Changes between Version 1 and Version 2 of TracLinks
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- 03/02/09 17:14:09 (18 months ago)
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TracLinks
v1 v2 1 1 = Trac Links = 2 [[TracGuideToc]] 3 2 4 TracLinks are a fundamental feature of Trac, because they allow easy hyperlinking between the various entities in the system—such as tickets, reports, changesets, Wiki pages, milestones, and source files—from anywhere WikiFormatting is used. 3 5 … … 5 7 number, name or path of the item) though some frequently used kinds of items 6 8 also have short-hand notations. 9 10 == Where to use TracLinks == 11 You can use TracLinks in: 12 13 * Source code (Subversion) commit messages 14 * Wiki pages 15 * Full descriptions for tickets, reports and milestones 16 17 and any other text fields explicitly marked as supporting WikiFormatting. 7 18 8 19 Some examples: … … 10 21 * Ticket comments: '''!comment:ticket:1:2''' 11 22 * Reports: '''!{1}''' or '''!report:1''' 12 * Changesets: '''!r1''', '''![1]''', '''!changeset:1''' or (restricted) '''![1/trunk]''', '''!changeset:1/trunk''' 23 * Changesets: '''!r1''', '''![1]''', '''!changeset:1''' or (restricted) '''![1/trunk]''', '''!changeset:1/trunk''', '''![2:5/trunk]''' 13 24 * Revision log: '''!r1:3''', '''![1:3]''' or '''!log:@1:3''', '''!log:trunk@1:3''' 14 25 * Diffs (requires [milestone:0.10 0.10]): '''!diff:@1:3''', '''!diff:tags/trac-0.9.2/wiki-default//tags/trac-0.9.3/wiki-default''' or '''!diff:trunk/trac@3538//sandbox/vc-refactoring@3539''' 15 26 * Wiki pages: '''!CamelCase''' or '''!wiki:CamelCase''' 27 * Parent page: '''![..]''' 16 28 * Milestones: '''!milestone:1.0''' 17 29 * Attachment: '''!attachment:ticket:944:attachment.1073.diff''' … … 23 35 * Ticket comments: comment:ticket:1:2 24 36 * Reports: {1} or report:1 25 * Changesets: r1, [1], changeset:1, or (restricted) [1/trunk], changeset:1/trunk 37 * Changesets: r1, [1], changeset:1, or (restricted) [1/trunk], changeset:1/trunk, [2:5/trunk] 26 38 * Revision log: r1:3, [1:3] or log:@1:3, log:trunk@1:3 27 39 * Diffs (requires [milestone:0.10 0.10]): diff:@20:30, diff:tags/trac-0.9.2/wiki-default//tags/trac-0.9.3/wiki-default or diff:trunk/trac@3538//sandbox/vc-refactoring/trac@3539 28 40 * Wiki pages: CamelCase or wiki:CamelCase 41 * Parent page: '''[..]''' 29 42 * Milestones: milestone:1.0 30 43 * Attachment: attachment:ticket:944:attachment.1073.diff … … 47 60 Display: [ticket:1 This is a link to ticket number one]. 48 61 49 If the title is beomitted, only the id (the part after the colon) is displayed:62 If the title is omitted, only the id (the part after the colon) is displayed: 50 63 51 64 {{{ … … 65 78 TracLinks are a very simple idea, but actually allow quite a complex network of information. In practice, it's very intuitive and simple to use, and we've found the "link trail" extremely helpful to better understand what's happening in a project or why a particular change was made. 66 79 67 The following sections describe the individual link types in detail, as well as several notes advanced usage of links. 68 69 == attachment: links == 70 71 The link syntax for attachments is as follows: 72 * !attachment:the_file.txt creates a link to the attachment the_file.txt of the current object 73 * !attachment:wiki:MyPage:the_file.txt creates a link to the attachment the_file.txt of the !MyPage wiki page 74 * !attachment:ticket:753:the_file.txt creates a link to the attachment the_file.txt of the ticket 753 75 76 == source: links == 77 78 The default behavior for a source:/some/path link is to open the directory browser 79 if the path points to a directory and otherwise open the log view. 80 It's also possible to link directly to a specific revision of a file like this: source:/some/file@123 81 or like this to link to the latest revision: source:/some/file@latest. 82 If the revision is specified, one can even link to a specific line number: source:/some/file@123#L10 83 84 == search: and query: links == 85 86 See TracSearch#SearchLinks and TracQuery#UsingTracLinks 87 88 == !SubWiki links == 89 To create a SubWiki link to a SubWiki-page just use a '/': 90 {{{ 91 [wiki:WikiPage/SubWikiPage]. 92 }}} 93 94 == InterWiki links == 80 81 == Advanced use of TracLinks == 82 83 === Relative links === 84 85 To create a link to a specific anchor in a page, use '#': 86 {{{ 87 [#Relativelinks relative links] 88 }}} 89 Displays: 90 [#Relativelinks relative links] 91 92 Hint: when you move your mouse over the title of a section, a '¶' character will be displayed. This is a link to that specific section and you can use this to copy the `#...