ref: cb39847dee488c373dd5bc2a3706385342a59355
dir: /content/en/hugo-pipes/introduction.md/
--- title: Hugo Pipes Introduction description: Hugo Pipes is Hugo's asset processing set of functions. date: 2018-07-14 publishdate: 2018-07-14 lastmod: 2018-07-14 categories: [asset management] keywords: [] menu: docs: parent: "pipes" weight: 20 weight: 01 sections_weight: 01 draft: false aliases: [/assets/] --- ### Asset directory Asset files must be stored in the asset directory. This is `/assets` by default, but can be configured via the configuration file's `assetDir` key. ### From file to resource In order to process an asset with Hugo Pipes, it must be retrieved as a resource using `resources.Get`, which takes one argument: the filepath of the file relative to the asset directory. ```go-html-template {{ $style := resources.Get "sass/main.scss" }} ``` ### Asset publishing Assets will only be published (to `/public`) if `.Permalink` or `.RelPermalink` is used. ### Go Pipes For improved readability, the Hugo Pipes examples of this documentation will be written using [Go Pipes](/templates/introduction/#pipes): ```go-html-template {{ $style := resources.Get "sass/main.scss" | resources.ToCSS | resources.Minify | resources.Fingerprint }} <link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ $style.Permalink }}"> ``` ### Method aliases Each Hugo Pipes `resources` transformation method uses a __camelCased__ alias (`toCSS` for `resources.ToCSS`). Non-transformation methods deprived of such aliases are `resources.Get`, `resources.FromString`, `resources.ExecuteAsTemplate` and `resources.Concat`. The example above can therefore also be written as follows: ```go-html-template {{ $style := resources.Get "sass/main.scss" | toCSS | minify | fingerprint }} <link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ $style.Permalink }}"> ``` ### Caching Hugo Pipes invocations are cached based on the entire _pipe chain_. An example of a pipe chain is: ```go-html-template {{ $mainJs := resources.Get "js/main.js" | js.Build "main.js" | minify | fingerprint }} ``` The pipe chain is only invoked the first time it is encountered in a site build, and results are otherwise loaded from cache. As such, Hugo Pipes can be used in templates which are executed thousands or millions of times without negatively impacting the build performance.