X-Git-Url: http://git.vanrenterghem.biz/git.ikiwiki.info.git/blobdiff_plain/2aaab7db29f154816d6338a1329b42090209d966..6a683800a4ff470f97dcadd89e5949afeadb34c2:/doc/post-commit.mdwn diff --git a/doc/post-commit.mdwn b/doc/post-commit.mdwn index 8dff290fd..1c5176d42 100644 --- a/doc/post-commit.mdwn +++ b/doc/post-commit.mdwn @@ -1,26 +1,19 @@ -The best way to run ikiwiki in a [[Subversion]] post-commit hook is using -a wrapper, which can be generated using `ikiwiki --wrapper`. +If your wiki is kept in [[revision_control|rcs]], a post-commit hook is run +every time you commit a change to your repository. -First, set up the subversion checkout that ikiwiki will update and compile -into your wiki at each subversion commit. Run ikiwiki a few times by hand -to get a feel for it. Now, generate the wrapper by adding "--wrapper" -to whatever command line you've been using to run ikiwiki. For example: - - ~/wiki-checkout> ikiwiki . ~/public_html/wiki - ~/wiki-checkout> ikiwiki . ~/public_html/wiki --wrapper - successfully generated ikiwiki-wrap +ikiwiki generates the "post-commit hook" once you've uncommented the relevant +section (under wrappers) in the ikiwiki.setup. The generated wrapper is a C program that is designed to safely be made suid if necessary. It's hardcoded to run ikiwiki with the settings specified when you ran --wrapper, and can only be used to update and compile that one checkout into the specified html directory. -Now, put the wrapper somewhere convenient, and create a post-commit hook -script in your subversion repository for the wiki. All the post-commit -hook has to do is run the wrapper (with no parameters). - -Depending on your Subversion setup, the post-commit hook might end up -getting called by users who have write access to subversion, but not to +Depending on your setup, the post-commit hook might end up +getting called by users who have write access to the repository, but not to your wiki checkout and html directory. If so, you can safely make -ikiwiki-wrap suid to a user who can write there (*not* to root!). You might +the wrapper suid to a user who can write there (*not* to root!). You might want to read [[Security]] first. + +[[Setup]] explains setting this up from the start and see [[rcs/details]] to +know more.