This is an automated email from the ASF dual-hosted git repository.

zregvart pushed a commit to branch master
in repository https://gitbox.apache.org/repos/asf/camel-website.git

commit 0254ca5ea26afa00eed6f68209e748e7f0be67b6
Author: Zoran Regvart <zregv...@apache.org>
AuthorDate: Wed Nov 4 14:39:32 2020 +0100

    refactor: replace absolute links with relative
---
 .../CamelK-CNCF-Landscape/index.md                 |  2 +-
 content/blog/2019/10/Camel3-2monthsaway/index.md   |  2 +-
 content/blog/2019/11/RELEASE-3.0.0/index.md        |  2 +-
 content/blog/2019/12/Camel3-Whatsnew/index.md      |  2 +-
 .../2019/12/LanguageSupportTooling-0.0.20/index.md |  2 +-
 .../blog/2020/01/CustomWebApiComponent/index.md    |  4 +-
 content/blog/2020/02/RELEASE-3.1.0/index.md        |  2 +-
 .../04/Camel-Quarkus-release-1.0.0-M7/index.md     |  4 +-
 content/blog/2020/04/Camel32-Whatsnew/index.md     |  2 +-
 content/blog/2020/04/RELEASE-3.2.0/index.md        |  2 +-
 content/blog/2020/05/Camel33-Whatsnew/index.md     |  2 +-
 .../blog/2020/05/CdcWithCamelAndDebezium/index.md  |  2 +-
 content/blog/2020/05/RELEASE-3.3.0/index.md        |  2 +-
 .../blog/2020/06/camel-k-release-1.0.0/index.md    | 14 ++---
 .../06/camel-quarkus-release-1.0.0-CR2/index.md    | 24 ++++----
 content/blog/2020/06/camel34-whatsnew/index.md     | 16 +++---
 .../07/camel-quarkus-release-1.0.0-CR3/index.md    | 40 ++++++-------
 .../index.md                                       | 10 ++--
 .../Camel-kafka-connector-0.4.0-RELEASE/index.md   |  2 +-
 .../2020/08/camel-quarkus-release-1.0.0/index.md   | 26 ++++-----
 .../2020/08/camel-quarkus-release-1.0.1/index.md   |  4 +-
 .../09/Camel-kafka-connector-050-Whatsnew/index.md |  2 +-
 content/blog/2020/09/Camel35-Whatsnew/index.md     | 14 ++---
 .../2020/09/camel-quarkus-release-1.1.0/index.md   | 44 +++++++--------
 content/blog/2020/09/windup/index.md               |  8 +--
 content/blog/2020/10/Camel36-Whatsnew/index.md     | 10 ++--
 .../2020/10/VSCode-LanguageSupport-0.0.28/index.md |  4 +-
 .../blog/2020/10/camel-k-release-1.2.0/index.md    |  2 +-
 .../camel-quarkus-release-1.2.0-and-1.3.0/index.md | 66 +++++++++++-----------
 content/docs/building.md                           |  2 +-
 static/schema/HEADER.html                          |  6 +-
 static/schema/spring/HEADER.html                   |  6 +-
 32 files changed, 165 insertions(+), 165 deletions(-)

diff --git 
a/content/blog/2019/10/Camel3-2monthsaway/CamelK-CNCF-Landscape/index.md 
b/content/blog/2019/10/Camel3-2monthsaway/CamelK-CNCF-Landscape/index.md
index 90c5abd..8f1a321 100644
--- a/content/blog/2019/10/Camel3-2monthsaway/CamelK-CNCF-Landscape/index.md
+++ b/content/blog/2019/10/Camel3-2monthsaway/CamelK-CNCF-Landscape/index.md
@@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ categories: ["CamelK"]
 preview: Apache Camel K is now added to the CNCF Interactive Serverless 
Landscape
 ---
 
-The [Apache Camel K](https://camel.apache.org/projects/camel-k/) project is 
now listed on the CNCF (Cloud Native Computing Foundation) [interactive 
landscape](https://landscape.cncf.io/format=serverless&zoom=150); which lists 
all known open source projects that works with kubernetes and cloud platforms. 
+The [Apache Camel K](/projects/camel-k/) project is now listed on the CNCF 
(Cloud Native Computing Foundation) [interactive 
landscape](https://landscape.cncf.io/format=serverless&zoom=150); which lists 
all known open source projects that works with kubernetes and cloud platforms. 
 
 {{< image "camelk-landscape.png" "Camel K CNCF landscape" >}}
 
diff --git a/content/blog/2019/10/Camel3-2monthsaway/index.md 
b/content/blog/2019/10/Camel3-2monthsaway/index.md
index bd31751..6c0f0b6 100644
--- a/content/blog/2019/10/Camel3-2monthsaway/index.md
+++ b/content/blog/2019/10/Camel3-2monthsaway/index.md
@@ -22,4 +22,4 @@ That is not all Apache Camel, is now a family of 3 projects 
(at this moment). So
 
 These projects have their own lifecycle. Will will post more details about 
these projects, and what’s new in Camel 3 in the following months leading up to 
the final release of Camel 3. So stay tuned.
 
-PS: If you are migrating Camel 2.x applications to Camel 3, then read the 
[migration 
guide](https://camel.apache.org/manual/latest/camel-3-migration-guide.html).
+PS: If you are migrating Camel 2.x applications to Camel 3, then read the 
[migration guide](/manual/latest/camel-3-migration-guide.html).
diff --git a/content/blog/2019/11/RELEASE-3.0.0/index.md 
b/content/blog/2019/11/RELEASE-3.0.0/index.md
index 43b7afa..f0300d6 100644
--- a/content/blog/2019/11/RELEASE-3.0.0/index.md
+++ b/content/blog/2019/11/RELEASE-3.0.0/index.md
@@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ preview: "The Camel community announces the immediate 
availability of a new rele
 
 The Camel community announces the immediate availability of Camel 3.0.0, a new 
major release with over 1000 new features, improvements and fixes.
 
-Please read our [migration 
guide](https://camel.apache.org/manual/latest/camel-3-migration-guide.html) the 
describes how to upgrade Camel 2.x applications to Camel 3.0.
+Please read our [migration guide](/manual/latest/camel-3-migration-guide.html) 
the describes how to upgrade Camel 2.x applications to Camel 3.0.
 
 The artifacts are published and ready for you to download from the Central 
Maven repository. For more details please take a look at the  [resolved 
issues](/releases/release-3.0.0/#resolved).
 
diff --git a/content/blog/2019/12/Camel3-Whatsnew/index.md 
b/content/blog/2019/12/Camel3-Whatsnew/index.md
index feee486..5d88a17 100644
--- a/content/blog/2019/12/Camel3-Whatsnew/index.md
+++ b/content/blog/2019/12/Camel3-Whatsnew/index.md
@@ -183,6 +183,6 @@ We have of course cleaned up the code base, such as 
removing all deprecated APIs
 
 Internally we have also adjusted the route model, to make it easier to extend 
into new DSLs; and there is a YAML DSL on the way which was initiated in Camel 
K.
 
-In terms of backward compatibility then Camel 3 is mostly compatibility for 
regular Camel applications. However, if you are using some of the more advanced 
features and other plugins in Camel then migration is needed. Also, custom 
components must be migrated and recompiled. There are other adjustments such as 
Spring Boot users must use `org.apache.camel.springboot` as groupId instead of 
`org.apache.camel` etc. All details can be seen in the [migration 
guide](https://camel.apache.org/manu [...]
+In terms of backward compatibility then Camel 3 is mostly compatibility for 
regular Camel applications. However, if you are using some of the more advanced 
features and other plugins in Camel then migration is needed. Also, custom 
components must be migrated and recompiled. There are other adjustments such as 
Spring Boot users must use `org.apache.camel.springboot` as groupId instead of 
`org.apache.camel` etc. All details can be seen in the [migration 
guide](/manual/latest/camel-3-migrat [...]
 
 Good luck with your migration if you decide to continue your Camel journey. 
And for new users to Camel then good luck getting onboard.
diff --git a/content/blog/2019/12/LanguageSupportTooling-0.0.20/index.md 
b/content/blog/2019/12/LanguageSupportTooling-0.0.20/index.md
index 7e1d973..eddbfd4 100644
--- a/content/blog/2019/12/LanguageSupportTooling-0.0.20/index.md
+++ b/content/blog/2019/12/LanguageSupportTooling-0.0.20/index.md
@@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ Before going into the list of updates in detail, I want to 
note that I mentioned
 
 ### Camel 3 inside
 
-Camel 3 was [released](https://camel.apache.org/blog/release-3-0-0.html) a few 
weeks ago, and the Camel Language Server is already relying on it internally. 
What does that mean for the end user? It means that the default catalog is now 
using Camel 3.
+Camel 3 was [released](/blog/release-3-0-0.html) a few weeks ago, and the 
Camel Language Server is already relying on it internally. What does that mean 
for the end user? It means that the default catalog is now using Camel 3.
 
 If you are still based on Camel 2.x, no problem; check out the following 
awesome feature.
 
diff --git a/content/blog/2020/01/CustomWebApiComponent/index.md 
b/content/blog/2020/01/CustomWebApiComponent/index.md
index 4817c4c..9373b6d 100644
--- a/content/blog/2020/01/CustomWebApiComponent/index.md
+++ b/content/blog/2020/01/CustomWebApiComponent/index.md
@@ -7,9 +7,9 @@ categories: ["Usecases"]
 preview: "Build your own custom Web API Component from scratch."
 ---
 
-Have you built a new great Web API for your product? Wouldn't be wonderful to 
have it available as a part of the great [Apache Camel component 
family](https://camel.apache.org/components/latest)? We would love it.
+Have you built a new great Web API for your product? Wouldn't be wonderful to 
have it available as a part of the great [Apache Camel component 
family](/components/latest)? We would love it.
 
