Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
|
* transformations contain one or more "datasource" meta nodes
** these nodes define the required datasources
** up until now it was required to define the whole path to the file to be loaded
* the implementation of directory linkage in b942f8e removed the underlying need for providing the source / target prefix
** this commit now updates the generation transformations to match this change
*** this simplifies the datasource definition process for the end-user
*** additionally it makes the target / source directories easier to maintain
* changed cleanage task implementation to remove the whole directory and recreate it from scratch
** otherwise directory linkage and in turn the whole generation failed when the target directory did not exist in the first place
* removed task reordering in the process transformation
** tasks are now processed exactly as they were scheduled
** this was changed so that e.g. the "00_content" directory is linked before the first datasource is required
|
|
* while articles can be ordered by e.g. date there is no useful order for the pages in a given category
** this is why the order of pages on category overview pages is now random (in each generation)
|
|
* base url is now a local webserver for more realistic testing
** i.e. otherwise the atom feed is not served correctly
* article, page, tag and stream pages are now generated as "index.html" inside appropriately named directories
** this is needed for pretty urls that actually work
|
|
* the output node is defined in both the master and datasource transformation
** i.e. they do not have to be defined in transformations making use of one of these transformations
|
|
* xalan and/or InputXSLT namespace should only be included when they are actually required
|
|
* added "tags.xsl" meta datasource
** augments tags and their articles extracted from the content tree with article data from the article datasource
* added basic tag page template
* renamed "pages" directory to "page" as it is more intuitive from a user perspective
|