` part inside a relative link to an anchor. 93 94 To create a link to a SubWiki-page just use a '/': 95 {{{ 96 WikiPage/SubWikiPage or ./SubWikiPage 97 }}} 98 99 To link from a SubWiki page to a parent, simply use a '..': 100 {{{ 101 [..] 102 }}} 103 104 To link from a SubWiki page to a sibling page, use a '../': 105 {{{ 106 [../Sibling see next sibling] 107 }}} 108 109 ''(Changed in 0.11)'' Note that in Trac 0.10, using e.g. `[../newticket]` may have worked for linking to the /newticket top-level URL, but now in 0.11 it will stay in the wiki namespace and link to a sibling page. See [#Server-relativelinks] for the new syntax. 110 111 === InterWiki links === 95 112 96 113 Other prefixes can be defined freely and made to point to resources in other Web applications. The definition of those prefixes as well as the URLs of the corresponding Web applications is defined in a special Wiki page, the InterMapTxt page. Note that while this could be used to create links to other Trac environments, there's a more specialized way to register other Trac environments which offers greater flexibility. 97 114 98 == InterTrac links == 99 100 Any of the above form of Trac links could be written in one Trac environment and actually refer to resources present in another Trac environment, provided the Trac link is prefixed by the name of that other Trac environment followed by a colon. That other Trac environment must be registered. See InterTrac for details. 101 102 103 == Server-relative links == 104 105 It is often useful to be able to link to objects on your server that have no built-in 106 Trac linking mechanism, such as static resources, a `/register` page, etc. This 107 can be achieved by simply using either an absolute path from the server root, 108 or a relative link from the URL of the current page: 109 110 {{{ 111 [../newticket newticket] 115 === InterTrac links === 116 117 This can be seen as a kind of InterWiki link specialized for targeting other Trac projects. 118 119 Any type of Trac links could be written in one Trac environment and actually refer to resources present in another Trac environment, provided the Trac link is prefixed by the name of that other Trac environment followed by a colon. That other Trac environment must be registered, under its name or an alias. See InterTrac for details. 120 121 A distinctive advantage of InterTrac links over InterWiki links is that the shorthand form of Trac links usually have a way to understand the InterTrac prefixes. For example, links to Trac tickets can be written #T234 (if T was set as an alias for Trac), links to Trac changesets can be written [trac 1508]. 122 123 === Server-relative links === 124 125 It is often useful to be able to link to objects in your project that 126 have no built-in Trac linking mechanism, such as static resources, `newticket`, 127 a shared `/register` page on the server, etc. 128 129 To link to resources inside the project, use either an absolute path from the project root, 130 or a relative link from the URL of the current page (''Changed in 0.11''): 131 132 {{{ 133 [/newticket Create a new ticket] 112 134 [/ home] 113 135 }}} 114 136 115 Display: [../newticket newticket] [/ home] 116 117 == Quoting space in TracLinks == 137 Display: [../newticket newticket][[comment(FIXME that's the 0.10 syntax)]] [/ home] 138 139 To link to another location on the server (outside the project), use the '//location' link syntax (''Changed in 0.11''): 140 141 {{{ 142 [//register Register Here] 143 }}} 144 145 Display: [//register Register Here] 146 147 === Quoting space in TracLinks === 118 148 119 149 Immediately after a TracLinks prefix, targets containing space characters should … … 125 155 * !attachment:"ticket:123:the file.txt" 126 156 127 == Where to use TracLinks == 128 You can use TracLinks in: 129 130 * Source code (Subversion) commit messages 131 * Wiki pages 132 * Full descriptions for tickets, reports and milestones 133 134 and any other text fields explicitly marked as supporting WikiFormatting. 135 136 == Escaping Links == 157 === Escaping Links === 137 158 138 159 To prevent parsing of a !TracLink, you can escape it by preceding it with a '!' (exclamation mark). … … 146 167 ![42] is not a link either. 