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Deploy a Hugo site to Azure Static Web Apps

This article demonstrates how to create and deploy a Hugo web application to Azure Static Web Apps. The final result is a new Azure Static Web App with associated GitHub Actions that give you control over how the app is built and published.

In this tutorial, you learn how to:

  • Create a Hugo app
  • Setup an Azure Static Web Apps
  • Deploy the Hugo app to Azure

If you don't have an Azure subscription, create an Azure free account before you begin.

Prerequisites

Create a Hugo App

Create a Hugo app using the Hugo Command Line Interface (CLI):

  1. Follow the installation guide for Hugo on your OS.

  2. Open a terminal

  3. Run the Hugo CLI to create a new app.

    hugo new site static-app
    
  4. Go to the newly created app.

    cd static-app
    
  5. Initialize a Git repo.

    git init
    
  6. Ensure that your branch is named main.

    git branch -M main
    
  7. Next, add a theme to the site by installing a theme as a git submodule and then specifying it in the Hugo config file.

    git submodule add https://github.com/budparr/gohugo-theme-ananke.git themes/ananke
    echo 'theme = "ananke"' >> config.toml
    
  8. Commit the changes.

    git add -A
    git commit -m "initial commit"
    

Push your application to GitHub

You need a repository on GitHub to connect to Azure Static Web Apps. The following steps show you how to create a repository for your site.

  1. Create a blank GitHub repo (don't create a README) from https://github.com/new named hugo-static-app.

  2. Add the GitHub repository as a remote to your local repo. Make sure to add your GitHub username in place of the <YOUR_USER_NAME> placeholder in the following command.

    git remote add origin https://github.com/<YOUR_USER_NAME>/hugo-static-app
    
  3. Push your local repo up to GitHub.

    git push --set-upstream origin main
    

Deploy your web app

The following steps show you how to create a new static site app and deploy it to a production environment.

Create the application

  1. Go to the Azure portal

  2. Select Create a Resource

  3. Search for Static Web Apps

  4. Select Static Web Apps

  5. Select Create

  6. On the Basics tab, enter the following values.

    Property Value
    Subscription Your Azure subscription name.
    Resource group my-hugo-group
    Name hugo-static-app
    Plan type Free
    Region for Azure Functions API and staging environments Select a region closest to you.
    Source GitHub
  7. Select Sign in with GitHub and authenticate with GitHub.

  8. Enter the following GitHub values.

    Property Value
    Organization Select your desired GitHub organization.
    Repository Select hugo-static-app.
    Branch Select main.

    Note

    If you don't see any repositories, you may need to authorize Azure Static Web Apps on GitHub. Browse to your GitHub repository and go to Settings > Applications > Authorized OAuth Apps, select Azure Static Web Apps, and then select Grant. For organization repositories, you must be an owner of the organization to grant the permissions.

  9. In the Build Details section, select Hugo from the Build Presets drop-down and keep the default values.

Review and create

  1. Select Review + Create to verify the details are all correct.

  2. Select Create to start the creation of the App Service Static Web App and provision a GitHub Actions for deployment.

  3. Once the deployment completes, select Go to resource.

  4. On the resource screen, select the URL link to open your deployed application. You may need to wait a minute or two for the GitHub Actions to complete.

    Deployed application

Custom Hugo version

When you generate a Static Web App, a workflow file is generated which contains the publishing configuration settings for the application. You can designate a specific Hugo version in the workflow file by providing a value for HUGO_VERSION in the env section. The following example configuration demonstrates how to set Hugo to a specific version.

jobs:
  build_and_deploy_job:
    if: github.event_name == 'push' || (github.event_name == 'pull_request' && github.event.action != 'closed')
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    name: Build and Deploy Job
    steps:
      - uses: actions/checkout@v3
        with:
          submodules: true
      - name: Build And Deploy
        id: builddeploy
        uses: Azure/static-web-apps-deploy@v1
        with:
          azure_static_web_apps_api_token: ${{ secrets.AZURE_STATIC_WEB_APPS_API_TOKEN }}
          repo_token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }} # Used for GitHub integrations (i.e. PR comments)
          action: "upload"
          ###### Repository/Build Configurations - These values can be configured to match you app requirements. ######
          # For more information regarding Static Web App workflow configurations, please visit: https://aka.ms/swaworkflowconfig
          app_location: "/" # App source code path
          api_location: "api" # Api source code path - optional
          output_location: "public" # Built app content directory - optional
          ###### End of Repository/Build Configurations ######
        env:
          HUGO_VERSION: 0.58.0

Use the Git Info feature in your Hugo application

If your Hugo application uses the Git Info feature, the default workflow file created for the Static Web App uses the checkout GitHub Action to fetch a shallow version of your Git repository, with a default depth of 1. In this scenario, Hugo sees all your content files as coming from a single commit, so they have the same author, last modification timestamp, and other .GitInfo variables.

Update your workflow file to fetch your full Git history by adding a new parameter under the actions/checkout step to set the fetch-depth to 0 (no limit):

      - uses: actions/checkout@v3
        with:
          submodules: true
          fetch-depth: 0

Fetching the full history increases the build time of your GitHub Actions workflow, but your .Lastmod and .GitInfo variables are accurate and available for each of your content files.

Clean up resources

If you're not going to continue to use this application, you can delete the Azure Static Web App resource through the following steps:

  1. Open the Azure portal
  2. In the top search bar, search for your application by the name you provided earlier
  3. Click on the app
  4. Click on the Delete button
  5. Click Yes to confirm the delete action

Next steps