aboutsummaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/doc/features.mdwn
blob: f63122edfa49726d5f5e2168c888efdabc7164b2 (plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
Some of ikiwiki's features:

* [[Subversion]]

  Rather than implement its own system for storing page histories etc,
  ikiwiki simply uses subversion. (Supporting other revision control
  systems is also possible, ikiwiki only needs $FOO add, $FOO commit, and
  $FOO log).

  Instead of editing pages in a stupid web form, you can use vim and commit
  changes via svn. Or work disconnected using svk and push your changes out
  when you come online.

  ikiwiki can be run from a [[post-commit]] hook to update your wiki
  immediately whenever you commit.

  Note that ikiwiki does not require subversion to function. If you want to
  run a simple wiki without page history, it can do that too.

* [[MarkDown]]

  ikiwiki supports pages using [[MarkDown]] as their markup language. Any
  page with a filename ending in ".mdwn" is converted from markdown to html
  by ikiwiki. Markdown understands text formatted as it would be in an email,
  and is quite smart about converting it to html. The only additional markup
  provided by ikiwiki aside from regular markdown is the [[WikiLink]] and 
  [[PreprocessorDirective]]

* support for other file types

  ikiwiki also supports files of any other type, including raw html, text,
  images, etc. These are not converted to wiki pages, they are just copied
  unchanged by ikiwiki as it builds your wiki. So you can check in an image,
  program, or other special file and link to it from your wiki pages.

* [[SubPage]]s

  Arbitrarily deep hierarchies of pages with fairly simple and useful [[SubPage/LinkingRules]]

* [[blog]]s

  You can turn any page in the wiki into a [[blog]]. Pages with names 
  matching a specified [[GlobList]] will be displayed as a weblog within
  the blog page. And an RSS feed can be generated to follow the blog.

  Ikiwikit's own [[TODO]] and [[news]] pages are good examples of some of
  the flexible ways that this can be used.

* Fast compiler

  ikiwiki is fast and smart about updating a wiki, it only builds pages
  that have changed (and tracks things like creation of new pages and links
  that can indirectly cause a page to need a rebuild)

* valid html and css

  ikiwiki aims to produce 
  [valid XHTML 1.0](http://validator.w3.org/check?url=referer).
  ikiwiki generates html using [[templates]], and uses css, so you can 
  change the look and layout of all pages in any way you would like.

* [[BackLinks]]

  Automatically included on pages. Rather faster than eg MoinMoin and
  always there to help with navigation.

* [[PageHistory]]

  Well, sorta. Rather than implementing YA history browser, it can link to
  [[ViewCVS]] or the link to browse the history of a wiki page.

* [[RecentChanges]], editing pages in a web browser

  Nearly the definition of a wiki, although perhaps ikiwiki challenges how
  much of that web gunk a wiki really needs. These features are optional
  and can be enabled by enabling [[CGI]].

* User registration

  Can optionally be configured to allow only registered users to post
  pages; online user registration form, etc.

* Discussion pages

  Thanks to subpages, every page can easily and automatically have a
  /Discussion subpage. By default, these links are included in the
  [[templates]] for each page.

* Smart merging and conflict resolution in your web browser

  Since it uses subversion, ikiwiki takes advantage of its smart merging to
  avoid any conflicts when two people edit different parts of the same page
  at the same time. No annoying warnings about other editors, or locking,
  etc, instead the other person's changes will be automatically merged with
  yours when you commit.

  In the rare cases where automatic merging fails due to the same part of a
  page being concurrently edited, regular subversion commit markers are
  shown in the file to resolve the conflict, so if you're already familiar
  with that there's no new commit marker syntax to learn.

  For all the gory details of how ikiwiki handles this behind the scenes,
  see [[commit-internals]].

* page locking

  Wiki admins can lock pages so that only other admins can edit them.

* Full text search

  ikiwiki can use the [[HyperEstraier]] search engine to add powerful
  full text search capabilities to your wiki.

* Commit mails

  ikiwiki can be configured to send you commit mails with diffs of changes
  to selected pages.

* [[Plugins]]

  A plugin system allows extending ikiwiki in arbitrary ways.

----

It also has some [[TODO]] items and [[Bugs]].