-The community just released [Camel 
3](https://camel.apache.org/blog/Camel3-Whatsnew) which is more modular, 
lightweight and already includes lots of components (300+) to quickly integrate 
various systems consuming or producing data. All of these components can be 
used with the same integration domain specific language (DSL) based on the 
famous [Enterprise Integration 
Patterns](https://www.enterpriseintegrationpatterns.com) (EIPs).
+The community just released [Camel 3](/blog/Camel3-Whatsnew) which is more 
modular, lightweight and already includes lots of components (300+) to quickly 
integrate various systems consuming or producing data. All of these components 
can be used with the same integration domain specific language (DSL) based on 
the famous [Enterprise Integration 
Patterns](https://www.enterpriseintegrationpatterns.com) (EIPs).
 
 Creating a new component is actually pretty simple and, as a benefit, you will 
also have the possibility to use Camel sub-projects to make your Web API 
available within different runtimes: 
[SpringBoot](https://github.com/apache/camel-spring-boot) (auto-config), 
[Quarkus](https://github.com/apache/camel-quarkus) (Java native compilation) 
and [Camel-K](https://github.com/apache/camel-k) (serverless work).
 
diff --git a/content/blog/2020/02/RELEASE-3.1.0/index.md 
b/content/blog/2020/02/RELEASE-3.1.0/index.md
index cf2afc2..67a90cc 100644
--- a/content/blog/2020/02/RELEASE-3.1.0/index.md
+++ b/content/blog/2020/02/RELEASE-3.1.0/index.md
@@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ The Camel community announces the immediate availability of 
Camel 3.1.0, a new m
 
 All users of Camel 3.0 are encouraged to upgrade to Camel 3.1 soon because 
there are some major memory usage optimizations in this release.
 We also plan to retire Camel 3.0 very soon due to this.
-Please read our [Camel 3.x upgrade 
guide](https://camel.apache.org/manual/latest/camel-3x-upgrade-guide.html) that 
describes how to upgrade Camel 3.0 applications to Camel 3.1.
+Please read our [Camel 3.x upgrade 
guide](/manual/latest/camel-3x-upgrade-guide.html) that describes how to 
upgrade Camel 3.0 applications to Camel 3.1.
 
 The artifacts are published and ready for you to download from the Central 
Maven repository. For more details please take a look at the  [resolved 
issues](/releases/release-3.1.0/#resolved).
 
diff --git a/content/blog/2020/04/Camel-Quarkus-release-1.0.0-M7/index.md 
b/content/blog/2020/04/Camel-Quarkus-release-1.0.0-M7/index.md
index 0a4c13a..71a2793 100644
--- a/content/blog/2020/04/Camel-Quarkus-release-1.0.0-M7/index.md
+++ b/content/blog/2020/04/Camel-Quarkus-release-1.0.0-M7/index.md
@@ -58,11 +58,11 @@ Components promoted from JVM-only to JVM+native:
 * Openshift Build Config
 * Openshift Builds
 
-All supported bits can be seen in the [List of Camel Quarkus 
extensions](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/list-of-camel-quarkus-extensions.html).
+All supported bits can be seen in the [List of Camel Quarkus 
extensions](/camel-quarkus/latest/list-of-camel-quarkus-extensions.html).
 
 ## Quarkus 1.4.1
 
 Quarkus was upgraded to 1.4.1 (from 1.3.2 in Camel Quarkus 1.0.0-M6).
 
-Enjoy and give feedback either via [mailing 
lists](https://camel.apache.org/manual/latest/mailing-lists.html)
+Enjoy and give feedback either via [mailing 
lists](/manual/latest/mailing-lists.html)
 or [GitHub issues](https://github.com/apache/camel-quarkus/issues)!
diff --git a/content/blog/2020/04/Camel32-Whatsnew/index.md 
b/content/blog/2020/04/Camel32-Whatsnew/index.md
index 19e90ab..4e22eb0 100644
--- a/content/blog/2020/04/Camel32-Whatsnew/index.md
+++ b/content/blog/2020/04/Camel32-Whatsnew/index.md
@@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ preview: Details of what we have done in the Camel 3.2 release.
 
 A few days ago Apache Camel 3.2 was released. This is a continuation of the 
work we are doing on Camel leading up to the first long term support release 
(LTS) that would be either Camel 3.3 or 3.4.
 
-In case you have missed this, the release model in Camel 3.x is following the 
principe of LTS and non-LTS releases (like Java JDKs). For more details see 
this [blog post](https://camel.apache.org/blog/LTS-Release-Schedule/).
+In case you have missed this, the release model in Camel 3.x is following the 
principe of LTS and non-LTS releases (like Java JDKs). For more details see 
this [blog post](/blog/LTS-Release-Schedule/).
 
 What this means is that we will not do patch releases for Camel 3.2.x, but 
move ahead for Camel 3.3.
 
diff --git a/content/blog/2020/04/RELEASE-3.2.0/index.md 
b/content/blog/2020/04/RELEASE-3.2.0/index.md
index 22093c7..eb908f8 100644
--- a/content/blog/2020/04/RELEASE-3.2.0/index.md
+++ b/content/blog/2020/04/RELEASE-3.2.0/index.md
@@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ preview: "The Camel community announces the immediate 
availability of the new Ca
 
 The Camel community announces the immediate availability of Camel 3.2.0, a new 
minor release with over 160 new features, improvements and fixes.
 
-Please read our [Camel 3.x upgrade 
guide](https://camel.apache.org/manual/latest/camel-3x-upgrade-guide.html#_upgrading_camel_3_1_to_3_2)
 that describes how to upgrade Camel 3.1 applications to Camel 3.2.
+Please read our [Camel 3.x upgrade 
guide](/manual/latest/camel-3x-upgrade-guide.html#_upgrading_camel_3_1_to_3_2) 
that describes how to upgrade Camel 3.1 applications to Camel 3.2.
 
 The artifacts are published and ready for you to download from the Central 
Maven repository. For more details please take a look at the [release 
notes](/releases/release-3.2.0/).
 
diff --git a/content/blog/2020/05/Camel33-Whatsnew/index.md 
b/content/blog/2020/05/Camel33-Whatsnew/index.md
index 8de1ac8..21701ef 100644
--- a/content/blog/2020/05/Camel33-Whatsnew/index.md
+++ b/content/blog/2020/05/Camel33-Whatsnew/index.md
@@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ preview: Details of what we have done in the Camel 3.3 release.
 
 A few days ago Apache Camel 3.3 was released. This is a continuation of the 
work we are doing on Camel leading up to the first long term support release 
(LTS) that will be the next release v3.4.
 
-In case you have missed this, the release model in Camel 3.x is following the 
principe of LTS and non-LTS releases (like Java JDKs). For more details see 
this [blog post](https://camel.apache.org/blog/LTS-Release-Schedule/).
+In case you have missed this, the release model in Camel 3.x is following the 
principe of LTS and non-LTS releases (like Java JDKs). For more details see 
this [blog post](/blog/LTS-Release-Schedule/).
 
 What this means is that we will not do patch releases for Camel 3.3.x, but 
move ahead for Camel 3.4.
 
diff --git a/content/blog/2020/05/CdcWithCamelAndDebezium/index.md 
b/content/blog/2020/05/CdcWithCamelAndDebezium/index.md
index fa5cbb2..7de1900 100644
--- a/content/blog/2020/05/CdcWithCamelAndDebezium/index.md
+++ b/content/blog/2020/05/CdcWithCamelAndDebezium/index.md
@@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ preview: "CDC approaches based on Camel and Debezium."
 Change Data Capture (CDC) is a well-established software design pattern for a 
system that monitors and captures
 data changes, so that other software can respond to those events.
 
-Using a CDC engine like [Debezium](https://debezium.io) along with 
[Camel](https://camel.apache.org) integration
+Using a CDC engine like [Debezium](https://debezium.io) along with [Camel]() 
integration
 framework, we can easily build data pipelines to bridge traditional data 
stores and new cloud-native event-driven
 architectures.
 
diff --git a/content/blog/2020/05/RELEASE-3.3.0/index.md 
b/content/blog/2020/05/RELEASE-3.3.0/index.md
index c981b33..fe11bbd 100644
--- a/content/blog/2020/05/RELEASE-3.3.0/index.md
+++ b/content/blog/2020/05/RELEASE-3.3.0/index.md
@@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ preview: "The Camel community announces the immediate 
availability of the new Ca
 
 The Camel community announces the immediate availability of Camel 3.3.0, a new 
minor release with 149 new features, improvements and fixes.
 
-Please read our [Camel 3.x upgrade 
guide](https://camel.apache.org/manual/latest/camel-3x-upgrade-guide-3_3.html#_upgrading_camel_3_2_to_3_3)
 that describes how to upgrade Camel 3.2 applications to Camel 3.3.
+Please read our [Camel 3.x upgrade 
guide](/manual/latest/camel-3x-upgrade-guide-3_3.html#_upgrading_camel_3_2_to_3_3)
 that describes how to upgrade Camel 3.2 applications to Camel 3.3.
 
