X-Git-Url: https://sipb.mit.edu/gitweb.cgi/ikiwiki.git/blobdiff_plain/d99082d5e125195b78d361d6b258ff0640af0288..4e54fa1144065b7ff99e88e6c61ff1fdcf6175c9:/doc/todo/supporting_comments_via_disussion_pages.mdwn diff --git a/doc/todo/supporting_comments_via_disussion_pages.mdwn b/doc/todo/supporting_comments_via_disussion_pages.mdwn index 50bc17ba3..420ae4a7e 100644 --- a/doc/todo/supporting_comments_via_disussion_pages.mdwn +++ b/doc/todo/supporting_comments_via_disussion_pages.mdwn @@ -45,6 +45,8 @@ Is this simple enough to be sensible? >>> As a side note, the feature described above (having a form not to add a page but to expand it in a formated way) would be useful for other things when the content is short (timetracking, sub-todo list items, etc..) --[[hb]] +# [[MarceloMagallon]]'s implementation + I've been looking into this. I'd like to implement a "blogcomments" plugin. Looking at the code, I think the way to go is to have a formbuilder_setup hook that uses a different template instead of the @@ -62,7 +64,7 @@ So, I have some code, included below. For some reason that I don't quite get it What I ended up doing is write something like this to the page: - [[blogcomment from="""Username""" timestamp="""12345""" subject="""Some text""" text="""the text of the comment"""]] + [[!blogcomment from="""Username""" timestamp="""12345""" subject="""Some text""" text="""the text of the comment"""]] Each comment is processed to something like this: @@ -80,7 +82,7 @@ Each comment is processed to something like this: -- [[MarceloMagallon]] -# Code +## Code #!/usr/bin/perl package IkiWiki::Plugin::comments; @@ -89,14 +91,14 @@ Each comment is processed to something like this: use strict; use IkiWiki '1.02'; - sub import { #{{{ + sub import { hook(type => "formbuilder_setup", id => "comments", call => \&formbuilder_setup); hook(type => "preprocess", id => "blogcomment", call => \&preprocess); - } # }}} + } - sub formbuilder_setup (@) { #{{{ + sub formbuilder_setup (@) { my %params=@_; my $cgi = $params{cgi}; my $form = $params{form}; @@ -133,12 +135,12 @@ Each comment is processed to something like this: $cgi->param('comments') : ''; my $comment=$cgi->param('blogcomment'); - $content.=qq{[[blogcomment from="""$name""" timestamp="""$timestamp""" subject="""$subject""" text="""$comment"""]]\n\n}; + $content.=qq{[[!blogcomment from="""$name""" timestamp="""$timestamp""" subject="""$subject""" text="""$comment"""]]\n\n}; $content=~s/\n/\r\n/g; $form->field(name => "editcontent", value => $content, force => 1); - } # }}} + } - sub preprocess (@) { #{{{ + sub preprocess (@) { my %params=@_; my ($text, $date, $from, $subject, $r); @@ -157,6 +159,64 @@ Each comment is processed to something like this: $r .= "\n" . $text . "\n"; return $r; - } # }}} + } - 1; \ No newline at end of file + 1; + +# [[smcv]]'s implementation + +I've started a smcvpostcomment plugin (to be renamed to postcomment if people like it, but I'm namespacing it while it's still experimental) which I think more closely resembles what Joey was after. The code is cargo-culted from a mixture of editpage and inline's "make a blog post" support - it has to use a lot of semi-internal IkiWiki:: functions (both of those plugins do too). It doesn't fully work yet, but I'll try to get it into a state where it basically works and can be published in the next week or two. + +My approach is: + +* Comments are intended to be immutable after posting (so, only editable by direct committers), so they go on internal pages (*._comment); these internal pages are checked in to the RCS (although later I might make this optional) + +* ?do=smcvpostcomment (in the CGI script) gives a form that lets logged-in users (later, optionally also anonymous users) create a new comment + +* \[[!smcvpostcomment]] just inserts a "Post comment" button into the current page, which goes to ?do=smcvpostcomment - it's intended to be used in conjunction with an \[[!inline]] that will display the comments + +* The title (subject line), author and authorurl are set with \[[!meta]] directives, just like the way aggregate does it (which means I'll probably have to disallow the use of those \[[!meta]] directives in the body of the comment, to avoid spoofing - obviously, spoofing can be detected by looking at RecentChanges or gitweb, but the expectation for blog-style comments is that the metadata seen in the comment can be trusted) + +* The initial plan is to have comments hard-coded to be in Markdown, with further directives not allowed - I'll relax this when I've worked out what ought to be allowed! + +I've also updated Marcelo's code (above) to current ikiwiki, and moved it to a "marceloblogcomment" namespace - it's in the "marcelocomments" branch of my repository (see ). I had to reconstitute the .tmpl file, which Marcelo didn't post here. + +--[[smcv]] + +OK, the postcomment branch in my repository contains an implementation. What +do you think so far? Known issues include: + +* The combination of RSS/Atom links and the "post new comment..." button is + ugly - I need a way to integrate the "new comment" button into the feed links + somehow, like the way inline embeds its own "new blog post..." feature + (I don't think the current way really scales, though) + +* There are some tweakables (whether to commit comments into the VCS, whether + wikilinks are allowed, whether directives are allowed) that are theoretically + configurable, but are currently hard-coded + +* The wikilink/directive disarming doesn't work unless you have + prefixdirectives set (which I just realised) + +* \[[!smcvpostcomment]] now displays the comments too, by invoking \[[!inline]] + with suitable parameters - but it does so in a very ugly way + +* Start-tags in a comment with no corresponding end-tag break page formatting + (unless htmltidy is enabled - inline and aggregate have the same problem) + +* There is no access control, so anonymous users can always comment, and so + can all logged-in users. Perhaps we need to extend canedit() to support + different types of edit? Or perhaps I should ignore canedit() and make the + access control configurable via a parameter to \[[!smcvpostcomment]]? + I'd like to be able to let anonymous (or at least non-admin) users comment + on existing pages, but not edit or create pages (but perhaps I'm being too + un-wikiish). + +--[[smcv]] + +I've updated smcvpostcomment and publicised it as [[plugins/contrib/comments]]. --[[smcv]] + +> While there is still room for improvement and entirely other approaches, +> I am calling this done since smcv's comments plugin is ready. --[[Joey]] + +[[done]]