Custom Hugo Shortcodes
This page explains the custom Hugo shortcodes that can be used in Kubernetes Markdown documentation.
Read more about shortcodes in the Hugo documentation.
Feature state
In a Markdown page (.md
file) on this site, you can add a shortcode to
display version and state of the documented feature.
Feature state demo
Below is a demo of the feature state snippet, which displays the feature as stable in the latest Kubernetes version.
{{< feature-state state="stable" >}}
Renders to:
Kubernetes v1.24 [stable]
The valid values for state
are:
- alpha
- beta
- deprecated
- stable
Feature state code
The displayed Kubernetes version defaults to that of the page or the site. You can change the
feature state version by passing the for_k8s_version
shortcode parameter. For example:
{{< feature-state for_k8s_version="v1.10" state="beta" >}}
Renders to:
Kubernetes v1.10 [beta]
Glossary
There are two glossary shortcodes: glossary_tooltip
and glossary_definition
.
You can reference glossary terms with an inclusion that automatically updates and replaces content with the relevant links from our glossary. When the glossary term is moused-over, the glossary entry displays a tooltip. The glossary term also displays as a link.
As well as inclusions with tooltips, you can reuse the definitions from the glossary in page content.
The raw data for glossary terms is stored at the glossary directory, with a content file for each glossary term.
Glossary demo
For example, the following include within the Markdown renders to cluster with a tooltip:
{{< glossary_tooltip text="cluster" term_id="cluster" >}}
Here's a short glossary definition:
{{< glossary_definition prepend="A cluster is" term_id="cluster" length="short" >}}
which renders as:
A cluster is a set of worker machines, called nodes, that run containerized applications. Every cluster has at least one worker node.
You can also include a full definition:
{{< glossary_definition term_id="cluster" length="all" >}}
which renders as:
A set of worker machines, called nodes, that run containerized applications. Every cluster has at least one worker node.
The worker node(s) host the Pods that are the components of the application workload. The control plane manages the worker nodes and the Pods in the cluster. In production environments, the control plane usually runs across multiple computers and a cluster usually runs multiple nodes, providing fault-tolerance and high availability.
Links to API Reference
You can link to a page of the Kubernetes API reference using the
api-reference
shortcode, for example to the
Pod reference:
{{< api-reference page="workload-resources/pod-v1" >}}
The content of the page
parameter is the suffix of the URL of the API reference page.
You can link to a specific place into a page by specifying an anchor
parameter, for example to the
PodSpec
reference or the
environment-variables
section of the page:
{{< api-reference page="workload-resources/pod-v1" anchor="PodSpec" >}}
{{< api-reference page="workload-resources/pod-v1" anchor="environment-variables" >}}
You can change the text of the link by specifying a text
parameter, for
example by linking to the
Environment Variables
section of the page:
{{< api-reference page="workload-resources/pod-v1" anchor="environment-variables" text="Environment Variable" >}}
Table captions
You can make tables more accessible to screen readers by adding a table caption. To add a
caption to a table,
enclose the table with a table
shortcode and specify the caption with the caption
parameter.
Here's an example:
{{< table caption="Configuration parameters" >}}
Parameter | Description | Default
:---------|:------------|:-------
`timeout` | The timeout for requests | `30s`
`logLevel` | The log level for log output | `INFO`
{{< /table >}}
The rendered table looks like this:
Parameter | Description | Default |
---|---|---|
timeout | The timeout for requests | 30s |
logLevel | The log level for log output | INFO |
If you inspect the HTML for the table, you should see this element immediately
after the opening <table>
element:
<caption style="display: none;">Configuration parameters</caption>
Tabs
In a markdown page (.md
file) on this site, you can add a tab set to display
multiple flavors of a given solution.
The tabs
shortcode takes these parameters:
name
: The name as shown on the tab.codelang
: If you provide inner content to thetab
shortcode, you can tell Hugo what code language to use for highlighting.include
: The file to include in the tab. If the tab lives in a Hugo leaf bundle, the file -- which can be any MIME type supported by Hugo -- is looked up in the bundle itself. If not, the content page that needs to be included is looked up relative to the current page. Note that with theinclude
, you do not have any shortcode inner content and must use the self-closing syntax. For example,{{< tab name="Content File #1" include="example1" />}}
. The language needs to be specified undercodelang
or the language is taken based on the file name. Non-content files are code-highlighted by default.- If your inner content is markdown, you must use the
%
-delimiter to surround the tab. For example,{{% tab name="Tab 1" %}}This is **markdown**{{% /tab %}}
- You can combine the variations mentioned above inside a tab set.
