previously the checks were explicit locations which does not work when
using something like nvm to manage node packages and versions.
this checks for the executable and sets the script variable LESSC to the
full path of the one found.
if none was found the make command will error.
this changes the release targets in the Makefile to use a subdirectory
of the format BINARYNAME_GITREV so extracting the archive results in a
single directory.
instead of updating it later. This is more correct behavior, prevents an
additional query, and ensures that potential collection-creation when
claiming posts also respects the default (which it didn't before).
Ref T675
Previously, the URL of the dynamically-added pinned post on a
single-user instance would include the username, causing the link to go
to a non-existent page. This fixes that.
This adds a new config value: `chorus` that signifies an instance is
more about the Reader view than individual blogs / writers. When
enabled, user navigation will show on all pages, including About,
Reader, and Privacy (ref T680).
It also uses different collection templates that keep the instance-wide
navigation at the top of the page, instead of the author's name --
again, branded more for the collective than the individual.
Ref T681
This adds a new editor template that strips away most of the
customization features in the default editor and includes only:
- publishing
- editing
- viewing word count
It also restricts publishing to a user's first collection, so it's
optimized for instances that only allow users to have a single
collection and don't use Drafts.
Ref T680 T677
This adds a new `wf_modesty` config option that removes the copious
mentions of WriteFreely in places like the About page and site
footers.
WriteFreely remains boastful and bumptious by default; but enabling
the modesty option will tone it down and likely lead to less confusion
among average users.
Ref T676
- This removes copy mentioning the Blogs page, which isn't used on
single-user instances
- This fixes the "Start writing" link, which on a single-user instance
would've gone to the blog index, rather than the editor