aboutsummaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/doc/setup.mdwn
blob: 2c3a979edbfa650efb4b9aefa2baf64744e7d4c1 (plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
This tutorial will walk you through setting up a wiki with ikiwiki.

1. [[Download]] and [[install]] ikiwiki.

2. Decide where your wiki's files will go.

   As a wiki compiler, ikiwiki builds a wiki from files in a source directory,
   and outputs the files to a destination directory.  If you keep your wiki in
   a version control system, the source directory will contain a working copy
   checked out from the version control system.

   For the purposes of this tutorial, we'll set shell variables
   for these locations, and use those variables in the commands that follow.

			SRCDIR=~/wikiwc
			DESTDIR=~/public_html/wiki/

   Note that ikiwiki owns the working copy directory; do not perform your own
   edits in ikiwiki's working copy.

3. Create the beginnings of your wiki.

   This will create a simple main page for the wiki.

   			mkdir $SRCDIR
			cd $SRCDIR
			$EDITOR index.mdwn

   In the editor, you could start by entering a simple page like 
   [[toggle id=page text="this one"]].
   
   [[toggleable id=page text="""
   			Welcome to your new wiki.
	   		All wikis are supposed to have a [[SandBox]],
	   		so this one does too.
	   		----
	   		This wiki is powered by [ikiwiki](http://ikiwiki.info).
   """]]
   
   See [[HelpOnFormatting]] for details about the markup language.

   Note that several [[standard_wiki_pages|basewiki]] will be added to your
   wiki, from files in `/usr/share/ikiwiki/basewiki/`, so your wiki will
   automatically get a [[SandBox]], and some other useful pages.

4. Build your wiki for the first time.

			ikiwiki --verbose $SRCDIR $DESTDIR --url=http://example.org/~you/wiki/

   Replace the url with the real url to your wiki. You should now
   be able to visit the url and see your wiki.

5. Repeat steps 3 and 4 as desired, editing or adding pages and rebuilding
   the wiki. 
   
   To quickly get started on a common task like blogging with ikiwiki, you
   can copy in files from the [[examples]]. The examples are located in
   `doc/examples/` in the ikiwiki source package.

   You can play around with other ikiwiki parameters such as `--wikiname`
   and `--rebuild` too. Get comfortable with its command line (see
   [[usage]]).

6. By now you should be getting tired of typing in all the command line
   options each time you change something in your wiki's setup. Time to
   introduce setup files.
   
   A sample setup file is [[ikiwiki.setup]]. Download it (or copy it from
   `doc/ikiwiki.setup` in the ikiwiki sources), and edit it. Note that this
   file should *not* be put in your wiki's directory with the rest of the
   files. A good place to put it is in a ~/.ikiwiki/ subdirectory.
   
   Most of the options, like `wikiname` in the setup file are the same as
   ikiwiki's command line options (documented in [[usage]]. `srcdir` and
   `destdir` are the two directories you specify when running ikiwiki by
   hand. Make sure that these are pointing to the right directories, and
   read through and configure the rest of the file to your liking.

   When you're satisfied, run `ikiwiki --setup ikiwiki.setup`, and it
   will set everything up.

7. Turn on additional features.

   Now you have a basic wiki with a configuration file. Time to experiment
   with ikiwiki's many features. 
   
   Let's first enable a key wiki feature and set up [[CGI]] to allow
   editing the wiki from the web. Just edit ikiwiki.setup, uncomment the
   block for the cgi wrapper, make sure the filename for the cgi wrapper
   is ok, run `ikiwiki --setup ikiwiki.setup`, and you're done!

   There are lots of other configuration options in ikiwiki.setup that you
   can uncomment, configure, and enable by re-running
   `ikiwiki --setup ikiwiki.setup`. Be sure to browse through all the
   [[plugins]]..

8. Put your wiki in revision control.

   At this point you might want to check your wiki in to a revision control
   system you can get history of past changes and revert edits. Depending
   on the revision control system you choose, the way this is done varies.
   
   There's little that's ikiwiki specific about these instructions; this is
   just how you put a directory under revision control using the various
   systems that ikiwiki supports. Note that the .ikiwiki subdirectory is
   where ikiwiki keeps its state, and should be preserved, but not checked
   into revision control.

