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.
For instance, a generator can inject values computed at build time for template variables. In the following example, the template reading.html
has two variables ongoing
and done
that are filled in the generator:
module Reading class Generator < Jekyll::Generator def generate(site) ongoing, done = Book.all.partition(&:ongoing?) reading = site.pages.detect {|page| page.name == 'reading.html'} 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 generator will create a series of files under the categories
directory for each category, listing the posts in each category using the category_index.html
layout.
module Jekyll class CategoryPageGenerator < Generator safe true def generate(site) if site.layouts.key? 'category_index' dir = site.config['category_dir'] || 'categories' site.categories.each_key do |category| site.pages << CategoryPage.new(site, site.source, File.join(dir, category), category) end end end end # A Page subclass used in the `CategoryPageGenerator` class CategoryPage < Page def initialize(site, base, dir, category) @site = site @base = base @dir = dir @name = 'index.html' self.process(@name) self.read_yaml(File.join(base, '_layouts'), 'category_index.html') self.data['category'] = category category_title_prefix = site.config['category_title_prefix'] || 'Category: ' self.data['title'] = "#{category_title_prefix}#{category}" end end end
Generators need to implement only one method:
Method | Description |
---|---|
| 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.
© 2020 Jekyll Core Team and contributors
Licensed under the MIT license.
https://jekyllrb.com/docs/plugins/generators/