1 * Need to get post commit hook working (or an example of how to use it.)
3 * rcs_notify is not implemented (not needed in this branch --[[Joey]])
4 * Is the code sufficiently robust? It just warns when mercurial fails.
5 * When rcs_commit is called with a $user that is an openid, it will be
6 passed through to mercurial -u. Will mercurial choke on this?
7 * Nope. Mercurial doesn't expect any particular format for the username,
8 though "Name <address@domain>" is standard. --[[bma]]
9 * The way `-u $user` is passed to `hg commit`, there's no way to tell
10 if a given commit came in over the web or was done directly. So
11 rcs_recentchanges hardcodes 'committype => "mercurial"'. See the monotone
12 backend for an example of one that does this right.
13 * The rcs_commit implementation seems not to notice if the file has been
14 changed since a web edit started. Unlike all the other frontends, which
15 use the rcstoken to detect if the web commit started editing an earlier
16 version of the file, and if so, merge the two sets of changes together.
17 It seems that with the current mercurial commit code, it will always
18 blindly overwrite the current file with the web edited version, losing
21 Posthook: in `$srcdir/.hg/hgrc`, I have the following
24 incoming.update = hg up
25 update.ikiwiki = ikiwiki --setup /path/to/ikiwiki.setup --refresh
27 This should update the working directory and run ikiwiki every time a change is recorded (someone who knows mercurial better than I do may be able to suggest a better way, but this works for me.)
29 > Try running it with --post-commit instead of --refresh. That should
30 > work better, handling both the case where the edit was made via the web
31 > and then committed, and the case where a commit was made directly.
32 > It can deadlock if the post-commit hook runs with --refresh in the
33 > former case. --[[Joey]]
37 I have a few notes on mercurial usage after trying it out for a while:
39 1. I have been using ikiwiki's `--post-commit` option without apparent problems. I'm the only current user of my wiki, though.
41 1. The `ikiwiki.setup` file included in ikiwiki works with mercurial's `hgserve`, which is not the preferred solution. Mercurial's `hgwebdir.cgi` is more flexible and doesn't require running a server. I have this in my .setup file:
45 historyurl => "http://localhost/cgi-bin/hgwebdir.cgi/ikiwiki/log/tip/\[[file]]",
46 diffurl => "http://localhost/cgi-bin/hgwebdir.cgi/ikiwiki/diff/tip/\[[file]]",
48 1. I have noticed that running `ikiwiki` after a change to the wiki adds files to a directory called `recentchanges` under `$srcdir`. I don't understand why such files are needed; worse, they are not added to mercurial's list of tracked files, so they polute the output of `hg log`. Is this a bug? Should mercurial's commit hook be modified to add these files before the commit?
52 > No, those files should not be added to revision control. --[[Joey]]
54 >> OK. I see two problems:
56 >> 1. If I clone my wiki, I won't get an exact copy of it: I will lose the recentchanges history. This could be an acceptable limitation but IMO this should be documented.
58 >>> The history is stored in mercurial. How will it be lost?
60 >> 2. The output of `hg status` is polluted. This could be solved trivially by adding a line containing `recentchanges` to `.hgignore`. Another alternative would be to store the `recentchanges` directory inside `$srdcir/.ikiwiki`.
62 >> I think the ideal solution would be to build `$destdir/recentchanges/*` directly from the output of `hg log`. --[[buo]]
64 >>>> That would be 100 times as slow, so I chose not to do that. --[[Joey]]