X-Git-Url: http://git.vanrenterghem.biz/git.ikiwiki.info.git/blobdiff_plain/3e55b09a0680e80dd274bf3f455a58c81c3b7984..913b2fc3dcc699c7bb25e21652057664dbc90bcc:/doc/about_rcs_backends.mdwn?ds=sidebyside diff --git a/doc/about_rcs_backends.mdwn b/doc/about_rcs_backends.mdwn index 547f973e2..1aafd4a8e 100644 --- a/doc/about_rcs_backends.mdwn +++ b/doc/about_rcs_backends.mdwn @@ -1,16 +1,16 @@ -## A few bits about the RCS backends +# A few bits about the RCS backends -### Terminology +## Terminology ``web-edit'' means that a page is edited by using the web (CGI) interface as opposed to using a editor and the RCS interface. -### [[Subversion]] +## [[Subversion]] -Subversion was that first RCS to be supported by ikiwiki. +Subversion was the first RCS to be supported by ikiwiki. -#### How does it work internally? +### How does it work internally? Master repository M. @@ -22,15 +22,18 @@ HTML is generated from W. rcs_update() will update from M to W. CGI operates on W. rcs_commit() will commit from W to M. +For all the gory details of how ikiwiki handles this behind the scenes, +see [[commit-internals]]. + You browse and web-edit the wiki on W. -### [darcs](http://darcs.net/) (not yet included) +## [darcs](http://darcs.net/) (not yet included) Support for using darcs as a backend is being worked on by [Thomas Schwinge](mailto:tschwinge@gnu.org). -#### How will it work internally? +### How will it work internally? ``Master'' repository R1. @@ -45,27 +48,45 @@ There is a working copy of R1: R2. CGI operates on R2. rcs_commit() will push from R2 to R1. You browse the wiki on R1 and web-edit it on R2. This means for example -that R2 needs to be updated from R1 if you are going the web-edit a page, +that R2 needs to be updated from R1 if you are going to web-edit a page, as the user otherwise might be irritated otherwise... How do changes get from R1 to R2? Currently only internally in -rcs_commit(). Is rcs_prepedit() suitable? +rcs\_commit(). Is rcs\_prepedit() suitable? It follows that the HTML rendering and the CGI handling can be completely separated parts in ikiwiki. -##### Rationale for doing it differently than in the Subversion case +What repository should [[RecentChanges]] and [[History]] work on? R1? + +#### Rationale for doing it differently than in the Subversion case darcs is a distributed RCS, which means that every checkout of a repository is equal to the repository it was checked-out from. There is no forced hierarchy. -R1 is the nevertheless called the master repository. It's used for +R1 is nevertheless called the master repository. It's used for collecting all the changes and publishing them: on the one hand via the rendered HTML and on the other via the standard darcs RCS interface. -R2, the repository where CGI operates on, is just a checkout of R1 and +R2, the repository the CGI operates on, is just a checkout of R1 and doesn't really differ from the other checkouts that people will branch off from R1. (To be continued.) + + +## [[Git]] + +Regarding the Git support, Recai says: + +I have been testing it for the past few days and it seems satisfactory. I +haven't observed any race condition regarding the concurrent blog commits +and it handles merge conflicts gracefully as far as I can see. + +As you may notice from the patch size, GIT support is not so trivial to +implement (for me, at least). Being a fairly fresh code base it has some +bugs. It also has some drawbacks (especially wrt merge which was the hard +part). GIT doesn't have a similar functionality like 'svn merge -rOLD:NEW +FILE' (please see the relevant comment in mergepast for more details), so I +had to invent an ugly hack just for the purpose.