Ensuring data privacy¶
Material for MkDocs makes compliance with data privacy regulations very easy, as it offers a native cookie consent solution to seek explicit consent from users before setting up analytics. Additionally, external assets can be automatically downloaded for self-hosting.
Configuration¶
Cookie consent¶
8.4.0 · Default: none · Experimental
Material for MkDocs ships a native and extensible cookie consent form which asks the user for consent prior to sending requests to third parties. Add the following to mkdocs.yml
:
extra:
consent:
title: Cookie consent
description: >- # (1)!
We use cookies to recognize your repeated visits and preferences, as well
as to measure the effectiveness of our documentation and whether users
find what they're searching for. With your consent, you're helping us to
make our documentation better.
- You can add arbitrary HTML tags in the
description
, e.g. to link to your terms of service or other parts of the site.
The following properties are available:
title
-
Default: none · Required – This property sets the title of the cookie consent, which is rendered at the top of the form and must be set to a non-empty string.
description
-
Default: none · Required – This property sets the description of the cookie consent, is rendered below the title, and may include raw HTML (e.g. a links to the terms of service).
cookies
-
Default: none – This property allows to add custom cookies or change the initial
checked
state and name of built-in cookies. Currently, the following cookies are built-in:- Google Analytics –
analytics
(enabled by default) - GitHub –
github
(enabled by default)
Each cookie must receive a unique identifier which is used as a key in the
cookies
map, and can be either set to a string, or to a map definingname
andchecked
state:If Google Analytics was configured via
mkdocs.yml
, the cookie consent will automatically include a setting for the user to disable it. Custom cookies can be used from JavaScript. - Google Analytics –
actions
-
Default:
[accept, manage]
– This property defines which buttons are shown and in which order, e.g. to allow the user to accept cookies and manage settings:- If the
manage
settings button is omitted from theactions
property, the settings are always shown.
The cookie consent form includes three types of buttons:
accept
– Button to accept selected cookiesreject
– Button to reject all cookiesmanage
– Button to manage settings
- If the
When a user first visits your site, a cookie consent form is rendered:
Change cookie settings¶
In order to comply with GDPR, users must be able to change their cookie settings at any time. This can be done by adding a simple link to your copyright notice in mkdocs.yml
:
copyright: >
Copyright © 2016 - 2022 Martin Donath –
<a href="#__consent">Change cookie settings</a>
Built-in privacy plugin¶
Sponsors only · insiders-4.9.0 · Plugin · Experimental
The built-in privacy plugin automatically identifies external assets as part of the build process and downloads all assets for very simple self-hosting. Add the following lines to mkdocs.yml
:
If you need to be able to build your documentation with and without Insiders, please refer to the built-in plugins section to learn how shared configurations help to achieve this.
The following configuration options are available:
enabled
-
Default:
true
– This option specifies whether the plugin is enabled when building your project. If you want to speed up local builds, you can use an environment variable:
External assets¶
The following configuration options are available for external assets:
external_assets
-
Default:
bundle
– This option specifies what the plugin should do when encountering external assets. There are two options: whilereport
will issue warning messages during the build,bundle
will automatically download all external files and adjust all references:If you've removed all external assets from your project via customization, it's still a good idea to enable the plugin and set the mode to
report
, as the plugin will make sure that there are no hidden external links in any Markdown files that were unintentionally added.Using
report
in strict mode will make the build fail when external assets are detected. external_assets_dir
-
Default:
assets/external
– This option specifies where the downloaded external assets will be stored. It's normally not necessary to change this option:The path must be defined relative to
docs_dir
. external_assets_exclude
-
Default: none – This option allows to exclude certain external assets from processing by the privacy plugin, so they will not be downloaded and bundled during the build:
plugins: - privacy: external_assets_exclude: # (1)! - cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/mathjax@3/* - giscus.app/*
-
MathJax loads web fonts for typesetting of mathematical content through relative URLs, and thus cannot be automatically bundled by the privacy plugin. MathJax can be self-hosted.
Giscus, which we recommend to use as a comment system, uses a technique called code-splitting to load only the code that is necessary, which is implemented via relative URLs. Giscus can be self-hosted as well.
Excluding specific external assets can be necessary if they contain dynamically created or relative URLs, which can't be resolved by the privacy plugin due to technical limitations.
-
Why can't Material for MkDocs bundle all assets by design?
