Close on the heels of shipping 3.7.0, we were informed of a couple of regressions due to the changes made in that release. In due time, Team Jekyll set out to address those issues as early as possible.
Days later here we’re, announcing 3.7.2 (sorry for skipping 3.7.1, RubyGems didn’t want to play nice) that fixes numerous issues! The highlights being:
-
A major regression in 3.7.0 was that when a Front Matter Default was configured with a
scope["path"]
set to a directory, Jekyll would scan that directory for any subfolders and files, for each document in thatpath
. Though this is intended, it increases build times in proportion to the size of the directory.We addressed this by having Jekyll scan the directory path only if the user explicitly configures the
scope["path"]
using wildcards.Read our documentation for more details.
A huge shout-out to @mmistakes for bringing this to our notice and additionally providing us with a test repository to aid in resolving the issue.
-
Another regression reported was related to our “Custom collections directory” feature introduced in 3.7.0.
Users setting
collection_dir
to a certain directory would have altered paths to their posts still at the root of their site’s source. This roughly translated to 404 errors on URLs to their posts.Props to @localheinz for bringing this regression to our notice.
We decided to resolve this by having Jekyll ignore posts and drafts at the root of the site’s source directory if the user customizes the
collection_dir
setting.Ergo, if you set a custom location for your collections, please ensure you move all of your collections into that directory. This includes posts and drafts as well. Your links generated by
{% post_url %}
or{% link %}
will adapt automatically. -
We also found out that
gem "wdm"
boosts performance while directories are being watched on Windows. So we recommend having it included in your Gemfile for a better development experience on Windows. (Newly generated Gemfiles will hereafter have that gem listed automatically )
In addition to the above, numerous other minor fixes and documentation updates have been made that should improve your Jekyll experience. All of which, would not have been possible without our wonderful contributors:
Alexandr, Andreas Möller, Ashwin Maroli, Chayoung You, Florian Thomas, Frank Taillandier, Hendrik Schneider, Kacper Duras, Olivia, Parker Moore and Paul Robert Lloyd.
As always, you can see our full changelog on the History page.
Happy Jekylling!