The awk script now performs all processing in the BEGIN block using an
implementation that is capable of handling if statements which contain nested
if statments (fixes#436). To make nested ifs look better, if, else and endif
lines can now have optional whitespace before {%.
Includes are now handled in the same way as the main file which means that
included files can both include other files and have if statements in addition
to variables (fixes#406). Include lines can now also have optional whitespace
before {%.
All variables are handled in the same way now so it's now possible to use env
variables in if statements (fixes#488).
Also add support for != in addition to == (fixes#358). Thus it's now
e.g. possible to check if a variable is set (#477) by doing:
{% if yadm.class != ""%}
Class is set to {{ yadm.class }}
{% endif %}
A non-existing yadm or env variable is now replaced with the empty string.
The new test Docker image has a newer gnupg which does not behave the
same way, handling invalid passwords. This type of error is simulated
using an ICP error in the pinentry protocol.
A local class is set with:
$ yadm config local.class cls1
More classes can be added with:
$ yadm config --add local.class cls2
$ yadm config --add local.class cls3
Any of cls1, cls2 and cls3 can be used in an alternate condition.
For templates, the existing variable yadm.class/YADM_CLASS is set to
the last class (i.e. cls3) to remain compatible with how it works
today and with what the following command gives:
$ yadm config local.class
For the default template processor there is no explicit yadm.classes
variable. Instead a yadm.class condition will check against all
classes.
For the other processors, a new template variable YADM_CLASSES will be
set to all classes separated by newline. For jinja2 templates a class
can be checked with: {%- if "cls" in YADM_CLASSES.split("\n") %}
For esh templates the logic is a bit more complex, but it is possible
to do.
Fixes#185.
Instead of duplicating the permissions on the temp file, the permissions
are duplicated on the output file directly. If the output file exists as
read-only, it is made writeable first.
There are some environments which don't allow the mv to work if the file
itself is read-only.
Instead of doing work to find the default branch just to be able to
set up the repository before doing a fetch, do a "git clone" and let
git handle it.
Use -c core.sharedrepository=0600 to get the same result as
--shared=0600 passed to init.
Use --separate-git-dir to get the git directory in $YADM_REPO. Use a
temporary dir as work tree and remove it right after the clone is
done.
When the clone is done, iterate over all missing files in $YADM_WORK
and perform a checkout. If local files exists that differ compared
with the cloned ones the local files are left intact and the user is
instructed to deal with the conflicts.
This makes it possible to run e.g. "yadm -Y foo introspect repo
2>/dev/null" and get an empty output instead of getting the error
message about foo not being fully qualified.
Start with doing "submodule absorbgitdirs" as otherwise "submodule
deinit" will fail if a module has been cloned first and later added as
a submodule (as it will then contain the .git dir instead of it being
under the superprojects .git dir).
Then try to deinit the submodules before moving the repo and abort the
upgrade if it fails for any submodule. Then do the move and finally
initialize the submodules that were initialized before the upgrade.
See #285
to make it easier to use yadm in the container. Set it in the system
config (i.e. /etc/gitconfig) to avoid getting a clash if one wants to
clone an existing yadm repo that contains a .gitconfig.