X-Git-Url: http://git.vanrenterghem.biz/git.ikiwiki.info.git/blobdiff_plain/c71ea2337d56b7fe7fde7a4b2fb43a510fb5f05f..2b2254e4d55c28da2853a307d9ef54ddcdde54e2:/doc/forum/ikiwiki_development_environment_tips.mdwn diff --git a/doc/forum/ikiwiki_development_environment_tips.mdwn b/doc/forum/ikiwiki_development_environment_tips.mdwn index 32da4a1cd..f9c584159 100644 --- a/doc/forum/ikiwiki_development_environment_tips.mdwn +++ b/doc/forum/ikiwiki_development_environment_tips.mdwn @@ -7,7 +7,13 @@ Does anyone have a comfortable setup or tips they would like to share? -- [[Jon] >> I think this suffers from two problems. Firstly, unless you are tracking git >> master in your existing wiki, there's the possibility that your plugin will >> not work with a more modern version of ikiwiki (or that it would benefit ->> from using a newly added utility subroutine or similar). Second, sometimes I +>> from using a newly added utility subroutine or similar). + +>>> Unlikely. I don't make changes to the plugin interface that break +>>> existing plugins. (Might change non-exported `IkiWiki::` things +>>> from time to time.) --[[Joey]] + +>> Second, sometimes I >> find that even writing a plugin can involve making minor changes outside of >> the plugin code (bug fixes, or moving functionality about). So, I think >> having some kind of environment built around a git checkout is best. @@ -17,3 +23,46 @@ Does anyone have a comfortable setup or tips they would like to share? -- [[Jon] >> >> I think I might personally benefit from a more consistent environment (I >> move from machine-to-machine frequently). -- [[Jon]] + +> If you set `libdir` to point to a checkout of ikiwiki's git repository, +> it will override use of the installed version of ikiwiki, so ikiwiki will +> immediatly use any changed or new `.pm` files (with the exception of +> IkiWiki.pm), and you can use git to manage it all without an installation +> step. If I am modifying IkiWiki.pm, I generally symlink it from +> `/usr/share/perl5/IkiWiki.pm` to my git reporisitory. Granted, not ideal. +> +> I often use my laptop's local version of my personal wiki for testing. +> It has enough stuff that I can easily test most things, and if I need +> a test page I just dump test cases on the sandbox. I can make +> any changes necessary during testing and then `git reset --hard +> origin/master` to avoid publishing them. +> +> If the thing I'm testing involves templates, or underlays, +> I will instead use ikiwiki's `docwiki.setup` for testing, modifying it as +> needed, since it is preconfigured to use the templates and underlays +> from ikiwiki's source repository. +> --[[Joey]] + +> I work with Ikiwiki from the git checkout directory the following way. +> +> * instead of running ikiwiki, I wrote the following `mykiwiki` shell script, +> that also allows me to use my custom lib-ifited multimarkdown: + + #!/bin/sh + + MMDSRC="$HOME/src/multimarkdown/lib" + IKIWIKISRC="$HOME/src/ikiwiki" + PLUGINS="$HOME/src/ikiplugins" + + /usr/bin/perl -I"$MMDSRC" -I"$IKIWIKISRC/blib/lib" -I"$PLUGINS" "$IKIWIKISRC/ikiwiki.out" -libdir "$IKIWIKISRC" "$@" + +> * I also have an installed ikiwiki from Debian unstable, from which I only use the base wiki, so my `.setup` has the following configs: + + # additional directory to search for template files + templatedir => '/home/oblomov/src/ikiwiki/templates', + # base wiki source location + underlaydir => '/usr/share/ikiwiki/basewiki', + # extra library and plugin directory + libdir => '/home/oblomov/src/ikiwiki', + +> Hope that helps --GB