Upgrading Serendipity Feature Request
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carl_galloway
- Regular
- Posts: 1331
- Joined: Sun Dec 04, 2005 5:43 pm
- Location: Andalucia, Spain
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Upgrading Serendipity Feature Request
My blog is currently running v1.1, and so are a few of my other sites. I'd like to upgrade them to 1.2 but I get a lot of traffic on a couple of my sites and the upgrade process will no doubt be seen by some visitors. Is there a way of temporarily shutting down s9y and giving the visitors a default please come back soon message while I go through the upgrade process, and can this be added to the list of things to do for serendipity?
Hi Carl,
look at this thread - http://board.s9y.org/viewtopic.php?t=2562. The entry of Big-Tux.
Frank.
look at this thread - http://board.s9y.org/viewtopic.php?t=2562. The entry of Big-Tux.
Frank.
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carl_galloway
- Regular
- Posts: 1331
- Joined: Sun Dec 04, 2005 5:43 pm
- Location: Andalucia, Spain
- Contact:
Ah so simple and yes, that is exactly what I want.
For the benefit of the English speakers, imagine a plugin that could rewrite the .htaccess so that all requests for index.php are temporarily redirected to a static html page explaining that the site is unavailable, but requests for serendipity_admin.php are allowed which would enable blog owners to upgrade software, change templates, plugins, rewrite entries etc and then simply get serendipity to rewrite the .htaccess file when you're ready to go live again.
Any idea when this plugin will be available?
For the benefit of the English speakers, imagine a plugin that could rewrite the .htaccess so that all requests for index.php are temporarily redirected to a static html page explaining that the site is unavailable, but requests for serendipity_admin.php are allowed which would enable blog owners to upgrade software, change templates, plugins, rewrite entries etc and then simply get serendipity to rewrite the .htaccess file when you're ready to go live again.
Any idea when this plugin will be available?
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garvinhicking
- Core Developer
- Posts: 30022
- Joined: Tue Sep 16, 2003 9:45 pm
- Location: Cologne, Germany
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Hi!
Automatted rewrite of .htaccess is IMHO always a problem, because you never know what the users server support, and you might easily break his site. Also, users often add custom content to their htaccess which could conflicht with what a tool would put there.
I don't think this could be done in a good way and would cause more trouble that it solves.
Regards,
Garvin
Automatted rewrite of .htaccess is IMHO always a problem, because you never know what the users server support, and you might easily break his site. Also, users often add custom content to their htaccess which could conflicht with what a tool would put there.
I don't think this could be done in a good way and would cause more trouble that it solves.
Regards,
Garvin
# Garvin Hicking (s9y Developer)
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# Did I help you? Consider making me happy: http://wishes.garv.in/
# or use my PayPal account "paypal {at} supergarv (dot) de"
# My "other" hobby: http://flickr.garv.in/