NAME

Text::Trac2GFM

SYNOPSIS

As a Perl library:

use Text::Trac2GFM qw( trac2gfm gfmtitle );

# GitLab Wiki compatible title: 'api-users-and-accounts'
my $gitlab_wiki_title = gfmtitle('API/Users & Accounts');

my $gfm_page = trac2gfm($tracwiki_markup);

Using the included trac2gfm command line program:

$ trac2gfm <path to tracwiki file>

Or piped to STDIN:

$ cat <trac wiki file> | trac2gfm

DESCRIPTION

This module provides functions which ease the migration of TracWiki formatted wikis (or any other content, such as ticket descriptions, which use TracWiki markup) to GitLab projects using GitLab Flavored Markdown (GFM).

For the most part, this module assumes that your input TracWiki text is fairly well-formed and valid. Some concessions are made for whitespace in markup that may not be optional in TracWiki, but which we can reliably treat as such. However, blatant violations such as an opening {{{ for a pre-formatted code block that is never followed by a closing }}} will break your output. Similar breakage can occur with horribly mis-nested emphasis markup, or wildly malformed links.

If your TracWiki markup renders properly on a Trac wiki, this module should convert it correctly (barring any special exceptions noted below). If it does not, please file a bug (or better yet, submit a patch)!

EXPORTED FUNCTIONS

This module does not export any functions by default. You must select the ones you wish you use explicitly during module import. The following functions are available for importing:

trac2gfm ($markup, $options)

Provided a scalar containing TracWiki markup, returns a scalar containing GFM compliant markup. As many markup features as can be converted are, but please note that GitLab-flavored Markdown does not support absolutely everything that TracWiki does.

An optional (though important) hash reference of options may be provided as the second argument.

  • commits

    A hash containing the mappings for any repository changeset/commit references in your wiki pages. This is crucial if you are migrating a project from Trac's Subversion module to a Gitlab project (which is, obviously, in Git). All of yuor SVN changesets will have been converted to Git commits. For this option, the keys are your original Subversion changeset numbers and the values are the new Git commit IDs (you may use the full hashes or the shortened ones). These mappings should be extracted from the output of the git svn clone command.

  • image_base

    A string with the base URL where any embedded or attached images are located. For Gitlab this will generally be https://<yourgitlabdomain>/<namespace>/<project>/uploads/<hash> where the domain, namespace, and project should hopefully be self-explanatory, and the hash is simply a randomized string. Note that this URL should map to the appropriate uploads directory on your Gitlab server where you have copied the images/attachments.

These options are used both for markup conversion as well as any necessary title rewriting, so in addition to the keys just mentioned, you will likely also need to pass in the options documented for gfmtitle below.

Things that do get converted:

  • Paragraphs (should have gone without saying)

  • Headings

  • Emphasis (bold, italic, and underline; including nesting)

  • Lists (numbered, bulleted, and lettered; latter being converted to bulleted)

  • Pre-formatted text and code blocks

  • Blockquotes

  • Links

  • TracLinks

    • Issues/Tickets

    • Changesets (including mapping SVN changeset numbers to Git commit IDs)

  • Image macross (for images on the current wiki page only)

  • Tables

Things that do not convert (at least not yet):

  • Definition Lists

  • Images from anywhere other than the current wiki page

  • Macros

gfmtitle ($title_string, $options)

Provided a single line string, $title_string, returns a variant suitable for use as the title of a GitLab Wiki page. Default mutations include replacement of all whitespace and disallowed characters with dashes along with a reduction to non-repeating kebab casing.

Some common technical terms that would otherwise render strangely within the restrictions of GFM titles are replaced with more verbose versions (e.g. 'C++' becomes 'c-plus-plus' instead of 'c-' as it would without special handling).

You may also pass in an optional hash reference containing the following options to override some of the default behavior:

  • downcase

    Defaults to true. Providing any false-y value will cause gfmtitle to retain the case of your input string, instead of lower-casing it.

  • unslash

    Defaults to true. Providing any false-y value will cause slashes (/) to be retained in the output, instead of converting them to dashes (-). Note that this can cause problems if you are committing your converted wiki pages into a local Git repository - special care will be needed to escape the retained slashes so that they are treated as part of the filename itself instead of as a directory separator.

  • terms

    Allows you to supply your own special term conversions, or override any default ones provided by this module. This is helpful in the event that your wiki uses words or phrases which are mangled in unfortunate ways. The keys of the hashref should be the terms (case-insensitive) as they appear in your wiki titles and the values should be the form to which they should be converted. For example, to keep a sane version of 'C++' in your wiki titles for GitLab (where the plus sign is not allowed), you might do:

    gfmtitle('Languages/C++', { terms => { 'c++' => 'c-plus-plus' } });

LIMITATIONS

This module makes a few concessions to sloppiness (and tolerated, though not official, markup), but for the most part it assumes your source content in the TracWiki markup is generally well-formed and valid.

Tables

Tables, specifically, will face known limitations in their conversion. GFM tables do not support row or column spanning, and cannot handle multi-line contents in the markup (the newline will terminate the current cell's content). As a result, complicated table markup from TracWiki pages will likely need to be hand-wrangled after the conversion.

In addition to the lack of spanning in GFM, this converter will base the cell alignment on the contents of the first row. While TracWiki markup allows each cell to have its own independent alignment, GFM tables set the alignment on a per-column basis using markup in the headers.

Headers are also mandatory in GFM tables, whereas they are optional in TracWiki. The first row of every TracWiki table will be used as the header in the GFM table, regardless of whether it included the ||=Foo=|| markup.

BUGS

There are no known bugs at the time of this release. There may well be some misfeatures, though.

Please report any bugs or deficiencies you may discover to the module's GitHub Issues page:

https://github.com/jsime/text-trac2gfm/issues

Pull requests are welcome.

AUTHORS

Jon Sime <jonsime@gmail.com>

LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT

This software is copyright (c) 2016 by Jon Sime.

This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See perlartistic.

This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.