The old name still works, if its value is numeric.
This name allows a non-numeric "show" to mean the same thing
it does for [[!map]] (show title, show description, etc.).
there is now a size calculating part (which chooses a final size) and a
scaling part (which triggers if the sizes calculated by the former
indicate a downscaling).
this solves the issue of unproportional upscalings
(bugs/image_rescaling_distorts_with_small_pictures).
also, "small" pdf files (or pdf files without explicit size settings),
which would not be converted under the old mechanism, now get rendered
to pngs.
this commit affects a unit test: while svgs were previously
unconditionally rendered to pngs, this now only happens on downscaling.
this is intentional -- while a small version of an svg graphic is
likely to be more compact when rendered (eg as a preview), a large
version would not have that benefit, and why convert something that
browsers basically can show and be inconsistend with how other images
are handled. the new unit test simply makes the original svg larger to
check for the same behaviros as before.
If someone has explicitly disabled the postform, it seems reasonable
from a least-astonishment point of view for that to take precedence
over rootpage, even though that makes rootpage useless.
Also add a regression test; so far, this is all it tests.
After this change autoindex creates index pages also for empty directories
included in underlays, but only if it isn't going to commit them to the
srcdir ($config{autoindex_commit} = 0).
Inspired by a patch from Tuomas Jormola.
Bug-Debian: http://bugs.debian.org/611068
My change did cause this state to be retained. I hope this is not a
problem.
Afaik, plugins test if they were disabled before by looking at the toplevel
plugin state, not the per-page plugin state. So the only remaining problem
might be
a) A plugin is disabled but its state keeps being saved. Which is not
ideal, perhaps, but the large speedup of my optimisation seems worth it.
b) A plugin might have been enabled, be disabled, and get re-enabled, and
see old state from before. I don't see how this would be different from
the plugin seeing any other old state, though, so hopefully no breakage.
My optmisation looks a little more risky, but I still hope I can keep it.
Simple podcast feeds didn't have content tags and I made sure to
keep it that way. This may be unnecessarily conservative. Changing
the behavior to include empty content tags might be fine, but I
don't want to think about it right now, I just want my tests to
keep passing!
The new fancy-podcast tests are copy-pasted-edited from the
simple-podcast tests. These tests shall be refactored.
In test, set up the post-commit hook for more realism (and bugs!).
To make wrappers work in test, set PERL5LIB, and allow the wrappee's
path to be overridden. Meta-test that post-commit is really hooked
up by verifying that content is getting generated in destdir.
About the longstanding bug, which as far as I know was harmless:
CVS can't operate outside a srcdir, so we're always setting $CWD.
"local $CWD" restores the previous value when we go out of scope.
Usually that's correct. But if we're removing the last file from a
directory, the post-commit hook will exec in a working directory
that's about to not exist (CVS will prune it).
The fix: chdir() manually in cvs_runcvs(), so we can selectively
not chdir() back.
If the title of a trail changes, each member of that trail must be
rebuilt, for its prev/up/next box to reflect the new title.
If the title of a member changes, its next and previous items (if any)
must be rebuilt, for their prev/up/next boxes to reflect the new title.
Previously, prune("wiki/srcdir/sandbox/test.mdwn") could delete srcdir
or even wiki, if they happened to be empty. This is rarely what you
want: there's usually some base directory (destdir, srcdir, transientdir
or another subdirectory of wikistatedir) beyond which you do not want to
delete.
This ensures that when we do the second phase of the test (edit some
files and refresh), the changes get a different mtime and are picked up,
even if the entire test happened between two 1-second "clock ticks".
* Test that adding a text file under a name formerly tracked as
binary (and vice versa) gets the right keyword-substitution
behavior.
* Explicitly set -kkv for text files to make the tests pass.
* CVS warns in these cases about "changing keyword expansion mode",
but this is correct behavior, so filter it from stderr. Filter
stdout the same way in case we ever want to keep any of it.
* In rcs_add(), replace comments with obviousness.
a bunch more tests (that wind up exercising rcs_commit(),
rcs_commit_staged(), and rcs_recentchanges()). Extract some support
routines for brevity. Most is_in_keyword_substitution_mode() tests
are commented out because there's a bug -- non-binary files are
being added with "cvs add -kb".
Move tests that inspect recentchanges after direct CVS operations
into test_rcs_recentchanges().
In the code:
* general plugin API calls (in plugins/write order),
* VCS plugin API calls (in plugins/write order), then
* internal support routines (in alphabetical order).
In the tests:
* general meta-behavior (in no particular order, yet),
* general plugin API calls (in plugins/write order),
* VCS plugin API calls (in plugins/write order), then
* internal support routines (in semi-logical order).
* Add setup and teardown methods, called before and after every test sub.
* In setup, make a fresh repo; in teardown, throw it out.
* Extract runtests method and define default test methods at top.
* Move reflection routines near the xUnit-style subs they support.
Adapt existing test subs to run independently:
* In test_manual_add_and_commit(), assume a fresh repo.
While here, plan a bit better:
* Check for all modules used by cvs.pm.
* Check for program existence more generally.
* Check that we can rmdir after mkdir.
* Run all subs matching /^test_*/ (for which we can plan)...
* Unless TEST_METHOD is set, in which case run matching subs (sans plan).
* Define total number of tests very near 'use Test::More', where expected.
* Define test tempdir where it's declared, no longer any reason why not.
* Move most comments from TODO.cvs into t/cvs.t.
* Add a whole bunch more comments describing the needed test cases.
XXX existing tests are order-dependent, but currently happen to pass
* Call readfile() directly from writefile().
* Parameterize commit message for the web-commit case.
* Describe intent of test cases.
* Rename test subs to match what they actually do.
* To prove extra path slashes don't cause trouble, instead of running
the same tests a second time, just assert that checkconfig()
strips the slashes.