The primary reason why Material for MkDocs can't just bundle all of its own assets is the integration with Google Fonts, which offers over a thousand different fonts that can be used to render your documentation. Most of the fonts include several weights and are split up into different character sets to keep the download size small, so the browser only downloads what is really needed. For Roboto, our default regular font, this results in 42 *.woff2
files in total.
If Material for MkDocs would bundle all font files, the download size would be in the hundreds of megabytes, slowing down automated builds. Furthermore, authors might add external assets like third-party scripts or style sheets that would need to be remembered to be defined as further local assets.
This is the very reason the built-in privacy plugin exists — it automates the process of downloading all external assets manually to ensure compliance with GDPR with some some technical limitations.
External links ¶
Sponsors only · insiders-4.26.0 · Experimental
The following configuration options are available for external links:
external_links
-
Default:
true
– This option specifies whether the plugin should automatically annotate external links. By default,rel="noopener"
is added to all links withtarget="_blank"
: external_links_attr_map
-
Default: None – This option specifies custom attributes that should be added to external links, like for example
target="_blank"
so all external links open in a new window: external_links_noopener
-
Default:
true
– This option specifies whether the plugin should automatically addrel="noopener"
to all links withtarget="_blank"
for security reasons:
How it works¶
The built-in privacy plugin scans the resulting HTML for links to external resources, including external scripts, style sheets, images and web fonts, and downloads them to bundle them with your documentation site. Every URL refering to an external resource, no matter if part of a template or Markdown file, is then replaced with the URL to the local copy. An example:
The external script is downloaded, and the link is replaced with:
Style sheets are scanned for external url(...)
references, e.g. images and web fonts, which are then also downloaded and bundled with your documentation site. This means that Google Fonts can be configured in mkdocs.yml
as usual, as the built-in privacy plugin automatically downloads and bundles all dependent resources.
As a third measure, preconnect
hints used for DNS pre-fetching which might also leak the visitors IP address to a third party are automatically removed during the build process.
Expand to inspect example
For the official documentation, the built-in privacy plugin downloads the following resources:
.
└─ assets/external/
├─ unpkg.com/tablesort@5.3.0/dist/tablesort.min.js
├─ fonts.googleapis.com/css
├─ fonts.gstatic.com/s/
│ ├─ roboto/v29/
│ │ ├─ KFOjCnqEu92Fr1Mu51TjASc-CsTKlA.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOjCnqEu92Fr1Mu51TjASc0CsTKlA.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOjCnqEu92Fr1Mu51TjASc1CsTKlA.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOjCnqEu92Fr1Mu51TjASc2CsTKlA.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOjCnqEu92Fr1Mu51TjASc3CsTKlA.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOjCnqEu92Fr1Mu51TjASc5CsTKlA.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOjCnqEu92Fr1Mu51TjASc6CsQ.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOjCnqEu92Fr1Mu51TzBic-CsTKlA.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOjCnqEu92Fr1Mu51TzBic0CsTKlA.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOjCnqEu92Fr1Mu51TzBic1CsTKlA.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOjCnqEu92Fr1Mu51TzBic2CsTKlA.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOjCnqEu92Fr1Mu51TzBic3CsTKlA.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOjCnqEu92Fr1Mu51TzBic5CsTKlA.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOjCnqEu92Fr1Mu51TzBic6CsQ.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOkCnqEu92Fr1Mu51xEIzIFKw.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOkCnqEu92Fr1Mu51xFIzIFKw.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOkCnqEu92Fr1Mu51xGIzIFKw.