147 168 169 170 === Parameterized Trac links === 171 172 The Trac links target Trac resources which have generally more than one way to be rendered, according to some extra parameters. For example, a Wiki page can accept a `version` or a `format` parameter, a report can make use of dynamic variables, etc. 173 174 Any Trac links can support an arbitrary set of parameters, written in the same way as they would be for the corresponding URL. Some examples: 175 - `wiki:WikiStart?format=txt` 176 - `ticket:1?version=1` 177 - `[/newticket?component=module1 create a ticket for module1]` 178 179 180 == TracLinks Reference == 181 The following sections describe the individual link types in detail, as well as several notes advanced usage of links. 182 183 === attachment: links === 184 185 The link syntax for attachments is as follows: 186 * !attachment:the_file.txt creates a link to the attachment the_file.txt of the current object 187 * !attachment:wiki:MyPage:the_file.txt creates a link to the attachment the_file.txt of the !MyPage wiki page 188 * !attachment:ticket:753:the_file.txt creates a link to the attachment the_file.txt of the ticket 753 189 190 === query: links === 191 192 See TracQuery#UsingTracLinks and [#ticket:links]. 193 194 === search: links === 195 196 See TracSearch#SearchLinks 197 198 === ticket: links === 199 200 Besides the obvious `ticket:id` form, it is also possible to specify a list of tickets or even a range of tickets instead of the `id`. This generates a link to a custom query view containing this fixed set of tickets. 201 202 Example: 203 - `ticket:5000-6000` 204 - `ticket:1,150` 205 206 ''(since Trac 0.11)'' 207 208 === timeline: links === 209 210 Links to the timeline can be created by specifying a date in the ISO:8601 format. The date can be optionally followed by a time specification. The time is interpreted as being UTC time, but alternatively you can specify your local time, followed by your timezone if you don't want to compute the UTC time. 211 212 Examples: 213 - `timeline:2008-01-29` 214 - `timeline:2008-01-29T15:48` 215 - `timeline:2008-01-29T16:48Z+01` 216 217 ''(since Trac 0.11)'' 218 219 === wiki: links === 220 221 See WikiPageNames and [#QuotingspaceinTracLinks quoting space in TracLinks] above. 222 223 === Version Control related links === 224 ==== source: links ==== 225 226 The default behavior for a source:/some/path link is to open the directory browser 227 if the path points to a directory and otherwise open the log view. 228 229 It's also possible to link directly to a specific revision of a file like this: 230 - `source:/some/file@123` - link to the file's revision 123 231 - `source:/some/file@head` - link explicitly to the latest revision of the file 232 233 If the revision is specified, one can even link to a specific line number: 234 - `source:/some/file@123#L10` 235 - `source:/tag/0.10@head#L10` 236 237 Finally, one can also highlight an arbitrary set of lines: 238 - `source:/some/file@123:10-20,100,103#L99` - highlight lines 10 to 20, and lines 100 and 103. 239 ''(since 0.11)'' 240 241 ==== export: links ==== 242 243 To force the download of a file in the repository, as opposed to displaying it in the browser, use the `export` link. Several forms are available: 244 * `export:/some/file` - get the HEAD revision of the specified file 245 * `export:123:/some/file` - get revision 123 of the specified file 246 * `export:/some/file@123` - get revision 123 of the specified file 247 248 This can be very useful for displaying HTML documentation with correct stylesheets and images, in case that has been checked in the repository. 249 250 If the path is to a directory in the repository instead of a specific file, the source browser will be used to display the directory (identical to the result of `source:/some/dir`. 251 252 ==== log: links ==== 253 254 The `log:` links are used to display revision ranges. In its simplest form, it can link to the latest revisions from the specified path, but it can also support displaying an arbitrary set of revisions. 255 - `log:/` - the latest revisions starting at the root of the repository 256 - `log:/trunk/tools` - the latest revisions in `trunk/tools` 257 - `log:/trunk/tools@10000` - the revisions in `trunk/tools` starting from revision 10000 258 - `log:@20788,20791:20795` - list revision 20788 and the 20791 to 20795 revision range 259 - `log:/trunk/tools@20788,20791:20795` - list revision 20788 and the revisions from the 20791 to 20795 range which affect the given path 260 261 There are short forms for revision ranges as well: 262 - `[20788,20791:20795]` 263 - `[20788,20791:20795/trunk/tools]` 264 - `r20791:20795` (but not `r20788,20791:20795` nor `r20791:20795/trunk`) 265 266 Finally, note that in all of the above, a revision range can be written indifferently `x:y` or `x-y`. 267 148 268 ---- 149 269 See also: WikiFormatting, TracWiki, WikiPageNames, InterTrac, InterWiki
