This makes uploading a lot of attachments somewhat faster, because
the user does not need to wait for a long website refresh after each
upload. Still probably somewhat slow, since ikiwiki has to run for each
upload.
More importantly, this opens the door for integration of things like
the jquery file upload interface, which allow drag-n-drop and multiple
file uploads to be queued and then ran.
It uses rcs_commit_staged, which leaves out tla and mercurual which lack
that, but since rename, remove, autoindex, etc also use that, I think it's
fine for attachments to also depend on it.
The attachment list is currently broken; it does not look in the holding
area yet, and its links to the attached files won't work since they're not
yet in the wiki. previewing is also currently broken.
Work sponsored by TOVA.
Two problems fixed:
1. Files are written with a .ikiwiki-new suffix, which has to be taken into
account.
2. Need to count length of bytes, not of unicode characters.
Arguably, the real bug is in the interface to add_autofile, but since
that does take a filename, not a page name, it cannot really do case
handling on its own. The only other users of add_autofile in ikiwiki proper
is autoindex, and it always uses one case. Other third party plugins might
also need to add similar workarounds though.
There is a tension between looking up the avatar at post time
and build time. I have not yet decided which is better.
Lookup at build time has the benefit that if a user changes their
email address, or sets up their own federated libravatar
server, on rebuild their new avatar will show up.
It also allows getting a https version of the avatar easily if
the site was using http but was changed to use https.
And it can look up avatars for posts that have already been made.
Which is a nice thing, especially as we roll this out, eh?
But it has a drawback, that it depends on the sessiondb contents
for emails and so rebuilding a site w/o that will lose info.
And, it means dns lookups every time a comment is rendered. A page
with a lot of comments on it would render them all whenever another is
posted or the page is changed, and that could significantly slow things
down. (This could be amelorated by caching the lookups.)
Since I'm undecided, I have moved it into a function that could be called
either way. Currently looking up only at post time.
Don't fail if libravatar fails for some reason. Reasons I can think
of:
* too old version to do openid lookups (fall back to email lookup)
* network problem perhaps
Oddly, this hadn't caused any visible breakage. Possibly inline,
which is the only thing to use targetpage, resolves the function
to the "real" one before po gets loaded?
If the inline plugin is not being loaded, or is perhaps loaded after po
(when IkiWiki::Setup::getsetup loads all the plugins, for example),
po should not inject its custom rootpage sub, as that will lead to a
redefinition error message when inline loads.
Since the plugin abuses the checkconfig hook to launch aggregation when in
--aggregate mode, it should give other plugins that have checkconfig hooks
a chance to run before they are possibly used in rendering the aggregated
content.
This allows per-form/feedlink group customization without having to
resort to counting.
(cherry picked from commit b134feb0dc2d9a8ff7ae447537fa8bc02811aabd)
With the previous logic, same-level items would go down one level and
then again up one level closing and re-opening UL tags each time. The
resulting redundant lists caused whitespace layout issues in the
rendered pages.
Adjust the "moving up?" logic to check if the current item base is
different from the previous item _base_. Adjust the "going down?" logic
by moving it to an earlier phase and checking for (1) parent item not being
what it should be and (2) remaining bits; the root is grown unconditionally as
long as (2) is verified.
Problem was this: websetup loads all plugins, but does not checkconfig
them. So, htmltidy's recently added configurable command setting was unset;
this resulted in its sanitize hook failing; the sanitize hook is called
when a sidebar was enabled, and this caused the sidebar to not display.
I put in a fix, but the underlying problem is that websetup loads all
plugins but leaves them in an unconfigured and possibly broken state while
trying to display its forms.
Probably the long-term fix is to have it cache the original hook states from
before loading the plugins, and restore it after getting their configuration.
Or, even to get the configuration using a subprocess, as plugins may do things
outside the hook system.
- Migrate the set of deletions to the {autofile} set, since it has
more or less the same effect. This affects the "deleted" case in the
test.
- If a page has just been deleted, add it as an autofile anyway: by
the time gen_autofile is called, it'll be in the list of deleted files,
so it'll just be added to {autofile}. This affects the "gone" case
in the test.
- Behaviour change: we don't forget that a page with no reason to be
re-created was deleted. This affects the 'expunged' and 'reinstated'
cases in the test.
This does cause a minor regression: index pages are now committed
individually rather than being a single commit per rebuild.
This also means the autoindex regression test needs to trigger the
autofile generation pass.
The default templates are also updated to make use of this information.
The rel="alternate" attribute is also inserted, for completeness.
(cherry picked from commit 618ade535e6a7967a510d9e210edaef3d37cc9bc)
cgitemplate is a modified misctemplate that takes an optional cgi object
and uses it to set the baseurl, and also optionally the forcebaseurl,
if a page is provided.
If no cgi object is provided, it will fall back to using $config{url}.
I expect this will only be needed in exceptional cases where
that doesn't much matter, such as cgierror().
showform uses cgitemplate, so there is no more need for showform_preview.
This way, do=goto will go to the page relative to
the current location, while the permalinks in feeds
will be absolute (unless an url is not configured at all).