   [[toggle id=subversion text="Subversion"]]
   [[toggleable id=subversion text="""
			REPOSITORY=~/wikirepo
			svnadmin create $REPOSITORY
			svn mkdir file://$REPOSITORY/trunk -m "create trunk"
			cd $SRCDIR
			svn co file://$REPOSITORY/trunk .
			svn add *
			svn commit -m "initial import"
   """]]
   
   [[toggle id=git text="Git"]]
   [[toggleable id=git text="""
	When using Git, you probably want to set up two repositories, of which
	one should be bare (meaning that it does not have a working tree
	checked out). We call the bare repository the "repo" and the other the
	"srcdir". There are [other
	ways](http://blog.madduck.net/vcs/2007.07.11_publishing-git-repositories)
	to do the following, but this might be easiest:

			REPOSITORY=~/wiki.git
			cd $SRCDIR
			git init
			echo .ikiwiki > .gitignore
			git add .
			git commit -m'Initial commit'
			# if you expect $REPOSITORY to receive pushs from multiple
			# clones, then it is advisable to stop git performing
			# fast forwards -- this is to avoid overwriting the
			# remote ref and losing commits from there.
			git config receive.denyNonFastForwards true
			git config core.bare true
			mv .git $REPOSITORY
			mv .ikiwiki ..
			cd ..
			rm -r $SRCDIR
			git clone -l -s $REPOSITORY $SRCDIR
			mv .ikiwiki $SRCDIR

	It is **paramount** that you **never** push to the Git repository in
	`$SRCDIR` ([this FAQ entry explains
	why](http://git.or.cz/gitwiki/GitFaq#head-b6a3d85f677763313159eb39f7dbf4579d4ee28b)).
	Instead, if you want to work on the wiki from a remote machine, clone
	`$REPOSITORY`, using either the `git` transport (if available), or
	`ssh`.

	If at any point you commit changes in `$SRCDIR`, make sure to `git
	push` them to the `$REPOSITORY`.
   """]]

   [[toggle id=tla text="TLA"]]
   [[toggleable id=tla text="""
   			REPOSITORY=~/wikirepo
   			tla make-archive me@localhost--wiki $REPOSITORY
   			tla my-id "<me@localhost>"
   			cd $SRCDIR
   			tla archive-setup me@localhost--wiki/wiki--0
   			tla init-tree me@localhost--wiki/wiki--0
   			# Edit {arch}/=tagging-method and change the precious
   			# line to add the .ikiwiki directory to the regexp.
   			tla add *
   			tla import
   """]]

   [[toggle id=mercurial text="Mercurial"]]
   [[toggleable id=mercurial text="""
			REPOSITORY=$SRCDIR
			hg init $REPOSITORY
			cd $REPOSITORY
			hg add *
			hg commit -m "initial import"
   """]]

   [[toggle id=monotone text="Monotone"]]
   [[toggleable id=monotone text="""
			# These instructions are standard instructions to import a directory into monotone
			# and set it up so that you don't need any passwords to use it
			REPOSITORY=~/.ikiwiki/mtn.db
			BRANCH=com.company.wikiname
			# remember the password you use in the next step and
			# substitute it for 'wikiKeyPass' in the get_passphrase() hook below
			# note the you should never generate two monotone keys with the same name
			mtn genkey web@machine.company.com
			mtn db init --db=$REPOSITORY
			mv $SRCDIR $SRCDIR-old
			cd $SRCDIR-old
			echo ".ikiwiki" > $SRCDIR-old/.mtn-ignore
			mtn --db=$REPOSITORY --branch=$BRANCH import . -m "initial import"
			cd ..
			mtn --db=$REPOSITORY --branch=$BRANCH checkout $SRCDIR
			mv $SRCDIR-old/.ikiwiki $SRCDIR
			cat << EOF > $SRCDIR/_MTN/monotonerc
			function get_passphrase (branchname)
			    return "wikiKeyPass"
			end
			EOF
			rm -r $SRCDIR-old
   """]]

9. Configure ikiwiki to use revision control.

   Once your wiki is checked in to the revision control system,
   you should configure ikiwiki to use revision control. Edit your
   ikiwiki.setup, and uncomment the lines for the revision control system
   you chose to use. Be sure to set `svnrepo` to $REPOSITORY, if using
   subversion. Uncomment the block for the wrapper for your revision
   control system, and configure the wrapper path in that block
   appropriately (for Git, it should be `$REPO/hooks/post-update`).

   Once it's all set up, run `ikiwiki --setup ikiwiki.setup` once more.
   Now you should be able to edit files in $SRCDIR, and use your revision
   control system to commit them, and the wiki will automatically update.
   And in the web interface, RecentChanges should work, and files changed
   by web users will also be committed using revision control.

10. Enjoy your new wiki! Add yourself to [[IkiWikiUsers]]. And check out
    [[tips]] to find out how to get more out of ikiwiki.