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authorhttp://pdwhittaker.myopenid.com/ <http://pdwhittaker.myopenid.com/@web>2009-07-13 16:28:31 -0400
committerJoey Hess <joey@kitenet.net>2009-07-13 16:28:31 -0400
commit8c4800b55de32a84af1f0a1d8872eca315836852 (patch)
tree23a5fbb702f45e20bf8292a18dd40ad3a80dbcf0 /doc
parent546a6286f1943adc098910929645cda65f5d86fc (diff)
Trim previous "bug" report
Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
-rw-r--r--doc/bugs/CGI_problem_with_some_webservers.mdwn47
1 files changed, 25 insertions, 22 deletions
diff --git a/doc/bugs/CGI_problem_with_some_webservers.mdwn b/doc/bugs/CGI_problem_with_some_webservers.mdwn
index 3f80bbbd6..e4b0fd448 100644
--- a/doc/bugs/CGI_problem_with_some_webservers.mdwn
+++ b/doc/bugs/CGI_problem_with_some_webservers.mdwn
@@ -70,36 +70,39 @@ Marking [[done]] since it's not really an ikiwiki bug. --[[Joey]]
----
-I'm getting some odd behaviour with boa. When I edit a page and click "Save
-Page", the URL I get taken to produces a 403 - Forbidden error until I recompile
-the wiki. For example, after editing the root page of the wiki it brings me back to
-`http://localhost/~pdw/iki/?updated`, and I see a 403 error message. Then, if
-I open up a terminal and type `ikiwiki --setup ikiwiki.setup`, and then go back
-to the browser and hit Ctrl-R, the page displays correctly, with the same URL
-that gave an error a moment ago. This is with boa 0.94.14rc21-3 and Firefox
-3.0.11 on Ubuntu 9.04. I get the feeling I'm doing something wrong somewhere;
-any suggestions where to start looking? This is a very basic setup, so feel
-free to ask. --Paul
-
-Tried setting up a git repository back-end for the wiki, in case the `post-update`
-hook caused the right updates to happen; it didn't. (But I do now have my wiki
-in git!)
-
-Turns out that `.../destdir/index.html` was being recreated after a web edit, or
-at least having its permissions modified, and being left without world-read
-permissions. Boa was then rightly refusing to serve the page. Adding the
-`umask 022` config option to `ikiwiki.setup` fixed everything, and all
-appears to be working fine now. --Paul.
+I'm using boa and getting some odd behaviour if I don't set the `umask`
+option in the config file. Editing a page through the web interface and
+hitting "Save Page" regenerates the `index.html` file with no world-read
+permissions. As a result, the server serves a "403 - Forbidden" error page
+instead of the page I was expecting to return to.
+
+There are only two ways I found to work around this: adding a `umask 022`
+option to the config file, or re-compiling the wiki from the command line
+using `ikiwiki --setup`. Setting up a git back-end and re-running `ikiwiki
+--setup` from inside a hook had no effect; it needed to be at the terminal.
+--Paul
> Since others seem to have gotten ikiwiki working with boa,
> I'm guessing that this is not a generic problem with boa, but that
> your boa was started from a shell that had an unusual umask and inherited
> that. --[[Joey]]
-(I'm new to wiki etiquette - would it be more polite to leave these details on the
-wiki, or to remove them and only leave a short summary? Thanks. --Paul)
+>> That's right; once I'd worked out what was wrong, it was clear that any
+>> webserver should have been refusing to serve the page. I agree about the
+>> inherited umask; I hadn't expected that. Even if it's unusual, though, it
+>> probably won't be uncommon - this was a stock Ubuntu 9.04 install. --Paul
+
+(I'm new to wiki etiquette - would it be more polite to leave these details
+on the wiki, or to remove them and only leave a short summary? Thanks.
+--Paul)
> Well, I just try to keep things understandable and clear, whether than
> means deleting bad old data or not. That said, this page is a bug report,
> that was already closed. It's generally better to open a new bug report
> rather than edit an old closed one. --[[Joey]]
+
+>> Thanks for the feedback, I've tidied up my comment accordingly. I see
+>> your point about the bug; sorry for cluttering the page up. I doubt it's
+>> worth opening a new page at this stage, but will do so if there's a next
+>> time. The solution seems worth leaving, though, in case anyone else in my
+>> situation picks it up. --Paul