Loading and use of IkiWiki::Receive can all be pushed into the git plugin,
rather than scattered around.
I had at first wanted to make a receive plugin and move it there,
but a plugin was not a good fit; you don't want users to have to manually
load it, and making the git plugin load the receive plugin at the right
times would need more, and ugly code.
The syslog value from the setup file is purposfully ignored when doing
ikiwiki -setup, so that it will output to stdout (while generating wrappers
that do use the syslog). But that caused -dumpsetup to not preserve
the syslog value from the setup file.
This speeds up web commits by 1/4th of a second or so, since perl does
not have to start up for the post commit hook.
perl's locking is completly FuBar, since it's impossible to tell what perl
flock() really does, and thus difficult to write code in other languages
that interoperates with perl's locking. (Let alone interoperating with
existing fcntl locking from perl...)
In this particular case, I think I was able to find a way to avoid the
insanity, mostly. The C code does a true flock(2), and if perl is using an
incompatable lock method that does not use the same locking primative at
the kernel level, then the C code's test will fail, and it will go ahead
and run the perl code. Then the perl code's test will test the right thing.
On Debian, at least lately, perl's flock() does a true flock(2), so the
optimisation does work.
Setup output is once again output to stdout in this case.
Implemented by stashing the verbose/syslog values set in the setup file,
and using those values in the generated wrappers, but not allowing them to take
effect during the setup operation itself, so that command-line options,
appearing before or after -setup, are honored.
Also, some cleanups to how %config is generated for wrappers, removing some
fields that do not need to be recorded inside the wrapper.
on and supported creating it (especially Tumov). This adds a "usedirs"
option that makes ikiwiki use foo/index.html instead of foo.html as
output page names. It is not yet enabled by default.
and RCS server (or a push mirror). With this the RCS server can have a
real post-commit hook that sshs back to the web server, and runs ikiwiki
in post-commit mode to update the wiki.
commit hook, it was possible for one CGI to race another one and "win"
the commit of both their files. This race has been fixed by adding a new
commitlock, which when locked by the CGI, disables the commit hook
(except for commit mails). The CGI then takes care of the updates the
commit hook would have done.