 The artifacts are published and ready for you to download from the Central 
Maven repository. For more details please take a look at the [release 
notes](/releases/release-3.3.0/).
 
diff --git a/content/blog/2020/06/camel-k-release-1.0.0/index.md 
b/content/blog/2020/06/camel-k-release-1.0.0/index.md
index d7602e2..8c06e68 100644
--- a/content/blog/2020/06/camel-k-release-1.0.0/index.md
+++ b/content/blog/2020/06/camel-k-release-1.0.0/index.md
@@ -113,7 +113,7 @@ But improvements are not only limited to the Camel core: 
we're doing much more.
 
 In Camel K 1.0.0 we support **Camel Quarkus in JVM mode**. A goal is to have 
also the in-cluster native compilation soon (for some DSL languages, such as 
YAML), in one of next releases!
 
-To use Quarkus as underlying runtime, you just need to enable the **[Quarkus 
trait](https://camel.apache.org/camel-k/latest/traits/quarkus.html)** when 
running an integration:
+To use Quarkus as underlying runtime, you just need to enable the **[Quarkus 
trait](/camel-k/latest/traits/quarkus.html)** when running an integration:
 
 ```
 kamel run myintegration.groovy -t quarkus.enabled=true
@@ -181,7 +181,7 @@ kamel run Handler.java
 
 The other options are taken automatically from the file modeline. The CLI also 
displays the full command to let you know what's running.
 
-This kind of configuration is extremely useful in CI/CD scenarios because it 
allows you to have self-contained integration files and you don't need to 
change the pipeline to setup additional options. If you're curious about the 
CI/CD configurations, you can follow the [tutorial about Tekton 
pipelines](https://camel.apache.org/camel-k/latest/tutorials/tekton/tekton.html)
 to have more information.
+This kind of configuration is extremely useful in CI/CD scenarios because it 
allows you to have self-contained integration files and you don't need to 
change the pipeline to setup additional options. If you're curious about the 
CI/CD configurations, you can follow the [tutorial about Tekton 
pipelines](/camel-k/latest/tutorials/tekton/tekton.html) to have more 
information.
 
 ## Monitoring and Tracing
 
@@ -194,7 +194,7 @@ Let's suppose you've a 
**[Prometheus](https://prometheus.io/)** instance in your
 kamel run Routes.java -t prometheus.enabled=true
 ```
 
-That's it. No need to setup services and labels to enable scraping. A default 
prometheus configuration file is also provided for the integration, with 
sensible defaults. Of course you also have the option to provide [your own 
configuration](https://camel.apache.org/camel-k/latest/traits/prometheus.html) 
for advanced use cases.
+That's it. No need to setup services and labels to enable scraping. A default 
prometheus configuration file is also provided for the integration, with 
sensible defaults. Of course you also have the option to provide [your own 
configuration](/camel-k/latest/traits/prometheus.html) for advanced use cases.
 
 Now, let's suppose you want to see what your routes are doing and trace the 
execution flow of an integration. What you need to do is to install an 
opentracing compatible application in the namespace, such as 
**[Jaeger](https://www.jaegertracing.io/)**, and run the integration as:
 
@@ -202,8 +202,8 @@ Now, let's suppose you want to see what your routes are 
doing and trace the exec
 kamel run Routes.java -t prometheus.enabled=true -t tracing.enabled=true
 ```
 
-That's it again. The Camel K operator will add the [camel-opentracing 
library](https://camel.apache.org/components/latest/others/opentracing.html) 
and **connect it to the Jaeger collector that is available in the namespace**.
-Here again, [advanced use 
cases](https://camel.apache.org/camel-k/latest/traits/tracing.html) are 
supported.
+That's it again. The Camel K operator will add the [camel-opentracing 
library](/components/latest/others/opentracing.html) and **connect it to the 
Jaeger collector that is available in the namespace**.
+Here again, [advanced use cases](/camel-k/latest/traits/tracing.html) are 
supported.
 
 ## Master routes
 
@@ -241,7 +241,7 @@ So the Camel K operator automatically handles this 
situation by deploying your i
 
 There are cases when you don't want this feature to be enabled, for example, 
when your code makes use of in memory caches that is better to keep between 
executions. In these cases, you can safely turn off the feature by passing the 
flag `-t cron.enabled=false` to the `kamel run` command.
 
-The Cron feature does not only work with the `timer` component. We've also 
added a [cron 
component](https://camel.apache.org/components/latest/cron-component.html) 
since Camel 3.1 that works really well in combination with the [cron 
trait](https://camel.apache.org/camel-k/latest/traits/cron.html).
+The Cron feature does not only work with the `timer` component. We've also 
added a [cron component](/components/latest/cron-component.html) since Camel 
3.1 that works really well in combination with the [cron 
trait](/camel-k/latest/traits/cron.html).
 
 So you can also write the cron expression in the route directly:
 
@@ -264,7 +264,7 @@ The first step is to go to the [Camel K release 
page](https://github.com/apache/
 
 Installation is done usually using the `kamel install` command, but, depending 
on the kind of Kubernetes cluster you're using, 
 you may need to execute additional configuration steps.
-The Camel K documentation contains a section about **[installing it on various 
types of Kubernetes 
clusters](https://camel.apache.org/camel-k/latest/installation/installation.html)**.
+The Camel K documentation contains a section about **[installing it on various 
types of Kubernetes clusters](/camel-k/latest/installation/installation.html)**.
 
 If you have trouble or you need to install it on a particular cluster that is 
not listed, just reach out in the [Gitter 
chat](https://gitter.im/apache/camel-k) and
 we'll do our best to help you.
diff --git a/content/blog/2020/06/camel-quarkus-release-1.0.0-CR2/index.md 
b/content/blog/2020/06/camel-quarkus-release-1.0.0-CR2/index.md
index 0a144aa..b2537e8 100644
--- a/content/blog/2020/06/camel-quarkus-release-1.0.0-CR2/index.md
+++ b/content/blog/2020/06/camel-quarkus-release-1.0.0-CR2/index.md
@@ -16,31 +16,31 @@ So what is new in Camel Quarkus 1.0.0-CR2?
 
 While we do not have any new extensions this time, the following extensions 
were promoted from JVM-only to JVM+native:
 
-* [REST 
OpenApi](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/rest-openapi.html)
-* [Avro data 
format](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/avro.html)
-* [MongoDB 
GridFS](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/mongodb-gridfs.html)
-* [Debezium 
PostgreSQL](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/debezium-mysql.html)
-* [Debezium 
MySQL](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/debezium-mysql.html)
+* [REST OpenApi](/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/rest-openapi.html)
+* [Avro data format](/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/avro.html)
+* [MongoDB GridFS](/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/mongodb-gridfs.html)
+* [Debezium PostgreSQL](/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/debezium-mysql.html)
+* [Debezium MySQL](/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/debezium-mysql.html)
 
-All supported bits can be seen in the [List of Camel Quarkus 
extensions](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/list-of-camel-quarkus-extensions.html).
+All supported bits can be seen in the [List of Camel Quarkus 
extensions](/camel-quarkus/latest/list-of-camel-quarkus-extensions.html).
 
 ## New documentation pages
 
 Each Camel Quarkus extension has a separate page now. Most of the content is 
generated from the data available in
-[Camel Catalog](https://camel.apache.org/manual/latest/camel-catalog.html). 
This includes some basic description, Maven
+[Camel Catalog](/manual/latest/camel-catalog.html). This includes some basic 
description, Maven
 coordinates and links to the involved Camel bits.
-[ActiveMQ](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/activemq.html)
 is an example of such a rudimentary
+[ActiveMQ](/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/activemq.html) is an example of 
such a rudimentary
 page.
 
 In some cases, that generated content is combined with manually maintained 
sections that inform about Camel
-Quarkus specific behavior, limitations, configuration options, etc. See 
[MicroProfile 
Health](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/microprofile-health.html)
 as an example.
+Quarkus specific behavior, limitations, configuration options, etc. See 
[MicroProfile 
Health](/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/microprofile-health.html) as an 
example.
 
 Within a couple of days, [code.quarkus.io](https://code.quarkus.io/) should 
start to reference the new extension pages
 as "guides" of the individual Camel entries listed there.
 
 ## Camel 3.3.0
 
-Camel was upgraded to [3.3.0](https://camel.apache.org/blog/Camel33-Whatsnew/) 
bringing less reflection and less JAXP to
+Camel was upgraded to [3.3.0](/blog/Camel33-Whatsnew/) bringing less 
reflection and less JAXP to
 Camel Quarkus, thus improving the disk size, startup time and RAM usage of 
Camel Quarkus applications.
 
 ## Quarkus 1.5.0.Final
@@ -56,9 +56,9 @@ the last release supporting Java 8.
 
 The Hystrix component was recently deprecated in Camel, so we deprecated it as 
well. It will be removed in the next
 Camel Quarkus release. Please use
-[Microprofile Fault 
Tolerance](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/microprofile-fault-tolerance.html)
+[Microprofile Fault 
Tolerance](/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/microprofile-fault-tolerance.html)
 as a replacement.
 
-Enjoy and give feedback either via [mailing 
lists](https://camel.apache.org/manual/latest/mailing-lists.html)
+Enjoy and give feedback either via [mailing 
lists](/manual/latest/mailing-lists.html)
 or [GitHub issues](https://github.com/apache/camel-quarkus/issues)!
 
diff --git a/content/blog/2020/06/camel34-whatsnew/index.md 
b/content/blog/2020/06/camel34-whatsnew/index.md
index a63e922..44630b3 100644
--- a/content/blog/2020/06/camel34-whatsnew/index.md
+++ b/content/blog/2020/06/camel34-whatsnew/index.md
@@ -11,7 +11,7 @@ Apache Camel 3.4 is the first LTS (Long Term Support) release 
of Camel 3.
 
 This release will be actively supported with regular patch releases containing 
important bug and security fixes for 1-year.
 
-For more details about LTS vs non-LTS releases see this [blog 
post](https://camel.apache.org/blog/LTS-Release-Schedule/).
+For more details about LTS vs non-LTS releases see this [blog 
post](/blog/LTS-Release-Schedule/).
 
 
 ### So what's in this release?
@@ -44,7 +44,7 @@ We have provided an example using `camel-main` or 
`camel-spring-boot` which you
 
[here](https://github.com/apache/camel-examples/tree/master/examples/camel-example-main-health)
 and
 
[here](https://github.com/apache/camel-spring-boot-examples/tree/master/camel-example-spring-boot-health-checks).
 
-You can find more details in the [Route 
Controller](https://camel.apache.org/manual/latest/route-controller.html) 
documentation.
+You can find more details in the [Route 
Controller](/manual/latest/route-controller.html) documentation.
 
 #### Health Check
 
@@ -55,11 +55,11 @@ We also introduced the concept of readiness and liveness so 
a health check can b
 Each health check can be configured, from `application.properties` the same 
way, and it's all reflection free.
 
 The previously mentioned examples also comes with health-check so make sure to 
check those.
-See more details in the [Health 
Check](https://camel.apache.org/manual/latest/health-check.html) documentation.
+See more details in the [Health Check](/manual/latest/health-check.html) 
documentation.
 
 ### Endpoint DSL
 
-The [Endpoint DSL](https://camel.apache.org/manual/latest/Endpoint-dsl.html) 
had a number of annoying bugs fixed and other improvements.
+The [Endpoint DSL](/manual/latest/Endpoint-dsl.html) had a number of annoying 
bugs fixed and other improvements.
 It is now also easier to use Endpoint DSL to configure endpoints in POJOs as 
Java fields in a type-safe manner,
 by using `FluentProducerTemplate` and in `RouteBuilder` classes as in this 
example:
 
@@ -78,8 +78,8 @@ public class MyPojo {
 }
 ```
 
