1 ## A few bits about the RCS backends
5 ``web-edit'' means that a page is edited by using the web (CGI) interface
6 as opposed to using a editor and the RCS interface.
11 Subversion was the first RCS to be supported by ikiwiki.
13 #### How does it work internally?
17 RCS commits from the outside are installed into M.
19 There is a working copy of M (a checkout of M): W.
21 HTML is generated from W. rcs_update() will update from M to W.
23 CGI operates on W. rcs_commit() will commit from W to M.
25 You browse and web-edit the wiki on W.
28 ### [darcs](http://darcs.net/) (not yet included)
30 Support for using darcs as a backend is being worked on by [Thomas
31 Schwinge](mailto:tschwinge@gnu.org).
33 #### How will it work internally?
35 ``Master'' repository R1.
37 RCS commits from the outside are installed into R1.
39 HTML is generated from R1. HTML is automatically generated (by using a
40 ``post-hook'') each time a new change is installed into R1. It follows
41 that rcs_update() is not needed.
43 There is a working copy of R1: R2.
45 CGI operates on R2. rcs_commit() will push from R2 to R1.
47 You browse the wiki on R1 and web-edit it on R2. This means for example
48 that R2 needs to be updated from R1 if you are going the web-edit a page,
49 as the user otherwise might be irritated otherwise...
51 How do changes get from R1 to R2? Currently only internally in
52 rcs_commit(). Is rcs_prepedit() suitable?
54 It follows that the HTML rendering and the CGI handling can be completely
55 separated parts in ikiwiki.
57 What repository should [[RecentChanges]] and [[History]] work on? R1?
59 ##### Rationale for doing it differently than in the Subversion case
61 darcs is a distributed RCS, which means that every checkout of a
62 repository is equal to the repository it was checked-out from. There is
65 R1 is the nevertheless called the master repository. It's used for
66 collecting all the changes and publishing them: on the one hand via the
67 rendered HTML and on the other via the standard darcs RCS interface.
69 R2, the repository where CGI operates on, is just a checkout of R1 and
70 doesn't really differ from the other checkouts that people will branch