reorganise, include preprocess in the right order

master
joey 2006-08-23 01:54:40 +00:00
parent 128cb30e7a
commit b7e28ae022
1 changed files with 34 additions and 36 deletions

View File

@ -26,43 +26,9 @@ hook, a "id" paramter, which should be a unique string for this plugin, and
a "call" parameter, which is a reference to a function to call for the
hook.
# Writing a [[PreProcessorDirective]]
# Types of hooks
This is probably the most common use of a plugin.
IkiWiki::hook(type => "preprocess", id => "foo", call => \&preprocess);
Replace "foo" with the command name that will be used inside brackers for
the preprocessor directive.
Each time the directive is processed, the referenced function (`preprocess`
in the example above) is called, and is passed named parameters. A "page"
parameter gives the name of the page that embedded the preprocessor
directive, while a "destpage" parameter gices the name of the page the
content is going to (different for inlined pages). All parameters included
in the directive are included as named parameters as well. Whatever the
function returns goes onto the page in place of the directive.
## Error handing
While a plugin can call ikiwiki's error routine for a fatal error, for
errors that aren't intended to halt the entire wiki build, including bad
parameters passed to a [[PreProcessorDirective]], etc, it's better to just
return the error message as the output of the plugin.
## Html issues
Note that if the [[htmlscrubber]] is enabled, html in
[[PreProcessorDirective]] output is sanitised, which may limit what your
plugin can do. Also, the rest of the page content is not in html format at
preprocessor time. Text output by a preprocessor directive will be passed
through markdown (or whatever engine is used to htmlize the page) along
with the rest of the page.
# Other types of hooks
Beyond PreProcessorDirectives, Other types of hooks that can be used by
plugins include:
In roughly the order they are called.
## getopt
@ -94,6 +60,31 @@ Runs on the raw source of a page, before anything else touches it, and can
make arbitrary changes. The function is passed named parameters `page` and
`content` and should return the filtered content.
## preprocess
Adding a [[PreProcessorDirective]] is probably the most common use of a
plugin.
IkiWiki::hook(type => "preprocess", id => "foo", call => \&preprocess);
Replace "foo" with the command name that will be used inside brackets for
the preprocessor directive.
Each time the directive is processed, the referenced function (`preprocess`
in the example above) is called, and is passed named parameters. A "page"
parameter gives the name of the page that embedded the preprocessor
directive, while a "destpage" parameter gices the name of the page the
content is going to (different for inlined pages). All parameters included
in the directive are included as named parameters as well. Whatever the
function returns goes onto the page in place of the directive.
Note that if the [[htmlscrubber]] is enabled, html in
[[PreProcessorDirective]] output is sanitised, which may limit what your
plugin can do. Also, the rest of the page content is not in html format at
preprocessor time. Text output by a preprocessor directive will be passed
through markdown (or whatever engine is used to htmlize the page) along
with the rest of the page.
## htmlize
IkiWiki::hook(type => "htmlize", id => "ext", call => \&htmlize);
@ -169,6 +160,13 @@ This hook is called wheneven ikiwiki normally saves its state, just before
the state is saved. The function can save other state, modify values before
they're saved, etc.
## Error handing
While a plugin can call ikiwiki's error routine for a fatal error, for
errors that aren't intended to halt the entire wiki build, including bad
parameters passed to a [[PreProcessorDirective]], etc, it's better to just
return the error message as the output of the plugin.
# Wiki configuration
A plugin can access the wiki's configuration via the `%IkiWiki::config`