36 lines
1.7 KiB
Markdown
36 lines
1.7 KiB
Markdown
Basically, what I need is a two-sided wiki:
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* one side would be the published version, with the ikiwiki CGI disabled;
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* another would be the developement version, which would be editable online.
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These two sides would correspond to branches in the repository.
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Each time someone makes a change to the developement version,
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the created revision number would be added to a list of changes to be reviewed,
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maybe by a pre/post-commit hook. This would be done only if a published version of
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the page exists, and could be requested when a new page needs to be published.
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Some kind of priviledged user could then move the change around,
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from the "review needed" queue to the "accepted" or "rejected" ones.
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This would be done in a way that would trigger the appropriate VCS merge operations.
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A generic "change queue" mechanism could be used for translations or other stuff as well.
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Each change would have its own wiki page under changes/revNNNN.
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Change queues would be wiki pages as well (probably using [[inlines|plugins/inline]]);
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[[Pagespecs|Pagespec]] and [[tags]] would be used to control the queues to which a given change would belong.
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--[[JeremieKoenig]]
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> You can achieve something like this right now, by using Git. The
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> development and published versions each have their own repository, with
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> remotes set up so they push either to two backend repositories or to two
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> different branches of the same backend repository. You can then merge from
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> one to the other whenever you want.
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>
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> You could theoretically do this with SVN as well.
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>
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> I do like the idea you suggest of reviewing and merging changes through the
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> web interface, though.
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>
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> -- [[JoshTriplett]]
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[[tag wishlist]]
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