Both sides previous revisionPrevious revisionNext revision | Previous revision |
web_content_management [2025/02/21 01:03] – [CMS and Wiki Options That Only Require ARPA Membership] peteyboy | web_content_management [2025/03/07 18:08] (current) – [CMS and Wiki Options That Only Require ARPA Membership] add that pmwiki requires shell work for config peteyboy |
---|
| |
| |
I have tried several freely available CMS and wiki packages, and have determined the following ones can be installed in your user ''html'' space and work, as long as you have at least an ARPA membership. Each has certain strengths and weakenesses, and some are designed to be more multi-user, allowing you to have individual contributors that don't need SDF shell accounts. All are designed to allow you to create content from the website itself, not requiring you to log in to your shell account to add or modify content, and to give you an interface that doesn't require you to author content directly in HTML, and to give you templates to give your web site a cohesive look. | I have tried several freely available web [[wp>Content Management System]] (CMS) and [[wp>wiki]] packages, and have determined the following ones can be installed in your user ''html'' space and work, as long as you have at least an ARPA membership. Each has certain strengths and weakenesses, and some are designed to be more multi-user, allowing you to have individual contributors that don't need SDF shell accounts. All are designed to allow you to create content from the website itself, not requiring you to log in to your shell account to add or modify content, and to give you an interface that doesn't require you to author content directly in HTML, and to give you templates to give your web site a cohesive look. |
| |
The packages listed here also use the regular file system for storage, so an SDF DBA membership is not required for them to work. There are even more CMSs and wikis, not listed below (Drupal, for example) that do require a database. | The packages listed here also use the regular file system for storage, so an SDF DBA membership is not required for them to work. There are even more web CMSs and wikis, not listed below (Drupal, for example) that do require a database. |
| |
| |
* Typesetter CMS: https://github.com/Typesetter/Typesetter Very nice, multi-user, great UI for page design, cool templates. It used to have its own website, but that looks to be abandoned, leaving the github page. You may need look at the PHP 5.1 update fork... | * Typesetter CMS: https://github.com/Typesetter/Typesetter Very nice, multi-user, great UI for page design, cool templates. It used to have its own website, but that looks to be abandoned, leaving the github page. You may need look at the PHP 5.1 update fork... |
* GetSimple CMS: https://getsimple-ce.ovh/ Very straightforward. Single admin user. Looks bulletproof | * GetSimple CMS: https://getsimple-ce.ovh/ Very straightforward. Single admin user. Looks bulletproof |
* Flatpress CMS: https://www.flatpress.org/ A flat-file verison of wordpress that you can set up in your own web folder! Fewer features, but fully yours to control. You can use [[https://wiki.flatpress.org/doc:plugins:bbcode| BBCode]] as markup, or [[https://wiki.flatpress.org/res:plugins:markdown |Markdown]] via plugins if you like. Many templates for your site. Single admin user, though. | * Flatpress CMS: https://www.flatpress.org/ A flat-file version of wordpress that you can set up in your own web folder! Fewer features, but fully yours to control. You can use [[https://wiki.flatpress.org/doc:plugins:bbcode| BBCode]] as markup, or [[https://wiki.flatpress.org/res:plugins:markdown |Markdown]] via plugins if you like. Many templates for your site. Single admin user, though. |
| * PivotX CMS: https://github.com/pivotx A nice flat-file CMS that I have been using since 2016. Active development [[https://web.archive.org/web/20210923190203/http://blog.pivotx.net/2017-03-22/pivotx-development-has-ended | ended in 2017]] but it has been in maintenance mode, and honestly still works quite well. Supports multiple admin users and editors, has lots of (dated, but nice) templates for your site. |
* Wikis | * Wikis |
* DokuWiki: https://dokuwiki.org Used at SDF, right here on this wiki [[start]], and is the front page of https://sdfeu.org It's a fine wiki, easy configuration, re-skinning and extension-adding using the UI Configuration Manager. Has many cool skins, and several decent Responsive Design skins that look good. Has editing buttons to make it so you don't need to know the markup well to use, but also the markup is pretty standardish. | * DokuWiki: https://dokuwiki.org Used at SDF, right here on this wiki [[start]], and is the front page of https://sdfeu.org It's a fine wiki, easy configuration, re-skinning and extension-adding using the UI Configuration Manager. Has many cool skins, and several decent Responsive Design skins that look good. Has editing buttons to make it so you don't need to know the markup well to use, but also the markup is pretty standardish. |
* PmWiki: https://pmwiki.org super low resources, easy to extend with cookbooks. Lots of skins, but just a handful of Responsive Design skins. Easy to turn WikiWords back on so it can be a classic quick-to-author wiki experience. Can use Creole markup vs the default, note that its markup is very old school and likely not what you're used to, but you can turn on editing buttons like dokuwiki has by default, too. | * PmWiki: https://pmwiki.org super low resources (only 5MB on disk!), easy to extend with cookbooks. Lots of skins, but just a handful of Responsive Design skins. Configuration,skinning and extension requires copying files and editing a config file in shell. Easy to turn WikiWords back on so it can be a classic quick-to-author wiki experience. Can use Creole markup vs the default, note that pmwiki's native markup is very old school (! and !! for headings, vs <nowiki>==</nowiki>) and likely not what you're used to, but you can turn on editing buttons like dokuwiki has by default, too. |
| |
| ==== CMS and Wiki Options That Only Require USER Membership ==== |
| * Content Management Systems (CMS) |
| * mainly this would be the shell (ksh, zsh, bash, etc), though other tools like ''awk(1)'', ''rcs(1)'', ''db(1)'', or ''sqlite3(1)'' can be used to "roll your own" CMS. |
| * Wikis |
| * %%AwkiAwki%%: http://awkiawki.bogosoft.com An AWK-based wiki! Written as a stripped down clone of Ward Cunningham's original wiki engine, %%AwkiAwki%% has built-in support for RCS-based versioning, write-protection, theming via CSS, and basic HTML formatting. Being AWK-based, %%AwkiAwki%% is very easy to extend in functionality. |