-You can read more in the manual about [Endpoint 
DSL](https://camel.apache.org/manual/latest/Endpoint-dsl.html) and
-the [Component DSL](https://camel.apache.org/manual/latest/component-dsl.html).
+You can read more in the manual about [Endpoint 
DSL](/manual/latest/Endpoint-dsl.html) and
+the [Component DSL](/manual/latest/component-dsl.html).
 
 #### Spring Boot
 
@@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ This release also adds two new components:
 
 A new maven plugin called `camel-component-maven-plugin` has been added which 
intents to help
 third party component developers to generate all required metadata and 
configurations Java files. For more info on how to use it in your project,
-please take a look at the [Camel Component Plugin 
documentation](https://camel.apache.org/manual/latest/camel-component-maven-plugin.html).
+please take a look at the [Camel Component Plugin 
documentation](/manual/latest/camel-component-maven-plugin.html).
 
 You can now configure Camel's thread pool (profiles) and Saga/LRA the same way 
for
 standalone, Camel K, Camel Quarkus, and Spring Boot.
@@ -105,4 +105,4 @@ Some of the components (more to come in the future) we have 
moved initialization
 which allows these components to initialize at build time, which makes Camel 
startup faster (especially for GraalVM or Quarkus runtimes).
 
 For users that are upgrading to this release, then make sure to follow
-the [upgrade 
guide](https://camel.apache.org/manual/latest/camel-3x-upgrade-guide.html).
+the [upgrade guide](/manual/latest/camel-3x-upgrade-guide.html).
diff --git a/content/blog/2020/07/camel-quarkus-release-1.0.0-CR3/index.md 
b/content/blog/2020/07/camel-quarkus-release-1.0.0-CR3/index.md
index b1f5215..5da7520 100644
--- a/content/blog/2020/07/camel-quarkus-release-1.0.0-CR3/index.md
+++ b/content/blog/2020/07/camel-quarkus-release-1.0.0-CR3/index.md
@@ -16,33 +16,33 @@ Here are some highlights of Camel Quarkus 1.0.0-CR3.
 
 The following new extensions were added:
 
-* [AWS 2 
Athena](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/aws2-athena.html)
-* [Component 
DSL](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/componentdsl.html)
-* [JOLT](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/jolt.html)
-* [JTA](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/jta.html)
-* [OpenApi 
Java](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/openapi-java.html)
-* [Tika](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/tika.html)
-* [Vert.x](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/vertx.html)
+* [AWS 2 Athena](/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/aws2-athena.html)
+* [Component DSL](/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/componentdsl.html)
+* [JOLT](/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/jolt.html)
+* [JTA](/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/jta.html)
+* [OpenApi Java](/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/openapi-java.html)
+* [Tika](/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/tika.html)
+* [Vert.x](/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/vertx.html)
 
 
 The following extensions added native mode support:
 
-* [AWS 2 DynamoDB 
Streams](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/aws2-ddb.html)
-* [AWS 2 Elastic Compute Cloud 
(EC2)](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/aws2-ec2.html)
-* [AWS 2 Elastic Container Service 
(ECS)](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/aws2-ecs.html)
-* [AWS 2 Elastic Kubernetes Service 
(EKS)](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/aws2-eks.html)
-* [AWS 2 Identity and Access Management 
(IAM)](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/aws2-iam.html)
-* [AWS 2 Key Management Service 
(KMS)](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/aws2-kms.html)
-* [AWS 2 Managed Streaming for Apache Kafka 
(MSK)](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/aws2-msk.html)
-* [AWS 2 
MQ](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/aws2-mq.html)
-* [AWS 2 Simple Email Service 
(SES)](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/aws2-ses.html)
-* [AWS 2 
Translate](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/aws2-translate.html)
+* [AWS 2 DynamoDB Streams](/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/aws2-ddb.html)
+* [AWS 2 Elastic Compute Cloud 
(EC2)](/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/aws2-ec2.html)
+* [AWS 2 Elastic Container Service 
(ECS)](/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/aws2-ecs.html)
+* [AWS 2 Elastic Kubernetes Service 
(EKS)](/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/aws2-eks.html)
+* [AWS 2 Identity and Access Management 
(IAM)](/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/aws2-iam.html)
+* [AWS 2 Key Management Service 
(KMS)](/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/aws2-kms.html)
+* [AWS 2 Managed Streaming for Apache Kafka 
(MSK)](/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/aws2-msk.html)
+* [AWS 2 MQ](/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/aws2-mq.html)
+* [AWS 2 Simple Email Service 
(SES)](/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/aws2-ses.html)
+* [AWS 2 Translate](/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/aws2-translate.html)
 
-All supported extensions can be seen in the [List of Camel Quarkus 
extensions](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/list-of-camel-quarkus-extensions.html).
+All supported extensions can be seen in the [List of Camel Quarkus 
extensions](/camel-quarkus/latest/list-of-camel-quarkus-extensions.html).
 
 ## Camel 3.4.0
 
-Camel was upgraded to 
[3.4.0](https://camel.apache.org/blog/2020/06/camel34-whatsnew/). For Quarkus 
this brings some performance improvements, 
+Camel was upgraded to [3.4.0](/blog/2020/06/camel34-whatsnew/). For Quarkus 
this brings some performance improvements, 
 with JAXB dependencies having been removed from the OpenAPI components. 
There's also some enhancements to the health check APIs and a new 
 [health 
example](https://github.com/apache/camel-quarkus/tree/master/examples/health) 
was added to demonstrate this.
 
@@ -51,5 +51,5 @@ with JAXB dependencies having been removed from the OpenAPI 
components. There's
 Quarkus was upgraded to 1.6.0.Final.
 
 
-Enjoy! Feel free to give feedback via the [mailing 
lists](https://camel.apache.org/manual/latest/mailing-lists.html)
+Enjoy! Feel free to give feedback via the [mailing 
lists](/manual/latest/mailing-lists.html)
 or [GitHub issues](https://github.com/apache/camel-quarkus/issues).
diff --git 
a/content/blog/2020/07/command-line-utility-with-camel-quarkus/index.md 
b/content/blog/2020/07/command-line-utility-with-camel-quarkus/index.md
index 02ee73e..4ae39ca 100644
--- a/content/blog/2020/07/command-line-utility-with-camel-quarkus/index.md
+++ b/content/blog/2020/07/command-line-utility-with-camel-quarkus/index.md
@@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ categories: ["Howtos", "Camel Quarkus"]
 preview: How to write a command line utility with Camel Quarkus
 ---
 
-[Camel](https://camel.apache.org/) and [Camel 
Quarkus](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/index.html) are
+[Camel](/) and [Camel Quarkus](/camel-quarkus/latest/index.html) are
 typically used to create integration applications that run as long living 
processes, a.k.a. daemons or services.
 In this blog post, we are going to explain a slightly different use case: 
using Camel Quarkus in programs that exit by
 themselves after performing some desired tasks.
@@ -28,7 +28,7 @@ There are just two things where it would differ from a stock 
Camel Quarkus appli
 1. Adding `camel-quarkus-main` dependency
 2. Setting an exit condition in `application.properties`
 
-The rest of the application - most notably the 
[Route](https://camel.apache.org/manual/latest/routes.html) that
+The rest of the application - most notably the 
[Route](/manual/latest/routes.html) that
 performs the actual data transformation and transfer - will look the same like 
with a traditional Camel service.
 
