Upgrading from 3.x to 4.x
A few things have changed in Jekyll 4.
Before we dive in, you need to have at least Ruby 2.4.0 installed.
Run the following in your terminal to check
ruby -v
ruby 2.6.3p62 (2019-04-16 revision 67580)
If you’re using a supported Ruby version >= 2.4.0, go ahead and fetch the latest version of Jekyll:
gem update jekyll
post_url
Tag and Baseurl
The post_url
tag now incorporates the relative_url
filter within itself
and therefore automatically prepends your site's baseurl
to the post's url
value.
Please ensure that you change all instances of the post_url
usage as following:
Template rendering
We’ve slightly altered the way Jekyll parses and renders your various templates to improve the overall build times. Jekyll now parses a template once, caches it internally and then renders the parsed template multiple times as required by your pages and documents.
The downside to this is that some of the community-authored plugins may not work as they previously used to.
Static files in unrendered collections
Collections other than posts
can contain static assets along with Markdown files.
But if the collection has not been configured with metadata output: true
, then
neither its documents nor its static assets will be output to the destination
directory.
For plugin authors
-
If your plugin depends on the following code:
site.liquid_renderer.file(path).parse(content)
, note that the return value (template
, an instance ofLiquid::Template
), from that line will always be the same object for a givenpath
.
Thetemplate
instance is then rendered as previously, with respect to thepayload
passed to it. You’ll therefore have to ensure thatpayload
is not memoized or cached in your plugin instance. -
If its a requirement that
template
you get from the above step be different at all times, you can invokeLiquid::Template
directly:- template = site.liquid_renderer.file(path).parse(content) + template = Liquid::Template.parse(content)
Exclusion changes
We’ve enhanced our default exclusion array. It now looks like the following:
# default excludes
exclude:
- .sass-cache/
- .jekyll-cache/
- gemfiles/
- Gemfile
- Gemfile.lock
- node_modules/
- vendor/bundle/
- vendor/cache/
- vendor/gems/
- vendor/ruby/
What’s new is that this array does not get overridden by the exclude
array
in the user’s config file anymore. The user’s exclude entries simply get
added to the above default array (if the entry isn’t already excluded).
To forcibly “process” directories or files that have been excluded, list them
in the include
array instead:
# overrides your excluded items configuration and the default include array ([".htaccess"])
include:
- .htaccess
- node_modules/uglifier/index.js
The above configuration directs Jekyll to handle only
node_modules/uglifier/index.js
while ignoring every other file in the
node_modules
directory since that directory is “excluded” by default.
Note that the default include
array still gets overridden by the include
array in your config file. So, be sure to add .htaccess
to the list if you
need that file to be present in the generated site.
Kramdown v2
Jekyll has dropped support for kramdown-1.x
entirely.
From v2.0
onwards
kramdown requires specific extensions to be additionally installed to use
certain features are desired outside of kramdown’s core functionality.
Out of all the extensions listed in the report linked above, gem
kramdown-parser-gfm
is automatically installed along with Jekyll 4.0. The
remaining extensions will have to be manually installed by the user depending on
desired funtionality, by listing the extension’s gem-name in their Gemfile
.
Notes:
-
kramdown-converter-pdf
will be ignored by Jekyll Core. To have Jekyll convert Markdown to PDF you’ll have to depend on a plugin that subclassesJekyll::Converter
with the required methods.For example:
module Jekyll External.require_with_graceful_fail "kramdown-converter-pdf" class Markdown2PDF < Converter safe true priority :low def matches(ext) # match only files that have an extension exactly ".markdown" ext =~ /^\.markdown$/ end def convert(content) Kramdown::Document.new(content).to_pdf end def output_ext ".pdf" end end end
-
Vendors that provide a versioned Jekyll Environment Image (e.g. Docker Image, GitHub Pages, etc) will have to manually whitelist kramdown’s extension gems in their distributions for Jekyll 4.0.
Deprecated Configuration Options
Jekyll 4.0 has dropped support for all legacy configuration options that were deprecated over multiple releases in the previous series.
To that end, we shall no longer output a deprecation warning when we encounter a legacy config key nor
shall we gracefully assign their values to the newer counterparts. Depending on the key, it shall either
be ignored or raise an InvalidConfigurationError
error if the key is still valid but the associated
value is not of the valid type.