I am using ikiwiki 2.6.1.

I can't figure out the locked pages.

As an admin in preferences, I put in my Locked Pages:

index and downloads

I don't want anyone to be able to edit the front page or my downloads page.

That didn't work. I am using a different web browser as a different non-ikiwiki-admin user.

So I changed it to

/index and /downloads

That stopped me from editing the front page. It didn't say it was locked just repeatedly gave me the ikiwiki login. (How can I get it to tell me it is locked instead?)

I also tried

/index and /downloads/index

But I could still edit my downloads page.

Can someone share some hints on how to lock these two pages?

My source pages for the lock are:

source/downloads.mdwn
source/index.mdwn

My webpages to lock are:

public\_html/downloads/index.html
public\_html/index.html

> So I tried again with using "or" instead of "and":
>
> index or downloads
>
> And that worked. I now get a message saying it is locked and cannot be edited.
> To me saying "lock both 'index and downloads'" made sense while now it reads like: "lock either 'index or downloads'". Maybe the [[PageSpec]] should define "and" and "or" (beyond the examples it has).
>
> Also why did my "/index and /downloads" prevent editing the index by repeatedly showing login webpage?
>
> -JeremyReed

>> I've clarified and/or in [[PageSpec]].
>> 
>> I can't reproduce "/index and /downloads" causing the login webpage to
>> be shown repeatedly. Sure you weren't having some independent issue with
>> logging in? --[[Joey]]

----

I have a page for a tag.  On that page I want to list every page on my wiki that has been so tagged.  Easy enough, right?

> \[[!inline pages="link(Categories/Ikiwiki_Plugins)" feeds=no archive=yes sort=title template=titlepage]]

> (I'm using tagbase => "Categories" because I'm converting from Mediawiki) 

This works beautifully in my sandbox: <http://iki.u32.net/sandbox>  But it is totally blank on the page where I actually do want output!  <http://iki.u32.net/Categories/Ikiwiki_Plugins>

How can I fix this?  --[[sabr]]

> I don't see why that wouldn't work. Can I download the source to your
> wiki from somewhere to investigate? --[[Joey]]

----

Should negation work with user(), with locked_pages in setup?  I
experimented with setting locked_pages => 'user(someuser)' and was able to
edit as a different user.  However, setting locked_pages =>
'!user(someuser)' doesn't seem to allow edits for only 'someuser' - it
locks out all users.

> Negation works with anything in any PageSpec. I tested the case you
> describe, and a negated pagespec worked for me; all users except the
> listed user (and except wiki admins of course) were locked out.
> --[[Joey]] 

>> It must be a local problem, then, cause I've tried it with two separate 
>> machines.  Both are running the most recent release of ikiwiki in 
>> pkgsrc - 2.66.  Perhaps an update to a newer version would solve the issue.

----

Is there a way to refer to all subpages of the current page, if  the name of the 
current page is not known (i.e. the pagespec is used in a template)? The ./ syntax
does not seem suitable for this, as

> \[[!map pages="./*"]]

also lists the current page and all its siblings.

---

I am a little lost. I want to match the start page `/index.mdwn`. So I use

    \[[!inline pages="/index"]]

which does not work though. I also tried it in this Wiki. Just take a look at the end of the [[SandBox|sandbox]]. --[[PaulePanter]]

> Unlike wikilinks, pagespecs match relative to the top of the wiki by
> default. So lose the "/" and it will work. --[[Joey]]


----

I'd like to create a collapsable tree with a map, eg

* top level item

* * second level item1

* * * content 1

* * * content 2

* * * content 3

* * second level item2

* * second level item3


but I can't work out how to specify "all items at this level, and all directories at ../ and all the other directories to the root

any ideas?

> I don't think pagespecs currently support that. How would such a made-up
> pagespec look? I can imagine it supporting something like `glob(../*) and not
> glob(../*/*)` to match all "directories" of the parent page, and so on up
> to the root. --[[Joey]] 

>> I don't know, perhaps some way of nesting pagespecs 
>>> glob(../* unless $_ eq 'second level item'{ glob 'second level item'/*}) 

>> but that could get messy, perhaps a new cmd 'pagetree' or something 
>> might be better? --Colin

>>> You could probably do a lot worse than stealing terminology from 
>>> [XPath Axes](http://www.w3.org/TR/xpath/#axes),
>>> passing the "argument" through `bestlink` if there is one, and
>>> treating an empty argument as "this page", something like:
>>>
>>> * `ancestor(/plugins/contrib/album)` matches `plugins` or
>>>   `plugins/contrib`
>>>   but not `plugins/map` or `plugins/contrib/album`
>>>   (does it match `index`? answers on a postcard)
>>> * `descendant(/plugins)` is basically `plugins/*`
>>> * `child(/plugins)` is basically `plugins/* and !plugins/*/*`
>>> * `self(/plugins)` is just `plugins` but without interpreting
>>>   globs
>>> * `ancestor-or-self(/plugins)`, `descendant-or-self(/plugins)`
>>>   are syntactic sugar for e.g. `ancestor(/plugins) or self(/plugins)`
>>> * `self()` always matches the current page (not destpage)
>>> * `ancestor-or-self()` always matches the current pages and all
>>>   pages that would go in its [[plugins/parentlinks]]
>>>
>>> XPath has `following-sibling` and `preceding-sibling` axes for
>>> siblings, but pagespecs are unordered, so we'd probably want
>>> to invent `sibling()` - so `sibling(/plugins/map)` matches
>>> `plugins/inline` but not `plugins/map` or `plugins/contrib/album`.
>>>
>>> Then, the requested functionality would be `sibling() or ancestor()`,
>>> or possibly `sibling() or ancestor() or self()`?
>>> --[[smcv]]

>>>> I like that idea! --[[KathrynAndersen]]