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-rw-r--r--doc/todo/Moving_Pages.mdwn21
1 files changed, 12 insertions, 9 deletions
diff --git a/doc/todo/Moving_Pages.mdwn b/doc/todo/Moving_Pages.mdwn
index 7485f06fd..d93cea0a0 100644
--- a/doc/todo/Moving_Pages.mdwn
+++ b/doc/todo/Moving_Pages.mdwn
@@ -395,16 +395,10 @@ is checked too.
## RCS
-Two new optional functions are added to the RCS interface:
+Two new functions are added to the RCS interface:
-* `rcs_delete(file, message, rcstoken, user, ipaddr)`
-* `rcs_rename(old, new, message, rcstoken, user, ipaddr)`
-
-The page move/rename code will check if these are not available, and error
-out.
-
-Similar to `rcs_commit` both of these take a rcstoken, which is generated
-by an earlier `rcs_prepedit`.
+* `rcs_remove(file)`
+* `rcs_rename(old, new)`
## conflicts
@@ -413,17 +407,26 @@ Cases that have to be dealt with:
* Alice clicks "delete" button for a page; Bob makes a modification;
Alice confirms deletion. Ideally in this case, Alice should get an error
message that there's a conflict.
+ Update: In my current code, alice's deletion will fail if the file was
+ moved or deleted in the meantime; if the file was modified since alice
+ clicked on the delete button, the modifications will be deleted too. I
+ think this is acceptable.
* Alice opens edit UI for a page; Bob makes a modification; Alice
clicks delete button and confirms deletion. Again here, Alice should get
a conflict error. Note that this means that the rcstoken should be
recorded when the edit UI is first opened, not when the delete button is
hit.
+ Update: Again here, there's no conflict, but the delete succeeds. Again,
+ basically acceptible.
* Alice and Bob both try to delete a page at the same time. It's fine for
the second one to get a message that it no longer exists. Or just to
silently fail to delete the deleted page..
+ Update: It will display an error to the second one that the page doesn't
+ exist.
* Alice deletes a page; Bob had edit window open for it, and saves
it afterwards. I think that Bob should win in this case; Alice can always
notice the page has been added back, and delete it again.
+ Update: Bob wins.
* Alice clicks "rename" button for a page; Bob makes a modification;
Alice confirms rename. This case seems easy, it should just rename the
modified page.