Page Bundles
Page Bundles are a way to group Page Resources.
A Page Bundle can be one of:
- Leaf Bundle (leaf means it has no children)
- Branch Bundle (home page, section, taxonomy terms, taxonomy list)
Leaf Bundle | Branch Bundle | |
---|---|---|
Usage | Collection of content and attachments for single pages | Collection of attachments for section pages (home page, section, taxonomy terms, taxonomy list) |
Index file name | index.md 1 |
_index.md 1 |
Allowed Resources | Page and non-page (like images, pdf, etc.) types | Only non-page (like images, pdf, etc.) types |
Where can the Resources live? | At any directory level within the leaf bundle directory. | Only in the directory level of the branch bundle directory i.e. the directory containing the _index.md (ref). |
Layout type | single |
list |
Nesting | Does not allow nesting of more bundles under it | Allows nesting of leaf or branch bundles under it |
Example | content/posts/my-post/index.md |
content/posts/_index.md |
Content from non-index page files… | Accessed only as page resources | Accessed only as regular pages |
Leaf Bundles
A Leaf Bundle is a directory at any hierarchy within the content/
directory, that contains an index.md
file.
Examples of Leaf Bundle organization
content/
├── about
│ ├── index.md
├── posts
│ ├── my-post
│ │ ├── content1.md
│ │ ├── content2.md
│ │ ├── image1.jpg
│ │ ├── image2.png
│ │ └── index.md
│ └── my-other-post
│ └── index.md
│
└── another-section
├── ..
└── not-a-leaf-bundle
├── ..
└── another-leaf-bundle
└── index.md
In the above example content/
directory, there are four leaf
bundles:
- about
- This leaf bundle is at the root level (directly under
content
directory) and has only theindex.md
. - my-post
- This leaf bundle has the
index.md
, two other content Markdown files and two image files. - image1
- This image is a page resource of
my-post
and only available inmy-post/index.md
resources. - image2
- This image is a page resource of
my-post
and only available inmy-post/index.md
resources. - my-other-post
- This leaf bundle has only the
index.md
. - another-leaf-bundle
- This leaf bundle is nested under couple of
directories. This bundle also has only the
index.md
.
Headless Bundle
A headless bundle is a bundle that is configured to not get published anywhere:
- It will have no
Permalink
and no rendered HTML inpublic/
. - It will not be part of
.Site.RegularPages
, etc.
But you can get it by .Site.GetPage
. Here is an example:
{{ $headless := .Site.GetPage "/some-headless-bundle" }}
{{ $reusablePages := $headless.Resources.Match "author*" }}
<h2>Authors</h2>
{{ range $reusablePages }}
<h3>{{ .Title }}</h3>
{{ .Content }}
{{ end }}
In this example, we are assuming the some-headless-bundle
to be a headless
bundle containing one or more page resources whose .Name
matches
"author*"
.
Explanation of the above example:
- Get the
some-headless-bundle
Page “object”. - Collect a slice of resources in this Page Bundle that matches
"author*"
using.Resources.Match
. - Loop through that slice of nested pages, and output their
.Title
and.Content
.
A leaf bundle can be made headless by adding below in the Front Matter
(in the index.md
):
headless = true
There are many use cases of such headless page bundles:
- Shared media galleries
- Reusable page content “snippets”
Branch Bundles
A Branch Bundle is any directory at any hierarchy within the
content/
directory, that contains at least an _index.md
file.
This _index.md
can also be directly under the content/
directory.
Examples of Branch Bundle organization
content/
├── branch-bundle-1
│ ├── branch-content1.md
│ ├── branch-content2.md
│ ├── image1.jpg
│ ├── image2.png
│ └── _index.md
└── branch-bundle-2
├── _index.md
└── a-leaf-bundle
└── index.md
In the above example content/
directory, there are two branch
bundles (and a leaf bundle):
branch-bundle-1
- This branch bundle has the
_index.md
, two other content Markdown files and two image files. branch-bundle-2
- This branch bundle has the
_index.md
and a nested leaf bundle.
-
The
.md
extension is just an example. The extension can be.html
,.json
or any valid MIME type. ↩︎