# Known issues with the [[plugins/comments]] plugin ## Unimplemented * Instead of just a link to add a comment, it could have a form to enter the title, similar to the form for adding a new blog post. > I'm not sure this is so useful? On Livejournal titles are allowed on > comments, but very rarely used (and indeed usually not very useful); > it's hard enough to get some people to title their blog posts :-) > --[[smcv]] ## Won't fix * Because IkiWiki generates static HTML, we can't have a form inlined in page.tmpl where the user fills in an entire comment and can submit it in a single button-press, without being vulnerable to cross-site request forgery. So I'll put this in as wontfix. --[[smcv]] > Surely there's a way around that? > A web 2.0 way comes to mind: The user clicks on a link > to open the comment post form. While the nasty web 2.0 javascript :) > is manipulating the page to add the form to it, it looks at the cookie > and uses that to insert a sid field. > > Or, it could have a mandatory preview page and do the CSRF check then. > --[[Joey]] * It would be useful to have a pagespec that always matches all comments on pages matching a glob. Something like `comment(blog/*)`. Perhaps postcomment could also be folded into this? Then the pagespec would match both existing comments, as well as new comments that are being posted. > Please see [[plugins/comments/discussion]]. If I've convinced you that > internal pages are the way forward, then sure, we can do that, because > people who can comment still won't be able to edit others' comments > (one of my goals is that commenters can't put words into each other's > mouths :-) ) > > On the other hand, if you still want me to switch this plugin to "real" > pages, or if internal pages might become editable in future, then > configuring lockedit/anonok so a user X can add comments to blog pages > would also let X edit/delete comments on blog pages (including those > written by others) in arbitrary ways, which doesn't seem good. --[[smcv]] > I had a look at implementing comment() and fell afoul of > some optimisations that assume only internal() will be used to match > internal pages. So probably this isn't worth doing. --[[Joey]] ## Done * There is some common code cargo-culted from other plugins (notably inline and editpage) which should probably be shared > Actually, there's less of this now than there used to be - a lot of simple > things that were shared have become unshareable as they became more > complex. --[[smcv]] > There's still goto. You have a branch for that. --[[Joey]] >> Now merged --[[smcv]] * The default template should have a (?) icon next to unauthenticated users (with the IP address as title) and an OpenID icon next to OpenIDs > Done in my comments git branch, at least as a mockup (using the (?), > {x} and {*} smileys for anonymous, OpenID and login respectively). > --[[smcv]] >> I've improved this to use independent icons from the wikiicons >> directory (untested!) --[[smcv]] >>> The new code produces links like /wikiisons/openid.png, which >>> fail if ikiwiki is not at the root of the web server. --[[Joey]] >>>> Sorry, I should have spotted that (the assumption failed on my demo >>>> site, but the push to that site was when I was on the way out, so I >>>> didn't have time to investigate). As a note for other ikiwiki hackers, >>>> I should have used >>>> ``. --[[smcv]] >>> I got to wondering if the icons are needed. On my comments branch >>> (not master), I've dropped the icons and info can be seen by hovering >>> over the author's name. Idea being that you probably don't care how >>> they authenticated unless something is weird, and in that case you >>> can hover to check. Does that make sense, should I merge it? >>> --[[Joey]] >>>> Yeah, go ahead. I preferred my layout with the author before the >>>> comment - perhaps that's Livejournal's influence :-) - but I can always >>>> edit the templates for my own site. As long as the default is something >>>> reasonable and both layouts are possible, I don't really mind. >>>> Minimizing the number of "resource" files in the basewiki also seems >>>> a good goal. --[[smcv]] * Previews always say "unknown IP address" > Fixed in my comments branch by commits bc66a00b and 95b3bbbf --[[smcv]] * The Comments link in the "toolbar" is to `index.html#comments`, not the desired `./#comments` > Fixed in my comments branch by commit 0844bd0b; commits 5b1cf21a > and c42f174e fix another `beautify_urlpath` bug and add a regression test > --[[smcv]] * Now that inline has some comments-specific functionality anyway, it would be good to output `` in Atom and the equivalent in RSS. > Fixed in my comments branch by d0d598e4, 3feebe31, 9e5f504e --[[smcv]] * Add `COMMENTOPENID`: the authenticated/verified user name, if and only if it was an OpenID > Done in my comments git branch --[[smcv]] > Not seeing it there, which branch? --[[Joey]] >> Bah, git push --all is not the default... 'comments' branch now (I've also rebased it). >> Sorry, I'm on mobile Internet at the moment... --[[smcv]] >>> merged by [[Joey]] in commit 0f03af38 --[[smcv]] * Should the comments be visually set off more from the page above? Rather than just a horizontal rule, I'm thinking put the comments in a box like is used for inlined pages. > I did put them in a box in the CSS... I agree the default template > could do with visual improvement though. --[[smcv]] >> I'll consider this solved by [[Joey]]'s changes. --[[smcv]] * One can use inline to set up a feed of all comments posted to any page. Using template=comment they are displayed right. Only problem is there is no indication in that template of what page each comment in the feed is a comment on. So, if a comment is inlined into a different page, I think it should show a link back to the page commented on. (BTW, the rss feed in this situation seems ok; there the link element points back to the parent page. > done --[[Joey]] * One of Joey's commit messages says "Not ideal, it would be nicer to jump to the actual comment posted, but no anchor is available". In fact there is an anchor - the `\[[_comment]]` preprocessing wraps the comment in a `