can be used to avoid a security check that is a good safe default, but
problimatic overkill in some situations.
I decided to underdocument this, because the option looks ugly, and I don't
want people randomly turning it on because it looks like a good idea. So if
you need it, you'll get an error message mentioning how to fix it.
I think this used to be a fatal error, not just inline error, so I don't
know why it was never noticed, but if a page that an img directive mentions
gets deleted, bestlink() returns a file that no longer exists, and
srcfile() throws an error.
Note that bestlink's behavior of returning a deleted file could be
considered buggy. But, if it's changed to not do that, the page with the img
on it is not updated at all when the file is removed.
This is overkill for delete, since it's only used on Cancel. But it will be
crucial for rename, so as to restore any pending edits after renaming a
page.
The trailer line was a bit complex and ugly;
I think it's better to just put "(web)" after the user
name.
This has a side effect of making web commits with no messages
have a completly empty commit message. Use --cleanup=verbatim
to force git to accept such.
The committer's email address is not used (because leaking email addresses
is not liked by many users). Closes: #451023
A "Web-commit" trailer is added, to allow telling the difference between
web commits and direct commits.
What was really going on is that expanding a smiley modified the string and
reset the match process. Force set pos so it continues on from the expanded
smiley.
Smileys need to be double-escaped to work, since the smiley plugin runs as
a sanitize hook, and markdown helpfully removes one level of escapes first.
There were some bugs in the smiley handling code that made escaped smileys
still be expanded. After unescaping a smiley, it needed to move pos forward
past it or the next pass would expand it.
Also, once the m//g got to the end, it seemed to loop back through and make
one more pass (a difference in perl 5.10's regexp exngine? I observed that
pos was undefined when this happened, so added a `last unless defined pos`.
* Renamed to parentlinks every single variable or function called
pedigree
* Removed the parentlinks function from Render.pm
* Enabled the new parentlinks plugin by default
* Adapted testsuite and documentation to reflate the above facts
Signed-off-by: intrigeri <intrigeri@boum.org>
Usage:
1. Update all pagespecs that use aggregated pages to use internal()
2. ikiwiki-transition aggregateinternal $srcdir $htmlext
(where $srcdir and $htmlext are the srcdir and htmlext options in
your .setup file)
3. Add aggregateinternal to your .setup file
4. Rebuild the wiki
... at least when it's not used in the same template as
PEDIGREE_BUT_TWO_OLDEST (see Known bugs section in pedigree.mdwn for
details)
Signed-off-by: intrigeri <intrigeri@boum.org>
... after having learned a bit of Perl, knocked my head against
Perl references and arrays of hashes, tried to use some nice
functionnal programming constructs - no success - to make things
more generic... I'm back to the roots, with this simple code :)
Signed-off-by: intrigeri <intrigeri@boum.org>
If hardlinks are enabled, it would hardlink files from the underlay. That
was sorta annoying if you tried to edit by hand for some reason, so let's
not. Files that are hardlinked should be rare enough that a few extra stats
won't hurt.
This addresses <http://ikiwiki.info/todo/aggregate_to_internal_pages/>
in a simple way. With this approach, a flag day is required, on which all
users of aggregated pages start to inline them using the internal() pagespec;
after that, the aggregateinternal option can safely be switched on in the
setup file (and the old aggregated pages can be deleted by hand).
This ensures that the same link is reached as is used on pages,
so browsers will know that the link on pages has been visited, and color it
appropriately.
The constructor can fail with a useless error message if module fail to
load. Work around this by evaling it, and checking for failures, and
printing CGI::Session->errstr to get a more useful message.
This is truely horribly disgusting. CGI::tmpFileName, in current perls, is
an undocumented function (which should be a clue..) that takes the original
filename of an uploaded attachment, and returns the name of the tempfile
that CGI has stored it in.
In old perls, though, CGI::tmpFileName does not take a filename. It takes
a key from the object's {'.tmpfiles'} hash. This key is something
crazy like '*Fh::fh00001group' -- apparently the stringification of a
filehandle object.