 
@@ -53,12 +53,12 @@ public class CamelRoute extends RouteBuilder {
 }
 ```
 
-Note that we use the 
[timer](https://camel.apache.org/components/latest/timer-component.html) 
component to trigger the
+Note that we use the [timer](/components/latest/timer-component.html) 
component to trigger the
 route execution. The URI parameter `delay=-1` causes the timer to be triggered 
with no initial delay and
 `repeatCount=1` ensures that the route is executed just once.
 
 However, doing just the above would not make our application exit by itself.
-[camel-main](https://camel.apache.org/components/latest/others/main.html) and 
its `camel.main.durationMax*`
+[camel-main](/components/latest/others/main.html) and its 
`camel.main.durationMax*`
 family of configuration options offers a way to solve that. E.g. we can set 
the following in
 `application.properties`
 
@@ -173,7 +173,7 @@ $ $ java -Dgreeted.subject=Joe -jar target/*-runner.jar
 
 ## Compiling the command line utility to a native executable
 
-[As usual with Camel 
Quarkus](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/user-guide/first-steps.html#_native_mode),
+[As usual with Camel 
Quarkus](/camel-quarkus/latest/user-guide/first-steps.html#_native_mode),
 the application can be compiled to native executable by activating the 
`native` profile.
 GraalVM with `native-image` command installed and `GRAALVM_HOME` environment 
variable set is required for that,
 see [Building a native 
executable](https://quarkus.io/guides/building-native-image) section of the 
Quarkus
diff --git a/content/blog/2020/08/Camel-kafka-connector-0.4.0-RELEASE/index.md 
b/content/blog/2020/08/Camel-kafka-connector-0.4.0-RELEASE/index.md
index d349835..d5b49e3 100644
--- a/content/blog/2020/08/Camel-kafka-connector-0.4.0-RELEASE/index.md
+++ b/content/blog/2020/08/Camel-kafka-connector-0.4.0-RELEASE/index.md
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ preview: "Camel Kafka Connector 0.4.0 Released"
 draft: false
 ---
 
-We recently released camel-kafka-connector 0.4.0. This is the first release of 
the latest project in the Camel’s ecosystem, based on an [LTS camel 
release](https://camel.apache.org/blog/2020/03/LTS-Release-Schedule/). 
+We recently released camel-kafka-connector 0.4.0. This is the first release of 
the latest project in the Camel’s ecosystem, based on an [LTS camel 
release](/blog/2020/03/LTS-Release-Schedule/). 
 
  * The main features of this release are:
  * Introduction of aggregation support
diff --git a/content/blog/2020/08/camel-quarkus-release-1.0.0/index.md 
b/content/blog/2020/08/camel-quarkus-release-1.0.0/index.md
index 7c2cb7f..6becec4 100644
--- a/content/blog/2020/08/camel-quarkus-release-1.0.0/index.md
+++ b/content/blog/2020/08/camel-quarkus-release-1.0.0/index.md
@@ -16,12 +16,12 @@ The Apache Camel community celebrates the release 1.0.0 of 
Camel Quarkus!
 Camel Quarkus brings the outstanding integration capabilities of Apache Camel 
to [Quarkus](https://quarkus.io/) - the
 toolkit for writing subatomically small and supersonically fast Java and 
Kotlin applications. In addition to
 memory consumption and start time improvements on stock JVMs, Quarkus also 
allows for compiling applications to
-[native 
executables](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/user-guide/first-steps.html#_package_and_run_the_application)
+[native 
executables](/camel-quarkus/latest/user-guide/first-steps.html#_package_and_run_the_application)
 thus improving the performance characteristics even more.
 
 Camel Quarkus is suitable not only for creating long living services and 
potentially short living serverless
 applications but also for
-[command-style 
applications](https://camel.apache.org/blog/2020/07/command-line-utility-with-camel-quarkus/)
+[command-style 
applications](/blog/2020/07/command-line-utility-with-camel-quarkus/)
 that execute some specific task (or wait for some specific condition) and exit.
 
 ## Developer joy
@@ -35,7 +35,7 @@ Writing integrations has never been more joyful for 
developers than with Camel Q
 * Hides the complexity of the native compilation using 
[GraalVM](https://www.graalvm.org/) or
   [Mandrell](https://github.com/graalvm/mandrel)
 
-Check our [User 
guide](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/user-guide/first-steps.html)!
+Check our [User guide](/camel-quarkus/latest/user-guide/first-steps.html)!
 
 ## Camel components coverage
 
@@ -49,7 +49,7 @@ Camel 3.4, Camel Quarkus supports:
 * 17 out of 42 miscellaneous Camel components (40%)
 
 Some of these are supported in JVM mode only - please refer to the
-[complete 
list](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/list-of-camel-quarkus-extensions.html)
 for details.
+[complete list](/camel-quarkus/latest/list-of-camel-quarkus-extensions.html) 
for details.
 
 ## Bootstrapping methods
 
@@ -68,14 +68,14 @@ If you rather come from the CDI side and you never wrote 
Camel integrations befo
 bootstrap and configure your routes using CDI. You can configure Camel using 
CDI even if you have Camel Main in your
 application.
 
-See the [Bootstrap 
section](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/user-guide/bootstrap.html)
 of the User guide
+See the [Bootstrap section](/camel-quarkus/latest/user-guide/bootstrap.html) 
of the User guide
 for more details.
 
 ## CDI
 
 CDI plays a central role in Quarkus and Camel Quarkus offers a first class 
support for it too. You may use `@Inject`,
 `@ConfigProperty` and other annotations e.g. to inject beans and configuration 
values to your Camel RouteBuilder's.
-See the [CDI 
section](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/user-guide/cdi.html) of 
the User guide for more
+See the [CDI section](/camel-quarkus/latest/user-guide/cdi.html) of the User 
guide for more
 details.
 
 ## Native mode
@@ -95,10 +95,10 @@ On Camel Quarkus, the extensions roughly correspond to 
camel components - i.e. i
 need `camel-sql` you add the `camel-quarkus-sql` extension as a dependency to 
your application and it takes
 care for both pulling the `camel-sql` artifact and configuring the native 
compiler. Extension pages document any
 further configuration that needs to be done by the application developer. E.g. 
in case of the
-[SQL 
extension](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/sql.html#_additional_camel_quarkus_configuration),
+[SQL 
extension](/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/sql.html#_additional_camel_quarkus_configuration),
 the `quarkus.camel.sql.script-files` property needs to be set.
 
-Check the [Native 
mode](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/user-guide/native-mode.html)
 section of the Camel
+Check the [Native mode](/camel-quarkus/latest/user-guide/native-mode.html) 
section of the Camel
 Quarkus User guide and [Quarkus Native 
guide](https://quarkus.io/guides/writing-native-applications-tips) for more
 details about the native compilation on Quarkus.
 
@@ -106,8 +106,8 @@ details about the native compilation on Quarkus.
 
 While we mostly have only indirect information about the usage via
 [GitHub issues](https://github.com/apache/camel-quarkus/issues), there is one 
prominent user, we are especially proud
-of: [Camel K](https://camel.apache.org/camel-k/latest/index.html). As of
-[Camel K 
1.0](https://camel.apache.org/blog/2020/06/camel-k-release-1.0.0#fast-startup-and-low-memory),
 Camel Quarkus is
+of: [Camel K](/camel-k/latest/index.html). As of
+[Camel K 
1.0](/blog/2020/06/camel-k-release-1.0.0#fast-startup-and-low-memory), Camel 
Quarkus is
 one of the two supported runtimes and "is expected to be the default 
underlying runtime in the next release".
 
 ## Highlights of the release 1.0.0
@@ -119,13 +119,13 @@ General:
 
 New extensions:
 
-* [Grok](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/grok.html)
-* [JPA](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/jpa.html)
+* [Grok](/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/grok.html)
+* [JPA](/camel-quarkus/latest/extensions/jpa.html)
 
 ## What's next?
 
 * [More 
extensions](https://github.com/apache/camel-quarkus/issues?q=is%3Aissue+is%3Aopen+label%3Aextension)
 - upvote
-  or even better 
[contribute](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/contributor-guide/index.html)!
+  or even better 
[contribute](/camel-quarkus/latest/contributor-guide/index.html)!
 * Even less reflection with Camel 3.5
 
 We wish you a lot of joy with Camel Quarkus and we look forward to your 
feedback and participation!
diff --git a/content/blog/2020/08/camel-quarkus-release-1.0.1/index.md 
b/content/blog/2020/08/camel-quarkus-release-1.0.1/index.md
index 4d5c673..40259bc 100644
--- a/content/blog/2020/08/camel-quarkus-release-1.0.1/index.md
+++ b/content/blog/2020/08/camel-quarkus-release-1.0.1/index.md
@@ -25,9 +25,9 @@ Camel Quarkus 1.1.0 will be released shortly after Camel 
3.5.0. We will possibly
 depending on the availability of Camel 3.5.0 CRs.
 
 To get an idea which new extensions are coming, look for the extensions
-having `since = 1.1.0` in the [list of 
extensions](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/index.html).
+having `since = 1.1.0` in the [list of 
extensions](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/index.html).
 You may also check the [issues assigned to milestone 
1.1.0](https://github.com/apache/camel-quarkus/milestone/5?closed=1).
 
 We are looking forward to your participation through
-[contributing](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/contributor-guide/index.html)
 and/or
+[contributing](/camel-quarkus/latest/contributor-guide/index.html) and/or
 [filing bugs](https://github.com/apache/camel-quarkus/issues/new)!
\ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/content/blog/2020/09/Camel-kafka-connector-050-Whatsnew/index.md 
b/content/blog/2020/09/Camel-kafka-connector-050-Whatsnew/index.md
index 6285ffc..2ba1f7a 100644
--- a/content/blog/2020/09/Camel-kafka-connector-050-Whatsnew/index.md
+++ b/content/blog/2020/09/Camel-kafka-connector-050-Whatsnew/index.md
@@ -43,7 +43,7 @@ The documentation of each connector (source/sink or both) now 
contains reference
 - Aggregation Strategies list available in the connector as out of the box 
