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.
OBS *among others* need to copy files from the build folder to the
package folder.
With the old version, that wasn't possible, as it would try to install the software in the worker folder,
of course something denied on public instances.
Adding $(DESTDIR) before all paths ensure that you can install to another folder
* Use `git clone` directly during clone (#289, #323)
* Fix compatibility bug with Git completions (#318, #321)
* Support relative paths for --yadm-* and -w (#301)
* Improve parsing of if-statement in default template (#303)
* Read files without running cat in subshells (#317)
* Improve portability of updating read-only files (#320)
* Various code improvements (#306, #307, #311)
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.