Hi Arlen, Thanks for your work on this. I'm new to TiddlyServer but I have used node on windows. I am trying to figure out if my data folders should be under the webroot folder. Like webroot\mywiki. And if I was using a single html file wiki would that go inside webroot? Lastly, is it using a specific port?
Thanks On Wednesday, September 4, 2019 at 2:47:01 PM UTC-7, Arlen Beiler wrote: > > Hello everyone, TiddlyServer 2.1 is finally here. I believe it's stable > and I've gotten most of the bugs worked out. I specifically tested > single-file saving (which I've gotten a lot of bug reports about lately) > and I'm pleased to say that is working as well. Please continue making > suggestions. I really appreciate your input. > > As usual, I forgot exactly one thing (why is it always one thing). The > Readme in the release version says if upgrading from 2.0 you should run > upgrade-settings.js. That might work, but it's probably better to just > start fresh by copying example-settings.json and just copy and paste the > tree property over from your old settings.json file. > > This page is the one you should follow for upgrading: > https://arlen22.github.io/tiddlyserver/docs/gettingstarted.html > > The release page is here: > https://github.com/Arlen22/TiddlyServer/releases/tag/2.1.3. The rest of > this is what I wrote on the release page. > > You might not see much difference on the surface, but underneath a lot has > changed. A lot of the changes center around the server config and the tree > specification, both of which have seriously improved. You still have to > write JSON, but the error messages are quite a bit clearer, especially if > you have valid JSON text, but an incorrect setting or property name. > > The tree has been reworked to allow group and folder level customizations. > We don't match the path on disk, but if you specify it in the tree you can > customize the backup settings, specify which users can access the folder, > and change the put saver settings for that part of the tree. We've also > added index options for groups and folders, so you can customize the > directory page. > > The simple things are still there just like before. > > - Serve and save single-file wikis. You can also disable this feature > or restrict which users can use it. > - Serve and modify data folder wikis. Now with WebSocket support. > - Serve files and folders anywhere on disk and organize them into > virtual folders (called groups). > - Did you know you can specify the path to a file directly in the > tree? Any path can specify a file or folder, even as the root of the tree, > but I don't know why you would serve one file. > > The more advanced features include > > - Cookie-based login, which replaces basic auth. > - Advanced routing tree customization, including access restrictions > and index pages for groups. > - Flexible options to specify the IP addresses to bind to. > - Serving over HTTPS using the NodeJS HTTPS server implementation. > > It's all in the docs, which now has a home. Check it out at > https://arlen22.github.io/tiddlyserver/. They're definitely not > comprehensive, so feel free to ask if you aren't sure about something. > > A big thank you to every who has made suggestions and tested the betas. > TiddlyServer may not be done yet, but it wouldn't be what it is without > that feedback. > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "TiddlyWiki" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/tiddlywiki/31c66fae-22b0-471f-a8d7-3bb4feb43189%40googlegroups.com.