solutions
 
 On the Archetypes side: the archetype provided to extend the current 
connectors is now able to use a parameter to specify what connector you want to 
extend.
-More information available at [Camel-Kafka-connector archetype 
documentation](https://camel.apache.org/camel-kafka-connector/latest/archetypes.html).
+More information available at [Camel-Kafka-connector archetype 
documentation](/camel-kafka-connector/latest/archetypes.html).
 
 We added also a troubleshooting section in our documentation, to be able to 
debug and use the connectors in the best way possible.
 
diff --git a/content/blog/2020/09/Camel35-Whatsnew/index.md 
b/content/blog/2020/09/Camel35-Whatsnew/index.md
index a986bc3..716ae7f 100644
--- a/content/blog/2020/09/Camel35-Whatsnew/index.md
+++ b/content/blog/2020/09/Camel35-Whatsnew/index.md
@@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ We have upgraded to latest release at this time which is 
Spring Boot 2.3.3.
 
 A new `camel-spring-boot-bom` BOM has been added that only contains the 
supported Camel Spring JARs for Spring Boot.
 The existing `camel-spring-boot-dependencies` is a much bigger set of BOM that 
is curated to align Camel and Spring Boot
-dependencies. For more details see the [following 
documentation](https://camel.apache.org/camel-spring-boot/latest/#_camel_spring_boot_bom_vs_camel_spring_boot_dependencies_bom).
+dependencies. For more details see the [following 
documentation](/camel-spring-boot/latest/#_camel_spring_boot_bom_vs_camel_spring_boot_dependencies_bom).
 
 
 ### JUnit 5
@@ -41,7 +41,7 @@ We have also refactored the `camel-test-spring-junit5` for 
Spring Boot users wit
 that you mark on your unit test class instead of using JUnit 4.x `@RunWith`.
 
 See the 
[camel-spring-boot-example](https://github.com/apache/camel-spring-boot-examples/tree/master/camel-example-spring-boot)
-for an example, or the Camel 3.5 [upgrade 
guide](https://camel.apache.org/manual/latest/camel-3x-upgrade-guide-3_5.html#_spring_boot_testing_with_junit_5).
+for an example, or the Camel 3.5 [upgrade 
guide](/manual/latest/camel-3x-upgrade-guide-3_5.html#_spring_boot_testing_with_junit_5).
 
 
 #### LambdaRouteBuilder
@@ -63,13 +63,13 @@ For example in a Spring Boot configuration class you can 
add a Camel route via `
 Notice you can only define 1 route per lambda route builder (you can have many 
`@Bean` methods).
 The regular `RouteBuilder` can define as many routes you want in the same 
builder.
 
-See more details at the 
[LambdaRouteBuilder](https://camel.apache.org/manual/latest/lambda-route-builder.html)
+See more details at the 
[LambdaRouteBuilder](/manual/latest/lambda-route-builder.html)
 documentation.
 
 
 ### Parameterize routes
 
-This is one of the biggest new feature which goes by the name [route 
templates](https://camel.apache.org/manual/latest/route-template.html).
+This is one of the biggest new feature which goes by the name [route 
templates](/manual/latest/route-template.html).
 A route template is a way of parameterizing a route where you specify 
parameters that are mandatory,
 and which are optional, and potential default values and descriptions. Then 
you can instantiate new routes
 from the route templates by its template id, and the provided parameters.
@@ -81,7 +81,7 @@ This feature will also play a great role in Apache Camel K 
and the serverless la
 In this world the route templates are used as part of a bigger puzzle which we 
named _kamelets_. More details
 is coming in a new blog posts.
 
-See more details at the [route 
templates](https://camel.apache.org/manual/latest/route-template.html) 
documentation,
+See more details at the [route templates](/manual/latest/route-template.html) 
documentation,
 and in this [little 
example](https://github.com/apache/camel-examples/tree/master/examples/camel-example-routetemplate).
 
 
@@ -141,7 +141,7 @@ is now generated in the configurers, so Camel knows the 
value types in the colle
     camel.beans.foo.countries[de].language = DE
 
 The work did not stop there. By knowing the value type of the collection 
types, we allow to do reflection free
-[binding 
collections](https://camel.apache.org/manual/latest/property-binding.html).
+[binding collections](/manual/latest/property-binding.html).
 
 There has been many other smaller improvements in Camels properties binding. 
Camel uses this heavily internally during
 startup to configure and setup all of its things such as components, EIPs, 
routes etc. This work has been streamlined
@@ -180,5 +180,5 @@ So stay tuned for the next non-LTS release.
 
 ## Upgrading
 
-Make sure to read the [upgrade 
guide](https://camel.apache.org/manual/latest/camel-3x-upgrade-guide-3_5.html) 
if you
+Make sure to read the [upgrade 
guide](/manual/latest/camel-3x-upgrade-guide-3_5.html) if you
 are upgrading to this release from a previous Camel version.
diff --git a/content/blog/2020/09/camel-quarkus-release-1.1.0/index.md 
b/content/blog/2020/09/camel-quarkus-release-1.1.0/index.md
index b12fe1c..cb8feed 100644
--- a/content/blog/2020/09/camel-quarkus-release-1.1.0/index.md
+++ b/content/blog/2020/09/camel-quarkus-release-1.1.0/index.md
@@ -16,34 +16,34 @@ Here are some of the highlights.
 
 ## Major component upgrades
 
-* [Camel 3.5.0](https://camel.apache.org/blog/2020/09/Camel35-Whatsnew/)
+* [Camel 3.5.0](/blog/2020/09/Camel35-Whatsnew/)
 * Quarkus 1.8.0
 
 ## New extensions
 
-We added a whopping 174 new extensions in this release! This is because Camel 
Quarkus will shortly become [the only and default 
runtime](http://camel.465427.n5.nabble.com/camel-k-switch-to-Quarkus-as-default-framework-for-integrations-td5869959.html)
 in our sibling project [Camel K](https://camel.apache.org/camel-k/latest/). 
+We added a whopping 174 new extensions in this release! This is because Camel 
Quarkus will shortly become [the only and default 
runtime](http://camel.465427.n5.nabble.com/camel-k-switch-to-Quarkus-as-default-framework-for-integrations-td5869959.html)
 in our sibling project [Camel K](/camel-k/latest/). 
 159 of the new extensions initially have support for JVM mode only.
 
 In addition, native support has been added to the following 16 extensions:
 
-* 
[ArangoDB](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/arangodb.html)
-* 
[AS2](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/as2.html)
-* [AWS 2 
Lambda](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/aws2-lambda.html)
-* [AWS 2 Security Token Service 
(STS)](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/aws2-sts.html)
-* [AWS Identity and Access Management 
(IAM)](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/aws-iam.html)
-* 
[Dropbox](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/dropbox.html)
-* 
[Flatpack](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/flatpack.html)
-* 
[Git](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/git.html)
-* 
[Master](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/master.html)
-* 
[NATS](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/nats.html)
-* 
[RabbitMQ](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/rabbitmq.html)
-* [SmallRye Reactive 
Messaging](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/smallrye-reactive-messaging.html)
-* [ThreadPoolFactory 
Vert.x](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/threadpoolfactory-vertx.html)
-* [Vert.x HTTP 
Client](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/vertx-http.html)
-* [Vert.x 
WebSocket](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/vertx-websocket.html)
-* 
[Weather](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/weather.html)
-
-You can browse the full list of supported extensions over at the [extensions 
reference](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/index.html).
+* [ArangoDB](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/arangodb.html)
+* [AS2](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/as2.html)
+* [AWS 2 Lambda](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/aws2-lambda.html)
+* [AWS 2 Security Token Service 
(STS)](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/aws2-sts.html)
+* [AWS Identity and Access Management 
(IAM)](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/aws-iam.html)
+* [Dropbox](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/dropbox.html)
+* [Flatpack](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/flatpack.html)
+* [Git](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/git.html)
+* [Master](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/master.html)
+* [NATS](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/nats.html)
+* [RabbitMQ](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/rabbitmq.html)
+* [SmallRye Reactive 
Messaging](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/smallrye-reactive-messaging.html)
+* [ThreadPoolFactory 
Vert.x](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/threadpoolfactory-vertx.html)
+* [Vert.x HTTP 
Client](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/vertx-http.html)
+* [Vert.x 
WebSocket](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/vertx-websocket.html)
+* [Weather](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/weather.html)
+
+You can browse the full list of supported extensions over at the [extensions 
reference](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/index.html).
 
 ## Less use of reflection
 
@@ -54,7 +54,7 @@ we have been able to eliminate all of these remaining cases 
and take advantage o
 
 The project has started publishing SNAPSHOT releases from the `master` branch 
(builds with stable Camel & Quarkus releases), the `camel-master` branch 
(builds with the latest Camel SNAPSHOT) and also from the `quarkus-master` 
branch (builds with the latest Quarkus SNAPSHOT). There are more details about 
this here:
 
-https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/contributor-guide/ci.html#_snapshot_deploy_build
+/camel-quarkus/latest/contributor-guide/ci.html#_snapshot_deploy_build
 
 ## We ❤️ new contributors!
 We were happy to welcome as many as four new contributors in this release 
period. [Lukáš](https://github.com/llowinge) improved some of our tests, 