Just to add to the fun, tmpFileName doesn't take the key, it expects a
refernce to the key. Argh?!
But the fun doesn't stop there, because in perl 5.8, CGI.pm is also broken
in two other ways. The upload() method is supposed to return a filehandle
to the temp file. It doesn't. The param() method is supposed to return
a filehandle to the temp file, that stringifies to the original filename.
It returns just the original filename, no filehandle.
Combine all these bugs, and you end up with this disgusting commit. Since
I have no way to get the filehandle, I *need* to get the tempfile name.
If I had the filehandle, I could probably pass it into tmpFileName, and
it might strigify to the right key name. But I don't, so the only way to
determine the key is to grub through the .tmpfiles hash ourselves.
And finally, one the temp file name is discovered, a filehandle can finally
be obtained by (re)opening it.
I recommend that this commit be reverted when perl 5.8 is a mercifully
faded memory.
I'm really, really, really glad I'm actually being paid for working on
this right now!
* The editpage form now uses the raw page name, not the page title, in its
'page' cgi parameter. Using the title was ambiguous and made it
impossible to tell between some pages, like "foo/bar" and "foo__47__bar",
sometimes causing the wrong page to be edited.
* This change means that some edit links need to be updated.
Force a rebuild on upgrade to this version.
* Above change also allowed really fixing escaped slashes from the blogpost
form.
Currently includes UI, and a few tests of the attachment, as well as the
framework to extend pagespecs to test attachments. Does not actually save
the file yet.
* toc: Revert change in 2.45 that made it run at sanitize time. This breaks
use of toc in a sidebar.
* Call format hooks when generating page previews, thus fixing toc display
there, as well as fixing inlins to again display in page previews, since
it's started using format hooks. This also allows several other things,
like embed, that use format hooks, to work during page preview time.
* Format hooks should not rely on getting an entire html document, as they
will only get the body during page preview.
* toggle: Deal with preview mode when adding javascript.
This change needs libtext-wikicreole-perl (>= 0.05-2).
Also removing custom link function, there's no need for it -
if it is not defined, the unmodified markup will be returned.
Can't sort by titles; the tree building logic requires that the list be
sorted by page name.
Setting linktext => $page is not the same as omitting it entirely. So some
contortions to only set linktext when the page name is not being shown.
This occurred when a plugin, loaded earlier, filled out a template in its
checkconfig, before recentchanges's checkconfig had run. Since such a
template won't be a recentchanges template, just test for the value being
uninitialized and skip processing.
Using the title obscured path info, and made search results look
inconsistent. Since nothing else uses the title like that, it didn't make
sense for search to.
Because the search plugin needed it, also because it's one of the few
plugins that didn't already have it.
I also considered adding it to htmlize, but I really cannot imagine caring
what the destpage is when htmlizing. (I'll probably be poven wrong later.)
Something has changed in CGI.pm in perl 5.10. It used to not care
if STDIN was opened using :utf8, but now it'll mis-encode utf-8 values
when used that way by ikiwiki. Now I have to binmode(STDIN) before
instantiating the CGI object.
In 57bba4dac1, I changed from decoding
CGI::Formbuilder fields to utf-8, to decoding cgi parameters before setting
up the form object. As of perl 5.10, that approach no longer has any effect
(reason unknown). To get correctly encoded values in FormBuilder forms,
they must once again be decoded after the form is set up.
As noted in 57bba4da, this can cause one set of problems for
formbuilder_setup hooks if decode_form_utf8 is called before the hooks, and
a different set if it's called after. To avoid both sets of problems, call
it both before and after. (Only remaining problem is the sheer ugliness and
inefficiency of that..)
I think that these changes will also work with older perl versions, but I
haven't checked.
Also, in the case of the poll plugin, the cgi parameter needs to be
explcitly decoded before it is used to handle utf-8 values. (This may have
always been broken, not sure if it's related to perl 5.10 or not.)