* Allow users to filter directories by ending their path with "/"
* Allow users to filter with a Regexp, some scenariors can really require it.
* Use Pathutil#in_path? for Symlink verification, it real/expand.
This also requires some downstream work in "jekyll-watch" which at this time is
not very robust, it doesn't recognize the difference either, and should probably
start doing so (what I mean is detecting "/" and using the full path.)
When it comes to bundler it's smart enough to know what to require, and in casees it's not, it's smart enough to accept :require. In most cases when bundler has a LoadError (or otherwise) it's because there is a problem inside of the Gem itself and when this happens, Jekyll will happily let that error slip when it shouldn't, resulting in a badly placed error that is actually wrong. This corrects that so errors can surface properly.
* master: (58 commits)
Update history to reflect merge of #4792 [ci skip]
Update history to reflect merge of #4793 [ci skip]
Update history to reflect merge of #4804 [ci skip]
Update history to reflect merge of #4754 [ci skip]
Update history to reflect merge of #4813 [ci skip]
Added missing single quote on rsync client side command
Add v3.0.4 and v3.1.3 to the history.
Fixed typo
Add jekyll-autoprefixer plugin
Explicitly require Filters rather than implicitly.
Update history to reflect merge of #4786 [ci skip]
Update history to reflect merge of #4789 [ci skip]
updates example domain in config template
Globalize Jekyll's Filters.
Update JRuby to 9.0.5.0; Drop the double digit test.
Update Rack-Jekyll Heroku deployment blog post url
convertible: use Document::YAML_FRONT_MATTER_REGEXP to parse transformable files
Update history to reflect merge of #4734 [ci skip]
Update history to reflect merge of #4478 [ci skip]
Fix rubocop warning.
...
As it stands Jekyll does not globalize it's filters. So anybody wishing to go
into Jekyll's context to process their own Liquid (say in a plugin) may be taken
aback when they find out that Jekyll's filters are not available.
See: jekyll/jekyll-assets#252.
This commit introduces a where_exp filter, which can be used as follows:
`{{ array | where_exp: "item", "item == 10" }}`
`{{ array | where_exp: "item", "item.field > 10" }}`
`{{ site.posts | where_exp: "post", "post contains 'field'" }}`
`{{ site.posts | where_exp: "post", "post.array contains 'giraffes'" }}`
This permits a variety of use cases, such as reported in: jekyll#4467,
jekyll#4385, jekyll#2787.