[Zineb](https://twitter.com/ZinebBendhiba) and 
[Marcel](https://twitter.com/JeansenML) were brave enough to deliver two native 
extensions each and [Pooja](https://github.com/PoojaChandak) invested her time 
in improving our documentation.
@@ -64,6 +64,6 @@ Many thanks for the contributions!
 
 We move onwards towards supporting Camel 3.6.0 and Quarkus 1.9.0. There's also 
a [large 
list](https://github.com/apache/camel-quarkus/issues?q=is%3Aissue+is%3Aopen+label%3Anative)
 of extensions that need native support. 
 
-As ever, we love contributions. So if you'd like to fix a bug, add a new 
extension or add native support to an existing one, check out the [list of 
issues](https://github.com/apache/camel-quarkus/issues) and the [contributor 
guide](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/contributor-guide/index.html).
+As ever, we love contributions. So if you'd like to fix a bug, add a new 
extension or add native support to an existing one, check out the [list of 
issues](https://github.com/apache/camel-quarkus/issues) and the [contributor 
guide](/camel-quarkus/latest/contributor-guide/index.html).
 
 We hope you enjoy Camel Quarkus 1.1.0 and we look forward to your feedback and 
participation!
diff --git a/content/blog/2020/09/windup/index.md 
b/content/blog/2020/09/windup/index.md
index 8959c5a..4b4eb70 100644
--- a/content/blog/2020/09/windup/index.md
+++ b/content/blog/2020/09/windup/index.md
@@ -17,7 +17,7 @@ Checkout sample reports for [Camel in Action, Second 
Edition](http://windup.surg
 
 ## Introduction
 
-Camel 3.0.0 has been released in late 2019 which comes a decade after Camel 
2.0.0 was released back in 2009. Camel 3 is a major upgrade from Camel 2 with 
lots of breaking changes. The Camel team has done a great job 
[documenting](https://camel.apache.org/manual/latest/camel-3-migration-guide.html)
 those changes. In order to ease the upgrade, 
[Matej](https://github.com/mmelko) and I have decided to leverage the open 
source application migration tool [Windup](https://github.com/windup/wind [...]
+Camel 3.0.0 has been released in late 2019 which comes a decade after Camel 
2.0.0 was released back in 2009. Camel 3 is a major upgrade from Camel 2 with 
lots of breaking changes. The Camel team has done a great job 
[documenting](/manual/latest/camel-3-migration-guide.html) those changes. In 
order to ease the upgrade, [Matej](https://github.com/mmelko) and I have 
decided to leverage the open source application migration tool 
[Windup](https://github.com/windup/windup) and extend it's exis [...]
 
 ## Running Windup locally
 
@@ -54,7 +54,7 @@ which has been removed in Camel 3, and if so, output a 
helpful message:
     <perform>
         <hint title="`org.apache.camel:camel-linkedin` artifact has been 
removed" effort="7" category-id="mandatory" >
             <message>`org.apache.camel:camel-linkedin` artifact has been 
removed in Apache Camel 3 so it won't be available</message>
-            <link 
href="https://camel.apache.org/manual/latest/camel-3-migration-guide.html#_removed_components";
 title="Camel 3 - Migration Guide: Removed components" />
+            <link 
href="/manual/latest/camel-3-migration-guide.html#_removed_components" 
title="Camel 3 - Migration Guide: Removed components" />
         </hint>
     </perform>
 </rule>
@@ -101,7 +101,7 @@ As we've seen in the previous section, the rules are only 
as powerful as you've
               category-id="mandatory">
             <message>The `getProperties` and `setProperty` methods have been 
removed from `org.apache.camel.CamelContext`. Please use `getGlobalOptions` and 
`setGlobalOptions` instead</message>
             <link title="Camel 3 - Migration Guide: CONFIGURING GLOBAL OPTIONS 
ON CAMELCONTEXT"
-                  
href="https://camel.apache.org/manual/latest/camel-3-migration-guide.html#_configuring_global_options_on_camelcontext"/>
+                  
href="/manual/latest/camel-3-migration-guide.html#_configuring_global_options_on_camelcontext"/>
         </hint>
     </perform>
 </rule>
@@ -119,7 +119,7 @@ Another problem is string interpolation. When writting a 
rule that tries to matc
     <perform>
         <hint title="`twitter-streaming` component has been removed" 
effort="7" category-id="mandatory" >
             <message>`twitter-streaming` component has been deprecated in 
Apache Camel 2 and removed in Apache Camel 3 because it relied on the 
deprecated Twitter Streaming API and is no longer functional.</message>
-            <link 
href="https://camel.apache.org/manual/latest/camel-3-migration-guide.html#_removed_components";
 title="Camel 3 - Migration Guide: Removed components" />
+            <link 
href="/manual/latest/camel-3-migration-guide.html#_removed_components" 
title="Camel 3 - Migration Guide: Removed components" />
         </hint>
     </perform>
 </rule>
diff --git a/content/blog/2020/10/Camel36-Whatsnew/index.md 
b/content/blog/2020/10/Camel36-Whatsnew/index.md
index 20a1cae..09b7a93 100644
--- a/content/blog/2020/10/Camel36-Whatsnew/index.md
+++ b/content/blog/2020/10/Camel36-Whatsnew/index.md
@@ -86,7 +86,7 @@ There are several API based components which are source code 
generated from _ext
   
 Also, we include additional metadata for Camel tooling so they can provide 
code assistance when Camel end-users are using these API based components. Some 
of those external APIs are huge and you can have hundreds of APIs.
 
-The API based components are: 
[AS2](https://camel.apache.org/components/latest/as2-component.html), 
[Box](https://camel.apache.org/components/latest/box-component.html), 
[Braintree](https://camel.apache.org/components/latest/braintree-component.html),
 [FHIR](https://camel.apache.org/components/latest/fhir-component.html), Google 
[Calendar](https://camel.apache.org/components/latest/google-calendar-component.html)/[Drive](https://camel.apache.org/components/latest/google-drive-component.h
 [...]
+The API based components are: [AS2](/components/latest/as2-component.html), 
[Box](/components/latest/box-component.html), 
[Braintree](/components/latest/braintree-component.html), 
[FHIR](/components/latest/fhir-component.html), Google 
[Calendar](/components/latest/google-calendar-component.html)/[Drive](/components/latest/google-drive-component.html)/[Mail](/components/latest/google-mail-component.html)/[Sheets](/components/latest/google-sheets-component.html),
 [Olingo](/components/lates [...]
 
 
 ### Reduce reflection
@@ -99,7 +99,7 @@ Yet another release where we reduced using reflections in a 
few spots in Camel c
 As mentioned in the optimization section we moved initialization of languages 
to an earlier phase.
 Camel now pre compile languages when its applicable, for example JSonPath, and 
XPath language.
 
-And speaking of pre-compiled languages then Camel 3.7 introduces the [jOOR 
language](https://camel.apache.org/components/latest/languages/joor-language.html)
+And speaking of pre-compiled languages then Camel 3.7 introduces the [jOOR 
language](/components/latest/languages/joor-language.html)
 to use runtime compile Java in the Camel DSL. A compiled simple language is 
also on the roadmap.
 
 
@@ -120,16 +120,16 @@ This was a historical slow release in terms of new 
components. In fact there is
 - AWS2-EventBridge: Manage AWS EventBridge cluster instances
 
 You can read more about the new AWS EventBridge component
-in the [blog 
announcement](https://camel.apache.org/blog/2020/10/camel-aws2-eventbridge-intro/).
 
+in the [blog announcement](/blog/2020/10/camel-aws2-eventbridge-intro/). 
 
 
 ## Upgrading
 
-Make sure to read the [upgrade 
guide](https://camel.apache.org/manual/latest/camel-3x-upgrade-guide-3_6.html) 
if you
+Make sure to read the [upgrade 
guide](/manual/latest/camel-3x-upgrade-guide-3_6.html) if you
 are upgrading to this release from a previous Camel version.
 
 
 ## Release Notes
 
-You can find more information about this release in the [release 
notes](https://camel.apache.org/releases/release-3.6.0/),
+You can find more information about this release in the [release 
notes](/releases/release-3.6.0/),
 with a list of JIRA tickets resolved in the release.
diff --git a/content/blog/2020/10/VSCode-LanguageSupport-0.0.28/index.md 
b/content/blog/2020/10/VSCode-LanguageSupport-0.0.28/index.md
index a4c2871..4180239 100644
--- a/content/blog/2020/10/VSCode-LanguageSupport-0.0.28/index.md
+++ b/content/blog/2020/10/VSCode-LanguageSupport-0.0.28/index.md
@@ -10,11 +10,11 @@ A new release of [VS Code Language Support for Apache 
Camel](https://marketplace
 
 # Camel 3.6.0 upgrade
 
-Camel [3.6.0](https://camel.apache.org/blog/2020/10/Camel36-Whatsnew/) catalog 
is now provided by default. The 3.6.0 version is also leveraged internally.
+Camel [3.6.0](/blog/2020/10/Camel36-Whatsnew/) catalog is now provided by 
default. The 3.6.0 version is also leveraged internally.
 
 # Camel Kafka Connector Properties file improvements
 
-Previously, the support for [Camel Kafka 
Connector](https://camel.apache.org/camel-kafka-connector/latest/index.html) 
was limited to Camel URI in `camel.(sink|source).url` property value.
+Previously, the support for [Camel Kafka 
Connector](/camel-kafka-connector/latest/index.html) was limited to Camel URI 
in `camel.(sink|source).url` property value.
 This release adds support for the list of properties provided for each 
parameter instead of using a potentially long Camel URI. It relies on the new 
Camel Kafka Connector Catalog.
 
 #### Completion for `connector.class` property value
diff --git a/content/blog/2020/10/camel-k-release-1.2.0/index.md 
b/content/blog/2020/10/camel-k-release-1.2.0/index.md
index 1e4feaa..056d1f4 100644
--- a/content/blog/2020/10/camel-k-release-1.2.0/index.md
+++ b/content/blog/2020/10/camel-k-release-1.2.0/index.md
@@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ The power of Kamelets is that they hide the complexity of 
connecting to external
 
 Kamelets are also suitable to be used as generic connectors for building 
UI-based projects that leverage the power of Apache Camel, expanding the 
possibilities of Apache Camel into new areas.
 
-You can find more information about [Kamelets in the Camel K 
