Previously `ctrl+c` a `fab serve` wouldn't necessarily terminate the web server. Even if it does, re-using the command `fab serve` might result in the following error:
```
socket.error: [Errno 48] Address already in use
```
This fix manually creates a `TCPServer` with `allow_reuse_address` set to `True`, which solves this issue.
Tested on OS X 10.9.1.
`copy('', 'a/b.ext0', 'c/d.ext1')` is copying `a/b.ext0` into `c/d.ext1/b.ext0`
(creating folder `c/d.ext1` in the process) instead of `c/d.ext1`.
Bug introduced by e03cf3f517.
Previously pelican-quickstart would assume that the site it created for GitHub
Pages should be published to the gh-pages branch. This is correct for project
pages, but not correct for personal pages. Personal pages, which live in a
user's special username.github.io repository, are instead deployed to the
master branch. This means that if you did pelican-quickstart and tried to
publish your new personal site with make github you'd see nothing (or whatever
old pages site you had floating around in master).
ghp-import already supports publishing to different branches, so publishing
to the correct branch is just a matter of correct configuration and updating
the Makefile to pass the branch along to ghp-import. pelican-quickstart now
asks if the user wants to publish to GitHub Pages, and if so, asks if this
is a personal page and chooses the correct branch appropriately. I preferred
this approach to prompting for an arbitrary branch because I felt that
choosing the branch would feel more intimidating to someone using
pelican-quickstart for the first time.
This essentially ports changes I made to my personal pages site at
jculpon@82cae477a9e8712b90654f6432464369ebcc7ae5
Previously if you tried to mark an article as a draft by using a different
casing (for example, draft) you would get a warning when building:
`Unknown status Draft for file foo.md, skipping it.` This uses a
case-insensitive comparison when looking at article status instead. I
believe this behavior is a little easier for new Pelican users.
Fixes an intermittent devserver problem with directory urls
containing index.html (i.e. clean urls). It tries to send the
index.html file twice, resulting in a scrambled web page complete
with HTTP headers in the output, and sometimes Broken Pipe errors.
Including a binary wheel when uploading Pelican to PyPI will speed up
installation for the Pelican community. This change ensures that the
Pelican wheel is compatible with all supported Python versions. For more
information, see: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/wheel
publication time and date and the last modified time and date
independently.
This makes it possible to access the last updated date with {{ article.locale_modified }} in templates.
Additionally, an already delivered feed entry can be corrected by changing the modified date and time, as it is used for atom:update
/ rss pubDate field now.