputs` and `Config::preprocessors` for convenience
to access the entire `output` and `preprocessor` tables.
- Moved the unit-tests that were setting environment variables to the
testsuite where it launches a process instead.
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/mdBook/issues/1595
This removes toml as a public dependency. This reduces the exposure of
the public API, reduces exposure of internal implementation, and makes
it easier to make semver-incompatible changes to toml.
This is accomplished through a variety of changes:
- `get` and `get_mut` are removed.
- `get_deserialized_opt` is renamed to `get`.
- Dropped the AsRef for `get_deserialized_opt` for ergonomics, since
using an `&` for a String is not too much to ask, and the other
generic arg needs to be specified in a fair number of situations.
- Removed deprecated `get_deserialized`.
- Dropped `TomlExt` from the public API.
- Removed `get_renderer` and `get_preprocessor` since they were trivial
wrappers over `get`.
This is a pure git rename in order to make sure that git can follow
history. The next commit will integrate these into mdbook-html.
Additional commits will refactor/move/remove items.
This is a pure git rename in order to make sure that git can follow
history. The next commit will integrate these into mdbook-html.
Additional commits will refactor/move/remove items.
This is a pure git rename in order to make sure that git can follow
history. The next commit will integrate these into mdbook-summary.
Additional commits will refactor/move/remove items.
This updates everything for the move of config to mdbook-core. There
will be followup commits that will be moving and refactoring the config.
This simply moves it over unchanged.
This is a pure git rename in order to make sure that git can follow
history. The next commit will integrate these into mdbook-core.
Additional commits will refactor/move/remove items.
This updates everything for the move of utils to mdbook-core. There will
be followup commits that will be moving and refactoring these utils.
This simply moves them over unchanged (except visibility).
This is a pure git rename in order to make sure that git can follow
history. The next commit will integrate these into mdbook-core.
Additional commits will refactor/move/remove items.
This moves Result and Error to mdbook-core with the anticipation of
using them in user crates. For now, the internal APIs will be using
anyhow directly, but the intent is to transition more of these to
mdbook-core where it makes sense.
This is intended as a shared, internal library that will be used by
other mdbook crates. The intention is that those crates will either
directly use, or reexport items from this crate.
Initially this includes MDBOOK_VERSION, which will get reexported from
the preprocessor and renderer crates.
rel=edit lets a page indicate that the linked resource can be used to
edit the page. It is defined at https://microformats.org/wiki/rel-edit.
This can then be parsed by tools like the Universal Edit Button and
custom bookmarklets to open the edit page corresponding with a website.
This fixes several issues with how the sidebar was behaving:
- Manually resizing the sidebar was incorrectly applying transition
animations to the page-wrapper causing awkward movement.
- Clicking the sidebar toggle caused the menu bar to behave differently
compared to loading a page with the sidebar visible or hidden.
- page-wrapper animation wasn't working when JS was disabled.
- RTL sidebar animation was broken.
Most of these issues stem from
https://github.com/rust-lang/mdBook/pull/2454 which moved `js` and
`sidebar-visible` classes from `<body>` to `<html>`, but failed to
update some of the JS and CSS code that was still assuming it was on the
body.
https://github.com/rust-lang/mdBook/pull/1641 previously moved `js` from
`<html>` to `<body>` with the reasoning
"This will be necessary for using CSS selectors on root attributes.".
However, I don't see how that is absolutely necessary, since selectors
like `[dir=rtl].js` should work to select the root element.
This adds the ability to redirect URLs with `#` fragments. This is
useful when section headers get renamed or moved to other pages.
This works both for deleted pages and existing pages.
The implementation requires the use of JavaScript in order to manipulate
the location. (Ideally this would be handled on the server side.)
This also makes it so that deleted page redirects preserve the fragment
ID. Previously if you had a deleted page redirect, and the user went to
something like `page.html#foo`, it would redirect to `bar.html` without
the fragment. I think preserving the fragment is probably a better
behavior. If the new page doesn't have the fragment ID, then no harm is
really done. This is technically an open redirect, but I don't think
that there is too much danger with preserving a fragment ID?
When showing the sidebar, Safari was causing the sidebar to snap into
place without animating. This is apparently some well-known issue where
it doesn't like adding new elements (or changing display) and toggling
an animated transition in the same event loop.
Because `{{resource}}` references don't affect the hash[^1], we need
to avoid referencing dynamic content from within static content.
Otherwise, you get a cached searcher.js referencing a searchindex
that no longer exists.
[^1]: if we made it affect the hash, we'd have to do full dependency
tracking, and we'd no longer be able to support circular refs