Go to file
Martian 3642e56aad Added a comment: Using multiple setup files 2016-06-30 06:42:47 -04:00
Bundle
IkiWiki improve warning message for multiple sources for page 2016-05-31 15:29:09 -04:00
cpan
debian Wrapper: allocate new environment dynamically 2016-05-11 09:18:14 +01:00
doc Added a comment: Using multiple setup files 2016-06-30 06:42:47 -04:00
icons
plugins
po update 2016-06-23 16:39:36 -04:00
t Wrapper: allocate new environment dynamically 2016-05-11 09:18:14 +01:00
templates add missing </div> 2016-04-03 15:29:27 -04:00
themes
underlays
.gitattributes
.gitignore
.perlcriticrc
CHANGELOG
IkiWiki.pm HTML-escape error messages (OVE-20160505-0012) 2016-05-05 23:43:17 +01:00
Makefile.PL
NEWS
README
auto-blog.setup
auto.setup
docwiki.setup Exclude users/* from the HTML documentation 2016-05-06 07:53:53 +01:00
gitremotes
ikiwiki-calendar.in
ikiwiki-comment.in Indent. 2016-02-24 17:46:11 -05:00
ikiwiki-makerepo
ikiwiki-mass-rebuild
ikiwiki-transition.in
ikiwiki-update-wikilist
ikiwiki-w3m.cgi
ikiwiki.in
ikiwiki.spec update 2016-06-23 16:39:36 -04:00
mdwn2man
pm_filter
wikilist

README

Use ./Makefile.PL to generate a Makefile, "make" will build the
documentation wiki and a man page, and "make install" will install ikiwiki.

All other documentation is in the ikiwiki documentation wiki, which is also
available online at <http://ikiwiki.info/>


A few special variables you can set while using the Makefile.PL:

  PROFILE=1 turns on profiling for the build of the doc wiki.
  (Uses Devel::NYTProf)

  NOTAINT=0 turns on the taint flag in the ikiwiki program. (Not recommended
  unless your perl is less buggy than mine -- see
  http://bugs.debian.org/411786)

  MAKE, FIND, and SED can be used to specify where you have the GNU
  versions of those tools installed, if the normal make, find, and sed
  are not GNU.

  There are also other variables supported by MakeMaker, including PREFIX,
  INSTALL_BASE, and DESTDIR. See ExtUtils::MakeMaker(3).

  In particular, INSTALL_BASE is very useful if you want to install ikiwiki
  to some other location, as it configures it to see the perl libraries
  there. See `doc/tips/nearlyfreespeech.mdwn` for an example of using this to
  install ikiwiki and its dependencies in a home directory.