hook.
An optional "last" parameter, if set to a true value, makes the hook run
-after all other hooks of its type. Useful if the hook depends on some other
-hook being run first.
+after all other hooks of its type, and an optional "first" parameter makes
+it run first. Useful if the hook depends on some other hook being run first.
## Types of hooks
the state is saved. The function can save other state, modify values before
they're saved, etc.
-### renamepage
+### renamelink
- hook(type => "renamepage", id => "foo", call => \&renamepage);
+ hook(type => "renamelink", id => "foo", call => \&renamelink);
This hook is called by the [[plugins/rename]] plugin when it renames
-something. The hook is passed named parameters: `page`, `oldpage`,
-`newpage`, and `content`, and should try to modify the content to reflect
-the name change. For example, by converting links to point to the new page.
+something, once per page linking to the renamed page's old location.
+The hook is passed named parameters: `page`, `oldpage`, `newpage`, and
+`content`, and should try to modify the content of `page` to reflect
+the name change. For example, by converting links to point to the
+new page.
+
+### rename
+
+ hook(type => "rename", id => "foo", call => \&renamepages);
+
+When a page or set of pages is renamed, the referenced function is
+called, and passed a reference to an array of hashes with keys:
+`src`, `srcfile`, `dest`, `destfile`, `required`. It can modify
+the array.
### getsetup
to save the page to. It's passed a page name, and its type, and returns
the name of the file to create, relative to the srcdir.
-#### `targetpage($$)`
+#### `targetpage($$;$)`
Passed a page and an extension, returns the filename that page will be
rendered to.
+Optionally, a third parameter can be passed, to specify the preferred
+filename of the page. For example, `targetpage("foo", "rss", "feed")`
+will yield something like `foo/feed.rss`.
+
## Miscellaneous
### Internal use pages
#### `rcs_receive()`
This is called when ikiwiki is running as a pre-receive hook (or
-equivilant), and is testing if changes pushed into the RCS from an
+equivalent), and is testing if changes pushed into the RCS from an
untrusted user should be accepted. This is optional, and doesn't make
sense to implement for all RCSs.
It should examine the incoming changes, and do any sanity
checks that are appropriate for the RCS to limit changes to safe file adds,
-removes, and renames. If something bad is found, it should exit
+removes, and changes. If something bad is found, it should exit
nonzero, to abort the push. Otherwise, it should return a list of
files that were changed, in the form:
{
file => # name of file that was changed
action => # either "add", "change", or "remove"
+ path => # temp file containing the new file content, only
+ # needed for "add"/"change", and only if the file
+ # is an attachment, not a page
}
The list will then be checked to make sure that each change is one that