Skip to content

lycheeverse/remaps

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

7 Commits
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

lychee remaps

This is a collection of lychee remap expressions.

What are remaps?

The --remap option rewrites URLs into other URLs. It takes a list of space-separated pairs of strings.
The first string is the old URL regex pattern and the second string is the new URL regex pattern.

Click here for more details.

In the following example, any match of example.com is replaced with example.org:

lychee --remap 'example.com example.org' -- https://example.com/sitemap.xml 

You can use this option multiple times to remap multiple domains and you can use regular expressions.

Remap is a powerful feature. Instead of just replacing domains, you can also use regular expressions to replace parts of the URL.

For more information about the --remap option, check out the documentation at https://lychee.cli.rs and see #620, #1129, and the example config file.

Remap expressions

Allow index files when checking a folder

When deploying HTML files to some common platforms like Netlify or Gitlab Pages (or even on a typical Apache HTTP environment), you can rely on the platform to use an "index file", namely, for an URL like https://example.com/foo, it will serve ./public/foo/index.html if such a file exists.

From the Apache Server documentation:

Typically, a document called index.html will be served when a directory is requested without a file name being specified. For example, if DocumentRoot is set to /var/www/html and a request is made for http://www.example.com/work/, the file /var/www/html/work/index.html will be served to the client.

Here is the remap expression:

lychee --remap 'example.com/((?!.html).)*$ example.com/$1/index.html' https://example.com/foo

This command will match URLs that do not contain a slash in the last segment of the path, implying they do not have a file extension like .html, and appends /index.html to the end of these URLs. Therefore, URLs like https://example.com/foo.html won't be affected by this command, as they already have .html at the end. But URLs like https://example.com/foo will be transformed to https://example.com/foo/index.html.

Mapping from a file-system path to a deployed domain

When testing a deployed website using links from pre-deployed files or a base repository, two key mappings are required:

  1. File Extension Mapping: Convert pre-deployed file extensions to post-deployed file extensions (e.g., .md to .html).
  2. URL Mapping: Change the protocol and base domain components of the URL from file://local/path to https://www.my-deployed-site.com (or http://).
lychee --base https://www.my-deployed-site.com  --remap '(.*)\.md $1.html' index.md

This can be useful when working with github sites that are generated from markdown.

The lychee documentation itself can be tested in this manner; from the root of the repo cloned from https://github.com/lycheeverse/lycheeverse.github.io, execute:

lychee --base https://lychee.cli.rs  --remap '(.*)\.md $1.html' --exclude-path src/content/docs/CONTRIBUTING.md "src/content/docs/**/*.mdx" "src/content/docs/**/*.md"

Note that in this case we have:

  1. An .md file we exclude because we are intentionally linking to a .md file.
  2. Two path arguments because some repo files are .md and some are .mdx

Contributing

Please contribute your own remap expressions here! You can just edit this file and create a pull request.

About

Experimental repository for collecting lychee remap expressions

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published