Instiki 0.16.3: Rails 2.3.0

Instiki now runs on the Rails 2.3.0 Candidate Release.
Among other improvements, this means that it now 
automagically selects between WEBrick and Mongrel.

Just run

    ./instiki --daemon
This commit is contained in:
Jacques Distler 2009-02-04 14:26:08 -06:00
parent 43aadecc99
commit 4e14ccc74d
893 changed files with 71965 additions and 28511 deletions

View file

@ -33,28 +33,26 @@ module ActionController #:nodoc:
#
# Additionally, you can expire caches using Sweepers that act on changes in the model to determine when a cache is supposed to be
# expired.
#
# == Setting the cache directory
#
# The cache directory should be the document root for the web server and is set using <tt>Base.page_cache_directory = "/document/root"</tt>.
# For Rails, this directory has already been set to Rails.public_path (which is usually set to <tt>RAILS_ROOT + "/public"</tt>). Changing
# this setting can be useful to avoid naming conflicts with files in <tt>public/</tt>, but doing so will likely require configuring your
# web server to look in the new location for cached files.
#
# == Setting the cache extension
#
# Most Rails requests do not have an extension, such as <tt>/weblog/new</tt>. In these cases, the page caching mechanism will add one in
# order to make it easy for the cached files to be picked up properly by the web server. By default, this cache extension is <tt>.html</tt>.
# If you want something else, like <tt>.php</tt> or <tt>.shtml</tt>, just set Base.page_cache_extension. In cases where a request already has an
# extension, such as <tt>.xml</tt> or <tt>.rss</tt>, page caching will not add an extension. This allows it to work well with RESTful apps.
module Pages
def self.included(base) #:nodoc:
base.extend(ClassMethods)
base.class_eval do
@@page_cache_directory = defined?(Rails.public_path) ? Rails.public_path : ""
##
# :singleton-method:
# The cache directory should be the document root for the web server and is set using <tt>Base.page_cache_directory = "/document/root"</tt>.
# For Rails, this directory has already been set to Rails.public_path (which is usually set to <tt>RAILS_ROOT + "/public"</tt>). Changing
# this setting can be useful to avoid naming conflicts with files in <tt>public/</tt>, but doing so will likely require configuring your
# web server to look in the new location for cached files.
cattr_accessor :page_cache_directory
@@page_cache_extension = '.html'
##
# :singleton-method:
# Most Rails requests do not have an extension, such as <tt>/weblog/new</tt>. In these cases, the page caching mechanism will add one in
# order to make it easy for the cached files to be picked up properly by the web server. By default, this cache extension is <tt>.html</tt>.
# If you want something else, like <tt>.php</tt> or <tt>.shtml</tt>, just set Base.page_cache_extension. In cases where a request already has an
# extension, such as <tt>.xml</tt> or <tt>.rss</tt>, page caching will not add an extension. This allows it to work well with RESTful apps.
cattr_accessor :page_cache_extension
end
end
@ -147,7 +145,7 @@ module ActionController #:nodoc:
private
def caching_allowed
request.get? && response.headers['Status'].to_i == 200
request.get? && response.status.to_i == 200
end
end
end