I have followed this idea along, and it seems to work pretty well.
Now I have a question as a git newbie. Can I have the post-commit hook on the server use something like rsync to update the files on a third machine hosting the web server? The web server does not have git (cretins!). Of course I could just run a cron job.
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-- David Bremner
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+Or, was this last remark about rebuilding after pulling meant to apply to rebuilding after pushing as well?
+[[DavidBremner]]
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+* *Updated* Now that I play with this a bit, this seems not so important. Having a seperate sync operation that I run from the laptop is no big deal, and lets me update the parts of my site not yet managed by ikiwiki at the same time.
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+* Ok, I have finally finished to set this up. I have a question for you :) Is it mandatory to have a locally running webserver on the laptop ? I mean, do I need to setup the CGI wrapper on the laptop ? Is it possible to just add/edit/delete/whatever, git commit all the stuff and git push back to the server ? Thank you. --[[xma]]
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+> Of course you don't need a web server on the laptop. It is useful for
+> previewing pages before publishing them though. --[[Joey]]
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+I have followed this idea too, however after pushing to the server running gitk in the scrdir shows that the remotes/origin/master branch is newer than the master. Is this normal? Have I reset the master branch to remotes/origin/master then every time when someone pushed something (and run ikiwiki -setup afterwards?)
+[[Micheal]]