When the web server shows the manifest for a single, non top directory, append
the path to the directory to the archive links. This makes the web server
generate archive files that only include the current directory (and its
subdirectories).
Note that archive links in other pages (e.g. changeset) or at the top of the
manifest are unchanged. Directory archive links have an extra "/" at the end
which does not impact the result of the archive operation. Keeping it there
made the implementation of this feature simpler.
In order to use this, add a [websub] section to your configuration and add
websub expressions such as:
italic = s/\b_(\S+)_\b/<i>\1<\/i>/
bold = s/\*\b(\S+)\b\*/<b>\1<\/b>/
issues = s|issue(\d+)|<a href="http://bts.example.org/issue\1">issue\1</a>|i
bugzilla = s!((?:bug|b=|(?=#?\d{4,}))(?:\s*#?)(\d+))!<a href="http://bz.selenic.com/\2">\1</a>!i
This also adds documentation (proofed by Kevin!) to the config help section.
Without this, repository paths or names containing e.g. & characters or html
tags yielded strange results, possibly allowing cross-site scripting attacks.
The purpose of this change is to make it much easier to navigate up the
repository tree when the hg web server is used to serve more than one
repository.
A "URL breadcrumb" is a path where each of the path items can be clicked to go
to the corresponding path page.
This lets you go up the folder hierarchy very quickly. For example, when showing
the list of repositories in http://myserver/myteams/myprojects, the following
"breadcrumb" will be shown:
Mercurial > myteams > myprojects
Clicking on "myprojects" reloads the page. Clicking on "myteams" goes up one
folder. Clicking on the leftmost "Mercurial" goes to the server root.
This "breadcrumb" also appears on all repository pages. For example on the
summary page of the repository at http://myserver/myteams/myprojects/myrepo the
following will be shown:
Mercurial > myteams > myprojects > myrepo / summary
This change has been applied to all templates that already had a link to the
main repository page (i.e. gitweb, monoblue, paper and coal) plus to the index
page of the spartan template.
In order to make the breadcumb links stand out the some of the template styles
have been customized.
Up until now the templates that show RSS and Atom feeds on the "repository
lists" (i.e. gitweb and monoblue) showed them for all entries, including regular
folders. Clicking on those "folder RSS" links would result in an error page
being shown.
This patch hides those links for regular folders.
There were no RSS nor Atom feeds for the branches page. Different hgweb
templates linked to different feeds on their branches page (some linked to the
tags feed, some to the log feed and some to the unexisting branches feed).
hgweb has an incorrect padding calculation, causing the text to move further
away from the graph the more branches there are (issue3626). This patch fixes
all existing templates (gitweb, monoblue, paper and spartan).
Tests updated by Patrick Mezard <patrick@mezard.eu>
JavaScript .replace always magically processed $$ $& $' $` in replacement
strings and thus displayed subject lines incorrectly in the graph view.
Instead of regexps and .replace we now just create the strings the right way in
the first place.
The top-level 'comparison' template was not really needed, and it also caused a
traceback to be shown for inexistent files (as reported by Ross Lagerwall).
Getting rid of it makes the overall templating structure simpler and causes
invalid files to be handled nicely.
Adds new web command to the core, ``comparison``, which enables colorful
side-by-side change display, which for some might be much easier to work with
than the standard line diff output. The idea how to implement comes from the
SonicHq extension.
The web interface gets a new link to call the comparison functionality. It lets
users configure the amount of context lines around change blocks, or to show
full files - check help (also in this changeset) for details and defaults. The
setting in hgrc can be overridden by adding ``context=<value>`` to the request
query string. The comparison creates addressable lines, so as to enable sharing
links to specific lines, just as standard diff does.
Incorporates updates to all web related styles.
Known limitations:
* the column diff is done against the first parent, just as the standard diff
* this change allows examining diffs for single files only (as I am not sure if
examining the whole changeset in this way would be helpful)
* syntax highlighting of the output changes is not performed (enabling the
highlight extension has no influence on it)
All implementation in graph.tmpl are the same. It can still be overriden if
necessary. There is no clear reason to keep it separated from mercurial.js.
While Chrome, Firefox, and IE 6+ support the current date format being
passed to Date(), Safari doesn't:
> new Date('Mon Oct 24 13:58:01 2011 +0200')
Invalid Date
However, the rfc822date format--officially supported by
ECMAScript[1]--does work:
> new Date('Mon, 24 Oct 2011 13:58:01 +0200')
Mon Oct 24 2011 04:58:01 GMT-0700 (PDT)
This change replaces all instances of {date|date} in HTML with
{date|rfc822date}. For elements that only have the "age" class,
there's no outward change for users with JavaScript enabled. For
elements with both the "age" and "date" classes, the full date
displayed uses the new format.
Tested in IE 6, Safari 5.1.1, Google Chrome 15, and Firefox 7.0.1.
[1]: https://developer.mozilla.org/en/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Date/parse
This allow safe caching of the pages by the browser and still display the right
amount of elapsed time upon page refresh.
If javascript is disabled, absolute time is displayed, leaving it readable.
All the templates have been updated.
Clicking on the logo image/text in the hgweb interface brings the
user to the Mercurial project page. The majority of users expect that
this would bring them to the top level index. I have added a new template
variable named `logourl' which allows an administrator to change this
behavior. To stay compatible with existing behavior, `logourl' will
default to http://mercurial.selenic.com/. This change is very useful in
large installations where jumping to the index is common.
This patch changes column headers in the templates that previously
said `Last change' to `Last modified'. Neither code nor functionality
are changed other than that.
For some time now, I have been annoyed by the fact the `Last change'
column didn't list the age of the youngest changeset in the
repository, or at least tip. It just occurred to me that this is
because the wording is slightly misleading; what the column in fact
lists is when the repository was last *modified*, that is, when
changesets was last added or removed from it.
The word `change' can be understood as referring to the changeset
itself. Using `changed' would be ever so slightly less
amigous. However, the standard nomenclature in this case is
`modification date' and `Last modified', which is incidentally entirely
unambigous. Hence, `Last modified' is the wording used.
Remove the `install_package_data' subclass of `install_data' and use
the `package_data' functionality provided by distutils instead. As
package data must be located within the package directory, the data
files are now generated in the build directory.
To simplify the functionality of this change, the top-level `doc' and
`templates' directories have been moved into the `mercurial' package
directory.