# Demo config file for publishstaticweb.py. The default config file # used by publishstaticweb.py is staticweb.cfg, so to use this file as # the basis for your configuration, copy or rename this file and adapt # it to your needs. [staticweb] # Username and host on which the treepackager runs. publishstaticweb.py # has to be able to connect to that host as the build_user via ssh # without knowing the password. This is best achieved with the # ssh-agent. Also, publishstaticweb.py uses rsync to copy files from # build_host to the local host. build_user: builder build_host: localhost # the program to run on build_host to create the static web-page. # Currently publishstaticweb.py assumes that the default configuration # for that program works. build_create: ~/treepkg/bin/createstaticweb.py # The template for the web-page. This value is passed as the # --status-template argument to the build_create command on the build # host. It should be either an absolute filename or a filename relative # to the ~/treepkg/web/ directory. build_template: status-by-startdate.html # Additional log files can be configured here, those can have non standard # names as long as they are contained in the log directory of a package. # Filenames have to be seperated by a comma. # Default is: build_log.txt.gz # build_logs: build_log.txt.gz,tarball_log.txt,pkits_log.txt # the directory on build_host where the static web-site should be put. # This value is used as the parameter to the build_create command on # build_host. build_dir: /tmp/treepkg-web # Username and host on which to publish the static pages. # publishstaticweb.py uses rsync to copy the files from the local cache # to the publish_host. publish_user: builder publish_host: localhost # the directory on the publish_host where the web-site resides. It's # the directory where the index.html file will be found. The script may # delete files under that directory. publish_dir: /tmp/treepkg-status # local cache directory. publishstaticweb.py may delete it and its # contents. The value is passed through the python functions # os.path.expanduser and os.path.expandvars, so references to home # directories of the form ~ or ~user at the beginning of the value and # environment variable references of the form $VAR or ${VAR} are # expanded. cachedir: /tmp/${LOGNAME}/treepkg-status-cache/%(build_host)s