生成器插件(Generators)

You can create a generator when you need Jekyll to create additional content based on your own rules.

A generator is a subclass of Jekyll::Generator that defines a generate method, which receives an instance of Jekyll::Site. The return value of generate is ignored.

Generators run after Jekyll has made an inventory of the existing content, and before the site is generated. Pages with front matter are stored as instances of Jekyll::Page and are available via site.pages. Static files become instances of Jekyll::StaticFile and are available via site.static_files. See the Variables documentation page and Jekyll::Site for details.

In the following example, the generator will inject values computed at build time for template variables. The template named reading.html has two undefined variables ongoing and done that will be defined or assigned a value when the generator runs:

module Reading
  class Generator < Jekyll::Generator
    def generate(site)
      book_data = site.data['books']
      ongoing = book_data.select { |book| book['status'] == 'ongoing' }
      done = book_data.select { |book| book['status'] == 'finished' }

      # get template
      reading = site.pages.find { |page| page.name == 'reading.html'}

      # inject data into template
      reading.data['ongoing'] = ongoing
      reading.data['done'] = done
    end
  end
end

The following example is a more complex generator that generates new pages.

In this example, the aim of the generator is to create a page for each category registered in the site. The pages are created at runtime, so their contents, front matter and other attributes need to be designed by the plugin itself.

  • The pages are intended to render a list of all documents under a given category. So the basename of the rendered file would be better as index.html.
  • Having the ability to configure the pages via front matter defaults would be awesome! So assigning a particular type to these pages would be beneficial.
module SamplePlugin
  class CategoryPageGenerator < Jekyll::Generator
    safe true

    def generate(site)
      site.categories.each do |category, posts|
        site.pages << CategoryPage.new(site, category, posts)
      end
    end
  end

  # Subclass of `Jekyll::Page` with custom method definitions.
  class CategoryPage < Jekyll::Page
    def initialize(site, category, posts)
      @site = site             # the current site instance.
      @base = site.source      # path to the source directory.
      @dir  = category         # the directory the page will reside in.

      # All pages have the same filename, so define attributes straight away.
      @basename = 'index'      # filename without the extension.
      @ext      = '.html'      # the extension.
      @name     = 'index.html' # basically @basename + @ext.

      # Initialize data hash with a key pointing to all posts under current category.
      # This allows accessing the list in a template via `page.linked_docs`.
      @data = {
        'linked_docs' => posts
      }

      # Look up front matter defaults scoped to type `categories`, if given key
      # doesn't exist in the `data` hash.
      data.default_proc = proc do |_, key|
        site.frontmatter_defaults.find(relative_path, :categories, key)
      end
    end

    # Placeholders that are used in constructing page URL.
    def url_placeholders
      {
        :path       => @dir,
        :category   => @dir,
        :basename   => basename,
        :output_ext => output_ext,
      }
    end
  end
end

The generated pages can now be set up to use a particular layout or output at a particular path in the destination directory all via the config file using front matter defaults. For example:

# _config.yml

defaults:
  - scope:
      type: categories  # select all category pages
    values:
      layout: category_page
      permalink: categories/:category/

Technical Aspects

Generators need to implement only one method:

Method Description

generate

Generates content as a side-effect.

If your generator is contained within a single file, it can be named whatever you want but it should have an .rb extension. If your generator is split across multiple files, it should be packaged as a Rubygem to be published at https://rubygems.org/. In this case, the name of the gem depends on the availability of the name at that site because no two gems can have the same name.

By default, Jekyll looks for generators in the _plugins directory. However, you can change the default directory by assigning the desired name to the key plugins_dir in the config file.