The base path being optional in the Caddyfile is convenient when you just want the whole site to be markdown-enabled. The other change is to always generate links... this is because an index page for markdown files may not be statically generated, but it should still show links. Commit 09341fc was a regression, and this fixes it.
Merged config and app packages into one called caddy. Abstracted away caddy startup functionality making it easier to embed Caddy in any Go application and use it as a library. Graceful restart (should) now ensure child starts properly. Now piping a gob bundle to child process so that the child can match up inherited listeners to server address. Much cleanup still to do.
These tests with the backslash seem to assert that shlex (our Unix shell parsing library) is working properly, not our wrapper function (that parses commands for both Windows and non-Windows). These tests break on Windows so I have removed them.
"A receive from a closed channel returns the zero value immediately"
Close the tickerChan in the calling function, this causes "case <-c" to
unblock immediately, ending the goroutine and stopping the ticker.
Most of the Windows test failures are due to the path separator not being "/". The general approach I took here was to keep paths in "URL form" (ie using "/" separators) as much as possible, and only convert to native paths when we attempt to open a file. This will allow the most consistency between different host OS. For example, data structures that store paths still store them with "/" delimiters. Functions that accepted paths as input and return them as outputs still use "/".
There are still a few test failures that need to be sorted out.
- config/setup/TestRoot (I hear this has already been fixed by someone else)
- middleware/basicauth/TestBrowseTemplate and middleware/templates/Test (a line endings issue that I'm still working through)
... I think. Submitting as PR to double-check. This change changes file mod times on the testdata to ensure they are not all the same so that the sort is predictable!