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Blogdown makes it easy to create Hugo blogs or personal websites, and it is becoming more and more popular in the R community. Once the blog is created, people might want to submit their blogs’ RSS feeds to R-bloggers. But before that can happen, one must modify the RSS template to meet the requirements of RSS submission.< !--more-->
Due to my successful experience in creating a new Jekyll RSS template for my blog, I thought it would be easy to customize the RSS template of Hugo blogs to make it suitable for R-bloggers. I was WRONG. Hugo has stricter rules for modifying RSS templates1, and it took me a while to figure out how to modify the category/tag RSS templates.
By default, Hugo generates different RSS feeds for each section and taxonomy2. I will write about how to modify a subset of them to create category- or tag-specific RSS feeds for R-bloggers, i.e, making the <description>
field of the RSS feed display full content, rather than an excerpt, of a post.
Overwriting the default RSS Template
You won’t find any RSS template files shipped with Hugo themes (at least Hugo Acadimic theme doesn’t). RSS files (index.xml
) will be generated (in public/
) according to the default RSS template.
To override the default RSS template without touching the theme template,
-
Copy the default RSS template
-
Change
<description>{{ .Summary | html }}</description>
to<description>{{ .Content | html }}</description>
-
Create subdirectories in
layouts/
and save the RSS template files (name themrss.xml
) in them (one for each subdirectory).
Putting RSS templates in different subdirectories will have effects on different kind of RSS feeds. The file name (e.g. rss.xml
) of the template also matters and can’t be arbitrary. Read Hugo’s documentation on Lookup Order for RSS Templates for details3.
An Example: Hugo Acadimic Theme
I use Hugo Acadimic theme as an example to set two kinds of RSS templates:
- A template that causes RSS feeds under every category to display full content of the posts
- Browse RSS feed
- GitHub source: layouts/categories/rss.xml
- A template with
<category>
fields to capture all post tags- Browse RSS feed
- GitHub source: layouts/post/rss.xml
Directory Tree
Below is the directory structure (simplified) after adding RSS templates to Hugo Acadimic theme. I added and modified rss.xml
in /layouts/post/
and /layouts/categories/
. Then /docs/post/index.xml
and /docs/categories/r/index.xml
get generated according to /layouts/post/rss.xml
and /layouts/categories/rss.xml
, respectively. Note that /docs
is /public
by default, when publishDir = "docs"
is not set in /config.toml
. Using /docs
allows me to publish Hugo blog on GitHub Pages.
/ ├── index.Rmd ├── Hugo-RSS.Rproj ├── config.toml ├── content/ │ ├── home/ │ └── post/ │ ├── 2015-07-23-r-rmarkdown.html │ └── 2015-07-23-r-rmarkdown.Rmd │ ├── layouts/ │ ├── post/ │ │ └── rss.xml # Add/Modify RSS template here │ └── categories/ │ └── rss.xml # Add/Modify RSS template here │ ├── docs/ # change 'public' to 'docs' in /config.toml │ ├── index.html │ ├── index.xml │ ├── home/ │ ├── post/ │ │ ├── index.xml # set in '/layouts/post/rss.xml' │ │ ├── index.html │ │ ├── 2015-07-23-r-rmarkdown/ │ │ └── 2015-07-23-r-rmarkdown_files/ │ └── categories/ │ └── r/ │ ├── index.xml # set in '/layouts/categories/rss.xml' │ └── index.html └── themes/ └── hugo-academic/
Source Code
You can check out the complete directory at GitHub and the web page generated from this repo.
-
For Jekyll blogs, creating a new RSS feed is just like creating a new page in the blog, and one can even use custom file names for RSS template files (such as feed.rbloggers.xml). ↩
-
See https://gohugo.io/templates/rss/ for more information. ↩
-
I have to admit that I don’t completely understand Hugo’s RSS template look up order. I can’t predict the behaviors of Hugo precisely. ↩
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