Category:ProWiki
|
- For the ProWiki wiki farm, see: Category: ProWiki (farm).
- For the community help wiki for ProWiki users, see: ProWikiCenter.
ProWiki development started in 2001 by Helmut Leitner as a fork from UseMod Wiki, and since then it is used for wiki community projects at WikiService.at. ProWiki became open source software, and GNU General Public License (GPL'ed) in March 2006, to make it even more widely available. ProWiki is Perl software that is called through Common Gateway Interface (CGI) by Apache or similar web server software. The process delivers web pages to clients, answering corresponding HTTP requests. Users interact with wiki site through their favourite web browsers.
- The file system is used to keep all data, no database is necessary;
- Revision control system (RCS) is used for page revisions (can be turned off, but this is not recommended);
- The crontab subsystem is used to schedule processes (optional);
- The sendmail interface is used to send e-mail notifications (optional).
Having a virtual server or a root server (LAMP) and administrative access (SSH), you need not worry about requirements. ProWiki is written with performance in mind. An old 1000 MHz / 256 MB PC can handle a hundred wiki systems and 3-5 million page requests per month easily.
Having a simple web-space, your are probably out of luck because you probably can't handle access rights and Apache configuration. Often there are additional restrictions with respect to available memory for programme execution or bandwidth, so it is not really worth the effort to try.
Of course you can install ProWiki independently from the internet, e.g. locally on your PC for personal information management (PIM) or on an intranet server as a communication platform for your organisation. Installation procedures do not change for these applications.
- Strengths of the ProWiki engine
- CamelCase and underline_linking link creation, but crucially not wikilinks;
- flexible wiki engine specialised for individual communities and application needs;
- a consistent and extendible architecture grown in a long non-GPL development period;
- a dedication to support active elements and editable active content (like Flash, SVG, Java) through the wiki interface;
- the ability to host, support, and moderate many wiki sites at multiple servers by cross-wiki abilities;
- multilingual interface languages, available in English, French, German, Hungarian, Russian, and Spanish.
- External links
- Comparison of ProWiki and MediaWiki — "use MediaWiki if you want to build an encyclopedia or dictionary", at ProWikiCenter
- Comparison of ProWiki and TWiki — "use TWiki if control and administration are your top priorities", at ProWikiCenter
- Comparison of ProWiki and TiddlyWiki — "use TiddlyWiki if you want to work offline", at ProWikiCenter
- Comparison of ProWiki and MoinMoin — "don't use MoinMoin, it has lost direction", at ProWikiCenter
Note: the above quotes are attributable to Helmut Leitner[1]
- View a detailed feature list of ProWiki on the WikiMatrix wiki engine comparison wiki-site.
- ProWiki download and installation — at ProWikiCenter
- Download latest version of ProWiki — from ProWiki2.org, via Archive.org
- ProWiki wiki engine — at SourceForge.net
The following wiki sites listed here on WikiIndex are, or were powered by the ProWiki wiki engine.
Subcategories
This category has the following 3 subcategories, out of 3 total.
Pages in category “ProWiki”
The following 45 pages are in this category, out of 45 total.
H
I
K
Media in category "ProWiki"
The following 2 files are in this category, out of 2 total.
- ProWikiLogo.JPG 109 × 102; 2 KB
- ProWikiLogos.JPG 99 × 100; 3 KB