X-Git-Url: http://git.vanrenterghem.biz/git.ikiwiki.info.git/blobdiff_plain/4e54fa1144065b7ff99e88e6c61ff1fdcf6175c9..de9842ecc8914e11e73148dae78cd6909b535262:/doc/todo/Render_multiple_destinations_from_one_source.mdwn diff --git a/doc/todo/Render_multiple_destinations_from_one_source.mdwn b/doc/todo/Render_multiple_destinations_from_one_source.mdwn index 5fd787607..b7723f919 100644 --- a/doc/todo/Render_multiple_destinations_from_one_source.mdwn +++ b/doc/todo/Render_multiple_destinations_from_one_source.mdwn @@ -48,3 +48,38 @@ Just brainstorming a bit after [[liw]]'s comment about this being useful on IRC, > and parameterize it using `$ENV{FOO}`, then you can build two different > setups from the same setup file. > --[[Joey]] + +> > My post-update script has grown a bit, as I'm using ikiwiki-hosting now, so want to let the users update stuff themselves: +> > +> > #!/bin/sh +> > +> > PUB_URL=http://truestedt.hands.com +> > PUB_TMPL=$HOME/source-public/templates-public +> > +> > # make the public config, in case of updates via ikiwiki-hosting +> > sed -e 's/^\(srcdir\|destdir\|git_wrapper\): .*/&-public/;s#^\(url:\).*#\1 '$PUB_URL'#;s/^\(cgi_wrapper:\).*/\1 '"''"'/;s#^\(templatedir:\).*#\1 '$PUB_TMPL'#;s/^\(cgiurl\|historyurl\):/#&/;/disable_plugins:/a \ +> > - recentchanges\ +> > - editpage' ~/ikiwiki.setup > ~/ikiwiki.setup-public +> > #echo 'wikistatedir: source/.ikiwiki-public' >> ~/ikiwiki.setup-public +> > [ -d ~/source-public ] || cp -a ~/source ~/source-public +> > [ -d ~/public_html-public ] || mkdir ~/public_html-public +> > +> > # run normal post-update hook +> > ./hooks/post-update-ikiwiki "$@" +> > +> > # run post-update hook for the public version of the site +> > ./hooks/post-update-ikiwiki-public "$@" +> > +> > exec git update-server-info +> > +> > I tried using wikistatedir, as you suggested, but then wiki edits are not reflected on the second site (AFAICT), so reverted to having a full checkout of the source. +> > I'm guessing that that's because the second run through with the post-update hook sees no changes that it needs to worry about in the source directory, but it's just +> > possible that I got confused while testing, as the sed is pretty fragile, so some of the time it was failing because of sed syntax errors. +> > +> > It strikes me that one ought to be able to have a plugin that takes the current config, applies a few minor tweaks to it (perhaps by loading an extra config file) and +> > then does some or all of the tasks normally run by main() again, targeting a new directory -- that way there would be no need for the two post-updates, and whatever +> > provoked a rebuild would always do both, whether on the command line or via CGI. +> > I just don't know quite where the right place to plumb such a plugin in would be -- also, it would be good to separate out the bits of main() that we'd be calling +> > so that both the plugin and main calls them in the same way, to ease future maintenance +> > +> > Any hints on where to start with such a plugin, gratefully received :-) -[[fil]]