#!/bin/sh . $(dirname $0)/adc.common-functions # the help adc now takes some options; we need to process them first [ "$1" = "-list" -o "$HELP_LIST_DEFAULT" = "1" ] && { # the GL_ADC_PATH directory has files other than ADCs also, notably the # include file for shell ADCs, and maybe a README or two. Those should be # chmod -x. # if you want to temporarily hide any ADC from being listed, do the same # thing: chmod -x cd $($GL_BINDIR/gl-query-rc GL_ADC_PATH) for i in * do [ -x $i ] && echo $i done exit 0 } # the local site can have a file called gl-adc-help.txt, which will be used as # the *entire* help text for this site... [ -f $HOME/gl-adc-help.txt ] && { cat $HOME/gl-adc-help.txt exit 0 } # or the local site will use the default help text in this file, with an # optional pre- and post- text that is site local (like maybe the admin's # contact details) # pre [ -f $HOME/gl-adc-pre-help.txt ] && cat $HOME/gl-adc-pre-help.txt # default help text echo " The following adc's (admin-defined commands) are available at this site. creating a 'fork' of a repo: the 'fork' adc forks a repo that you have read access to, to a repo that you have create rights to deleting/trashing repos: You can permanently remove a repo using 'rm'. By default, repos are protected ('lock'ed) from being 'rm'-ed. You have to first 'unlock' a repo before you can 'rm' it. A different scheme of handling this is to use 'trash' to move the repo to a 'trashcan' area. You can then 'list-trash' to see what you have, and you can then 'restore' whichever repo you need to bring back. More details can be found in contrib/adc/repo-deletion.mkd (or online at http://sitaramc.github.com/gitolite/wild_repodel.html) " # post [ -f $HOME/gl-adc-post-help.txt ] && cat $HOME/gl-adc-post-help.txt