Below is a demo of the tabs shortcode.
tabs
definition must be unique within a content page.Tabs demo: Code highlighting
{{< tabs name="tab_with_code" >}}
{{{< tab name="Tab 1" codelang="bash" >}}
echo "This is tab 1."
{{< /tab >}}
{{< tab name="Tab 2" codelang="go" >}}
println "This is tab 2."
{{< /tab >}}}
{{< /tabs >}}
Renders to:
echo "This is tab 1."
println "This is tab 2."
Tabs demo: Inline Markdown and HTML
{{< tabs name="tab_with_md" >}}
{{% tab name="Markdown" %}}
This is **some markdown.**
{{< note >}}
It can even contain shortcodes.
{{< /note >}}
{{% /tab %}}
{{< tab name="HTML" >}}
<div>
<h3>Plain HTML</h3>
<p>This is some <i>plain</i> HTML.</p>
</div>
{{< /tab >}}
{{< /tabs >}}
Renders to:
This is some markdown.
Plain HTML
This is some plain HTML.
Tabs demo: File include
{{< tabs name="tab_with_file_include" >}}
{{< tab name="Content File #1" include="example1" />}}
{{< tab name="Content File #2" include="example2" />}}
{{< tab name="JSON File" include="podtemplate" />}}
{{< /tabs >}}
Renders to:
This is an example content file inside the includes leaf bundle.
This is another example content file inside the includes leaf bundle.
{
"apiVersion": "v1",
"kind": "PodTemplate",
"metadata": {
"name": "nginx"
},
"template": {
"metadata": {
"labels": {
"name": "nginx"
},
"generateName": "nginx-"
},
"spec": {
"containers": [{
"name": "nginx",
"image": "dockerfile/nginx",
"ports": [{"containerPort": 80}]
}]
}
}
}
Third party content marker
Running Kubernetes requires third-party software. For example: you usually need to add a DNS server to your cluster so that name resolution works.
When we link to third-party software, or otherwise mention it, we follow the content guide and we also mark those third party items.
Using these shortcodes adds a disclaimer to any documentation page that uses them.
Lists
For a list of several third-party items, add:
{{% thirdparty-content %}}
just below the heading for the section that includes all items.
Items
If you have a list where most of the items refer to in-project software (for example: Kubernetes itself, and the separate Descheduler component), then there is a different form to use.
Add the shortcode:
{{% thirdparty-content single="true" %}}
before the item, or just below the heading for the specific item.
Version strings
To generate a version string for inclusion in the documentation, you can choose from
several version shortcodes. Each version shortcode displays a version string derived from
the value of a version parameter found in the site configuration file, config.toml
.
The two most commonly used version parameters are latest
and version
.
{{< param "version" >}}
The {{< param "version" >}}
shortcode generates the value of the current
version of the Kubernetes documentation from the version
site parameter. The
param
shortcode accepts the name of one site parameter, in this case:
version
.
latest
and version
parameter values
are not equivalent. After a new version is released, latest
is incremented
and the value of version
for the documentation set remains unchanged. For
example, a previously released version of the documentation displays version
as v1.19
and latest
as v1.20
.Renders to:
v1.24{{< latest-version >}}
The {{< latest-version >}}
shortcode returns the value of the latest
site parameter.
The latest
site parameter is updated when a new version of the documentation is released.
This parameter does not always match the value of version
in a documentation set.
Renders to:
v1.24{{< latest-semver >}}
The {{< latest-semver >}}
shortcode generates the value of latest
without the "v" prefix.
Renders to:
1.24{{< version-check >}}
The {{< version-check >}}
shortcode checks if the min-kubernetes-server-version
page parameter is present and then uses this value to compare to version
.
Renders to:
To check the version, enterkubectl version
.{{< latest-release-notes >}}
The {{< latest-release-notes >}}
shortcode generates a version string
from latest
and removes the "v" prefix. The shortcode prints a new URL for
the release note CHANGELOG page with the modified version string.
Renders to:
https://git.k8s.io/kubernetes/CHANGELOG/CHANGELOG-1.24.mdWhat's next
- Learn about Hugo.
- Learn about writing a new topic.
- Learn about page content types.
- Learn about opening a pull request.
- Learn about advanced contributing.