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOkCnqEu92Fr1Mu51xHIzIFKw.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOkCnqEu92Fr1Mu51xIIzI.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOkCnqEu92Fr1Mu51xLIzIFKw.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOkCnqEu92Fr1Mu51xMIzIFKw.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOlCnqEu92Fr1MmSU5fABc4EsA.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOlCnqEu92Fr1MmSU5fBBc4.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOlCnqEu92Fr1MmSU5fBxc4EsA.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOlCnqEu92Fr1MmSU5fCBc4EsA.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOlCnqEu92Fr1MmSU5fCRc4EsA.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOlCnqEu92Fr1MmSU5fChc4EsA.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOlCnqEu92Fr1MmSU5fCxc4EsA.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOlCnqEu92Fr1MmWUlfABc4EsA.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOlCnqEu92Fr1MmWUlfBBc4.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOlCnqEu92Fr1MmWUlfBxc4EsA.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOlCnqEu92Fr1MmWUlfCBc4EsA.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOlCnqEu92Fr1MmWUlfCRc4EsA.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOlCnqEu92Fr1MmWUlfChc4EsA.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOlCnqEu92Fr1MmWUlfCxc4EsA.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOmCnqEu92Fr1Mu4WxKOzY.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOmCnqEu92Fr1Mu4mxK.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOmCnqEu92Fr1Mu5mxKOzY.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOmCnqEu92Fr1Mu72xKOzY.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOmCnqEu92Fr1Mu7GxKOzY.woff2
│ │ ├─ KFOmCnqEu92Fr1Mu7WxKOzY.woff2
│ │ └─ KFOmCnqEu92Fr1Mu7mxKOzY.woff2
│ └─ robotomono/v13/
│ ├─ L0xTDF4xlVMF-BfR8bXMIhJHg45mwgGEFl0_3vrtSM1J-gEPT5Ese6hmHSV0mf0h.woff2
│ ├─ L0xTDF4xlVMF-BfR8bXMIhJHg45mwgGEFl0_3vrtSM1J-gEPT5Ese6hmHSZ0mf0h.woff2
│ ├─ L0xTDF4xlVMF-BfR8bXMIhJHg45mwgGEFl0_3vrtSM1J-gEPT5Ese6hmHSd0mf0h.woff2
│ ├─ L0xTDF4xlVMF-BfR8bXMIhJHg45mwgGEFl0_3vrtSM1J-gEPT5Ese6hmHSh0mQ.woff2
│ ├─ L0xTDF4xlVMF-BfR8bXMIhJHg45mwgGEFl0_3vrtSM1J-gEPT5Ese6hmHSt0mf0h.woff2
│ ├─ L0xTDF4xlVMF-BfR8bXMIhJHg45mwgGEFl0_3vrtSM1J-gEPT5Ese6hmHSx0mf0h.woff2
│ ├─ L0xdDF4xlVMF-BfR8bXMIjhOsXG-q2oeuFoqFrlnAIe2Imhk1T8rbociImtElOUlYIw.woff2
│ ├─ L0xdDF4xlVMF-BfR8bXMIjhOsXG-q2oeuFoqFrlnAIe2Imhk1T8rbociImtEleUlYIw.woff2
│ ├─ L0xdDF4xlVMF-BfR8bXMIjhOsXG-q2oeuFoqFrlnAIe2Imhk1T8rbociImtEluUlYIw.woff2
│ ├─ L0xdDF4xlVMF-BfR8bXMIjhOsXG-q2oeuFoqFrlnAIe2Imhk1T8rbociImtEm-Ul.woff2
│ ├─ L0xdDF4xlVMF-BfR8bXMIjhOsXG-q2oeuFoqFrlnAIe2Imhk1T8rbociImtEmOUlYIw.woff2
│ └─ L0xdDF4xlVMF-BfR8bXMIjhOsXG-q2oeuFoqFrlnAIe2Imhk1T8rbociImtEn-UlYIw.woff2
└─ polyfill.io/v3/polyfill.min.js
Caching recommended¶
All downloaded files are written to the .cache
directory, significantly reducing the duration of subsequent builds as only replacements need to be carried out. You might want to:
- Ignore the
.cache
directory in your project, by adding it to.gitignore
. -
When building your site for publishing, use a build cache to save the
.cache
directory in between builds. Taking the example from the publishing guide, add the following lines:name: ci on: push: branches: - master - main jobs: deploy: runs-on: ubuntu-latest steps: - uses: actions/checkout@v2 - uses: actions/setup-python@v2 with: python-version: 3.x - uses: actions/cache@v2 with: key: ${{ github.ref }} path: .cache - run: pip install mkdocs-material - run: mkdocs gh-deploy --force
Limitations¶
Note that dynamically created URLs as part of scripts are not detected, and thus cannot be automatically downloaded. The built-in privacy plugin does not execute scripts – it can only detect fully qualified URLs to download and replace.
In short, don't do this:
Instead, always use fully qualified URLs:
Customization¶
Custom cookies¶
If you've customized the cookie consent and added a custom
cookie, the user will be prompted to accept your custom cookie. Use additional JavaScript to check whether the user accepted it: