Difference between revisions of "User:Dave/Squishy"
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* [[mediawikiwiki:Manual:Configuration settings|Manual:Configuration settings]] | * [[mediawikiwiki:Manual:Configuration settings|Manual:Configuration settings]] | ||
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+ | * [[mediawikiwiki:User:Al Maghi/Industrialization guide/Archive|Industrialization guide (Archive)]] | ||
+ | : [[mediawikiwiki:User:Al Maghi|User:Al Maghi]]'s [[mediawikiwiki:User:Al Maghi/Industrialization guide/Archive|Industrialization guide]] -- A guidebook to industrialize production of wikis running on MediaWiki engine. It describes the whole process, in 3 major steps: Installation, Configuration & Importation of basic-content. | ||
== MediaWiki Architecture == | == MediaWiki Architecture == |
Revision as of 12:32, 20 June 2011
Overview
- MediaWiki is wiki software, released under the GPL, that is used by Wikimedia projects and others. It is an implementation of a wiki, a content pool that anyone can freely edit. It is developed using MediaZilla (MediaWiki's version of BugZilla).
- Wikiversity's Wiki 101 page.
Installation
- User:Al Maghi's Industrialization guide -- A guidebook to industrialize production of wikis running on MediaWiki engine. It describes the whole process, in 3 major steps: Installation, Configuration & Importation of basic-content.
MediaWiki Architecture
- Basic info on how MediaWiki works.
- The current MySQL diagram for any MediaWiki version—with extensive comments—can be found in the maintenance/tables.sql file.
- Pages on a MediaWiki wiki are grouped into collections called "namespaces", which differentiate between the purpose of the pages at a high level. Pages in certain namespaces can also have special properties or behave differently when they interact with other pages.
- Another look at MediaWiki architecture provided by Science Commons.
- A PDF of Mark Bergsma's (Wikimedia Foundation) PowerPoint presentation on Wikimedia's global architecture. It includes lots of nice diagrams showing everything from basic MW architecture of a small LAMP installation to complex, load-balanced environments. Shows MediaWiki's scalability.
- There are many documents aiming at creating a formal representation of the MediaWiki markup and the parser behaviour. In this document all of these efforts are collected, discussed and coordinated.
Extensions
- Do particular features seen on another MediaWiki installation look like they may be useful to your project? You can glimpse at the specific extensions used, as well as the MediaWiki software version the site is using, by looking at Version under the Special namespace. For instance, here is Wikiversity's Special:Version page.
- A bit dated, but still useful.
- Provides LDAP authentication, and some authorization functionality for MediaWiki.
- Cite is an extension which allows a user to create footnotes. Cite includes several extensions which can be installed independently and operate independently of each other.
- The InputBox extension is a MediaWiki extension that adds already created HTML forms to wiki pages. Users can "complete" a form (entering text, selecting menu items, etc.) by entering text into the box.
- The CategoryTree extension provides a dynamic view of the wiki's category structure as a tree.
Semantic MediaWiki (and Related) Extensions
- Semantic MediaWiki and various of its spinoff extensions are also available in two different packages: SMW+ and Semantic Bundle.
- Semantic Bundle is a pre-packaged bundle of extensions for use with wikis that are based around the Semantic MediaWiki extension.
- SMW+ is a semantic enterprise Wiki for teams that need a human-readable and agile knowledge base for collaborating on rich text and data in their daily work.
SMW-based extensions included in Semantic Bundle are:
- Semantic Result Formats - defines many additional formats for SMW queries
- Semantic Forms - allows wiki administrators to create easy-to-use, domain-specific editing interfaces for their wiki
- Semantic Compound Queries - allows for displaying multiple queries at the same time
- Semantic Internal Objects - allows for storing compound, "n-ary" data on pages
- Semantic Drilldown - defines an easy browsing tool for the data set
- Semantic Maps - allows for using various map services to display semantic coordinate data and enter coordinates within forms
- Semantic Tasks - allows for sending reminder and notification emails to users for tasks
- Semantic Forms Inputs - provides additional input types for Semantic Forms
Other (non-SMW) extensions included in Semantic Bundle are:
- Admin Links - defines a special page that serves as a "control panel" for administrative tasks
- Approved Revs - allows for setting a single revision of any page as the "approved" one; the approved revision's data is stored by SMW
- ArrayExtension - defines useful parser functions for manipulating arrays
- Data Transfer - allows importing data into and out of the wiki via XML and CSV formats
- ConfirmEdit - enables blocking spam-bots using CAPTCHA tools
- External Data - allows for displaying data from outside APIs in the wiki
- Header Tabs - allows to convert top-level sections of the page into tabs; often used with Semantic Forms to make long forms more user-friendly
- Maps - allows for displaying individual points and geocoding addresses using various map services; required by Semantic Maps
- Page Object Model (POM) - a code library that helps extension and bot developers manipulate parts of structured wiki text easily using a model similar to the W3C DOM. It is also a MediaWiki API extension to perform such modifications remotely.
- ParserFunctions - adds useful parser functions for programming logic and string manipulation
- Replace Text - provides a form for administrators to do a text search-and-replace across the wiki
- Validator - parameter-handling framework for MediaWiki and extensions; required by both Maps and Semantic Maps
- Widgets - allows adding widgets to wiki by simply creating pages in the "Widget:" namespace
- The Halo extension is an extension to Semantic MediaWiki (SMW) and has been developed as a part of Project Halo in order to facilitate the use of Semantic Wikis for a large community of users. Main focus of the development was to create tools that increase the ease of use of SMW features and advertise the immediate benefits of semantically enriched content. Halo and related extensions are both available as stand alone packages and as a pre-packaged bundle (called SMW+), which can be deployed immediately.
- This extension extends the RDF import and export functionality in Semantic MediaWiki by providing import of arbitrary RDF triples (not only OWL ontologies, as was the case before), and a SPARQL endpoint that allows write operations.
- From Article: "The original use case behind the RDFIO Semantic MediaWiki Extension (developed as part of Google Summer of Code 2010) was to hook up SMW with Bioclipse. It is now for the first time possible to add and remove SMW facts from inside Bioclipse..."
Miscellaneous
Interwiki
- Interwiki database example: Special:Interwiki
- Interwiki map
- Help:Interwiki linking
- Manual:Configuration settings - Interwiki
- Extension:InterWiki
- This extension allows the InterWiki list in the database to be maintained from a list of entries in a file instead of running an update script or using a special page. This has the advantage of allowing a number of wikis installed on the same server to share the same interwiki list simplifying maintenance.