Hi, I've rebuilt two sites now, and anything that requires a working directory structure isn't working properly. I have no idea how it's doing this. I don't see anything in my templates, and I haven't messed around with the back-end code much. An example would show this best I think.
/ <- root of site /About/ <- sub-directory /Policy/ <- sub-sub-When you're on /About/, any generated links get mapped to /Policy/ and NOT /About/Policy/ - of course this results in a 404 error. I used to be able to use relative links or absolute ones to get the links I want, and now I can't do either. The generated link results in a 404 due to the stripping of a directory. I don't know if it's related to the fact that I have one ikiwiki install under another (/blog/ under / is also ikiwiki), but both are FUBAR. > what do you mean by generated links: do you mean the output of > [[ikiwiki/wikilink]]s? Or are you generating links some other way? > When you say "on /About/, any generated links get mapped to > /Policy/ and NOT /About/Policy" can you provide an example of what > source generates the link? -- [[Jon]] >> No, a \[[map]] call, such as: >> >> (actual code)
<div class="map"> <ul> <li><a class="mapitem" href="./Policy/">Policy</a> <ul> <li><a class="mapitem" href="./Policy/Microblog/">Microblogging subscription policy</a> </li> </ul> </li> </ul> </div>> I'm also confused about what is generating the links. The map directive? > You? --[[Joey]] >> see above :) >> I suspect this is due to git scanning everything under the pwd of the .git/ directory, but not totally so. >>> Ikiwiki never, ever, looks in directories with names starting with a >>> dot. --[[Joey]] >> Other ikiwiki sites I have don't do this, and work OK, on the same server, but different docroots. >>> Well, I've moved my blog to under my site's docroot - in terms of git >>> and ikiwiki - and it's still cutting out a whole directory level. I >>> have no idea what's going on. I need to check the code. The site is at >>> http://simonraven.kisikew.org/ - if you follow the "About" link, you'll >>> understand exactly what's going on, if you look at the URL in your >>> status bar (or under your cursor if you're using a text browser). >>>> Your page contains the following in its html: >>>> `