+++ title = "Moving to Hugo" publishDate = 2024-09-28T00:54:00+02:00 lastmod = 2024-12-08T03:39:16+01:00 tags = ["hugo", "web", "orgmode", "css", "tufte"] categories = ["tech", "emacs"] draft = false meta = true type = "list" [menu] [menu.posts] weight = 3012 identifier = "moving-to-hugo" +++ It's been a long time since I started using the `ox-tufte` exporter to keep and maintain my website. However, I have had issues with it; one of the larger ones being that it's a pain in the butt to remember how it all works when I want to change the structure of it. I also was a little tired of the look and layout; being presented with an endless table of contents isn't the best experience one could hope for online. Not to worry, I am in the midst of migrating most of my writing to Hugo! Naturally, since I am a lover of prose and dearly enamored with sidenotes, I opted for [the hugo-tufte theme.](https://github.com/loikein/hugo-tufte) However, I immediately found some unpleasantness in it. While I can and do appreciate whitespace, there is such a thing as too much. So I spent a number of hours fixing up the CSS (and a few minor things) more to my liking. at the same time, I realized that there are some limitations. I won't bore you with the details, suffice to say I [forked the repo and started messing with it](https://git.bajsicki.com/phil/hugo-tufte). I'm not familiar or even remotely good with CSS/ HTML/ Hugo, so please don't expect miracles{{}}Also called 'clean code.'{{}}. Most of my changes were minor; color scheme adjustments, decreasing the massive margins between the elements, getting some styling on the margin and side notes, and such. One thing that I realized quickly was that the way sidenotes are implemented leads to them overlapping when they're close together; I have yet to find a solution for that, so for the time being, I am choosing to simply make the sidenote font smaller so they don't. Other than that... I'm really happy with it. Of course, I didn't stop there. Being the crazy person that I am, I wanted to automate deployment of my website through git. And so I did. You can find the repo [here.](https://git.bajsicki.com/phil/bajsicki.com) The important bit lies on the server side. I'm using a git hook to automatically purge and re-build the `/public` directory after each commit. I don't get enough traffic for this to be an inconvenience. I used some of [this article](https://jasonmurray.org/posts/2020/githugogen/) by Jason Murray to help me understand how git hooks work. I'm running [Forgejo](https://forgejo.org/), and this is a much more elegant and simple solution when compared to running Actions or other CI/CD tools. The post-receive hook is like so: ```sh #!/bin/bash # Directory on the server where the website will be mapped. export GIT_WORK_TREE=/srv/bajsicki.com echo `pwd` echo "post-receive: Generating https://bajsicki.com with Hugo..." # Create the directory and all subdirectories if they don't exist. mkdir -p $GIT_WORK_TREE chmod 755 $GIT_WORK_TREE # Remove any files already in the public directory, a fresh copy will be generated by hugo rm -rf $GIT_WORK_TREE/public # Generate the site with hugo cd $GIT_WORK_TREE && chmod +x update.sh cd $GIT_WORK_TREE && ./update.sh # Fix any permission problems. find $GIT_WORK_TREE/public -type f -print | xargs -d '\n' chmod 644 find $GIT_WORK_TREE/public -type d -print | xargs -d '\n' chmod 755 echo "post-receive: Hugo site generation complete" ``` The `update.sh` script is as dead simple as things get. ```sh #!/usr/bin/env sh cd themes/hugo-tufte/ git reset --hard && git pull origin main -f cd ../.. git reset --hard && git pull origin main -f hugo ``` In short... it just works, and I can easily transition my blogging/ websites to Hugo without compromising on my `org-mode addiction`. All thanks to [ox-hugo](https://ox-hugo.scripter.co/), which made the process very easy, since I already had all of my articles in org-mode format in the first place. I guess the last thing to mention are the sidenotes and margin notes... sadly, the way to use them with ox-hugo is quite cumbersome. My current process is to keep these two snippets in the kill-ring{{}}I will be moving them to yasnippet... at some point.{{}}, so I can easily insert them when needed. ```org @@hugo:{{}} {{}}@@ ``` Then an example of it would look like this{{}}Or maybe not, I'm not sure.{{}}. ```org @@hugo:{{}}Or maybe not, I'm not sure.{{}}@@ ``` The same formatting applies to `marginnote`. As you may notice, there is an issue. For some reason the hugo-tufte theme doesn't treat the sidenote number/ indicator as only a character, but adds a whitespace after it as well. This can lead to some hanging punctuation, so if you see that on this website, that's why. And if you don't, there's a tiny chance I fixed it. Still, all things considered, I am quite happy, and working on this website has been a great reprieve from bombarding my brain with infosec. [Join the FSF.](https://my.fsf.org/join)