documentation](https://camel.apache.org/camel-k/latest/kamelets/kamelets.html).
+You can find more information about [Kamelets in the Camel K 
documentation](/camel-k/latest/kamelets/kamelets.html).
 
 ## What's Next?
 
diff --git 
a/content/blog/2020/10/camel-quarkus-release-1.2.0-and-1.3.0/index.md 
b/content/blog/2020/10/camel-quarkus-release-1.2.0-and-1.3.0/index.md
index 63760ae..6649769 100644
--- a/content/blog/2020/10/camel-quarkus-release-1.2.0-and-1.3.0/index.md
+++ b/content/blog/2020/10/camel-quarkus-release-1.2.0-and-1.3.0/index.md
@@ -20,61 +20,61 @@ and greatest Camel.
 ## What's new
 
 First of all, Camel 3.6.0 alone brings a lot of
-[improvements and 
optimizations](https://camel.apache.org/blog/2020/10/Camel36-Whatsnew/) that 
make Camel Quarkus
+[improvements and optimizations](/blog/2020/10/Camel36-Whatsnew/) that make 
Camel Quarkus
 even faster and more effective than before.
 
 ### New extensions and extensions newly supporting native mode
 
 There are 10 new extensions:
 
-* [AWS 
XRay](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/aws-xray.html)
 (JVM only)
-* 
[HBase](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/hbase.html)
 (JVM only)
-* 
[Headersmap](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/headersmap.html)
-* 
[Jasypt](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/jasypt.html)
 (JVM only)
-* 
[JCache](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/jcache.html)
 (JVM only)
-* 
[LevelDB](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/leveldb.html)
-* 
[LRA](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/lra.html)
 (JVM only)
-* 
[Ribbon](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/ribbon.html)
 (JVM only)
-* 
[Shiro](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/shiro.html)
 (JVM only)
-* 
[Spark](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/spark.html)
 (JVM only)
+* [AWS XRay](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/aws-xray.html) (JVM 
only)
+* [HBase](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/hbase.html) (JVM only)
+* [Headersmap](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/headersmap.html)
+* [Jasypt](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/jasypt.html) (JVM only)
+* [JCache](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/jcache.html) (JVM only)
+* [LevelDB](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/leveldb.html)
+* [LRA](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/lra.html) (JVM only)
+* [Ribbon](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/ribbon.html) (JVM only)
+* [Shiro](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/shiro.html) (JVM only)
+* [Spark](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/spark.html) (JVM only)
 
 And there are 16 promotions from JVM-only to native:
 
-* 
[Atom](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/atom.html)
-* 
[Browse](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/browse.html)
-* [Caffeine 
Cache](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/caffeine.html)
-* [Crypto 
(JCE)](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/crypto.html)
-* 
[Disruptor](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/disruptor.html)
-* 
[FOP](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/fop.html)
-* 
[Geocoder](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/geocoder.html)
-* 
[Jing](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/jing.html)
-* 
[NSQ](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/nsq.html)
-* [PostgresSQL 
Event](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/pgevent.html)
-* [PostgresSQL Replication 
Slot](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/pg-replication-slot.html)
-* 
[RSS](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/rss.html)
-* 
[SSH](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/ssh.html)
-* [String 
Template](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/stringtemplate.html)
-* [uniVocity 
CSV](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/univocity-parsers.html)
-* 
[Velocity](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/velocity.html)
-
-Check the full list of supported extensions in the [extensions 
reference](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/index.html).
+* [Atom](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/atom.html)
+* [Browse](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/browse.html)
+* [Caffeine Cache](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/caffeine.html)
+* [Crypto (JCE)](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/crypto.html)
+* [Disruptor](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/disruptor.html)
+* [FOP](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/fop.html)
+* [Geocoder](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/geocoder.html)
+* [Jing](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/jing.html)
+* [NSQ](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/nsq.html)
+* [PostgresSQL Event](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/pgevent.html)
+* [PostgresSQL Replication 
Slot](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/pg-replication-slot.html)
+* [RSS](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/rss.html)
+* [SSH](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/ssh.html)
+* [String 
Template](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/stringtemplate.html)
+* [uniVocity 
CSV](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/univocity-parsers.html)
+* [Velocity](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/extensions/velocity.html)
+
+Check the full list of supported extensions in the [extensions 
reference](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/index.html).
 
 With Camel Quarkus 1.3.0, we got very close to supporting all components 
required by
-[Camel K](https://camel.apache.org/camel-k/latest/index.html).
+[Camel K](/camel-k/latest/index.html).
 
 ### Documentation
 
 * Following [a request from a 
user](https://github.com/apache/camel-quarkus/issues/1781) Native since and JVM 
since
   versions are now kept in separate columns on our
-  [Extensions reference 
pages](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/index.html)
+  [Extensions reference pages](/camel-quarkus/latest/reference/index.html)
 * We have added a section about defining
-  [Camel routes in 
XML](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/user-guide/bootstrap.html)
+  [Camel routes in XML](/camel-quarkus/latest/user-guide/bootstrap.html)
 * We now have a [Change 
log](https://github.com/apache/camel-quarkus/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md) updated 
by the CI.
 
 ## What's next?
 
 We would like to promote
 [more 
extensions](https://github.com/apache/camel-quarkus/issues?q=is%3Aissue+is%3Aopen+label%3Anative)
 to native.
-Please upvote your favorites, or even better 
[contribute](https://camel.apache.org/camel-quarkus/latest/contributor-guide/index.html)!
+Please upvote your favorites, or even better 
[contribute](/camel-quarkus/latest/contributor-guide/index.html)!
 
 We hope Camel Quarkus 1.3.0 brings some tangible value to you and we look 
forward to your feedback and participation!
diff --git a/content/docs/building.md b/content/docs/building.md
index 1283703..83240fb 100644
--- a/content/docs/building.md
+++ b/content/docs/building.md
@@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ Camel uses [Maven](http://maven.apache.org/) as its build and 
management tool. I
   *  (Maven 3.1.1 or newer is required to build Camel 2.14 onwards)
   *  (Maven 3.2.5 or newer is required to build Camel 2.18 onwards)
   *  (Maven 3.3.3 or newer is required to build Camel 2.20 onwards)
-*  Get the latest [Source](https://camel.apache.org/source.html)
+*  Get the latest [Source](/download/)
 *  Java
   *  (1.7 or 1.8 to build Camel 2.14 onwards)
   *  (1.8 to build Camel 2.18 onwards)
diff --git a/static/schema/HEADER.html b/static/schema/HEADER.html
index b601b37..ad89c7e 100644
--- a/static/schema/HEADER.html
+++ b/static/schema/HEADER.html
@@ -1,10 +1,10 @@
 <html>
 <head>
-<meta name=viewport content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">   
+<meta name=viewport content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
 <title>Apache Camel XML Schemas</title></head>
 <body>
 <h1>Apache Camel XML Schemas</h1>
-<p>This site contains all the various versions of the XML Schema Documents for 
the <a href="http://camel.apache.org/";>Apache Camel project</a></p>
-<p>For details of how to use the XML Schema files, particularly with Spring, 
please see the <a 
href="https://camel.apache.org/manual/latest/spring.html";>Camel Spring 
support</a></p>
+<p>This site contains all the various versions of the XML Schema Documents for 
the <a href="/">Apache Camel project</a></p>
+<p>For details of how to use the XML Schema files, particularly with Spring, 
please see the <a href="/manual/latest/spring.html">Camel Spring support</a></p>
 </body>
 </html>
diff --git a/static/schema/spring/HEADER.html b/static/schema/spring/HEADER.html
index bafb059..ad89c7e 100644
--- a/static/schema/spring/HEADER.html
+++ b/static/schema/spring/HEADER.html
@@ -1,10 +1,10 @@
 <html>
 <head>
-<meta name=viewport content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1"> 
+<meta name=viewport content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
 <title>Apache Camel XML Schemas</title></head>
 <body>
 <h1>Apache Camel XML Schemas</h1>
-<p>This site contains all the various versions of the XML Schema Documents for 
the <a href="http://camel.apache.org/";>Apache Camel project</a></p>
-<p>For details of how to use the XML Schema files, particularly with Spring, 
please see the <a 
href="https://camel.apache.org/manual/latest/spring.html";>Camel Spring 
support</a></p>
+<p>This site contains all the various versions of the XML Schema Documents for 
the <a href="/">Apache Camel project</a></p>
+<p>For details of how to use the XML Schema files, particularly with Spring, 
please see the <a href="/manual/latest/spring.html">Camel Spring support</a></p>
 </body>
 </html>

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