Spring is hate...

Blog + Wiki + PHP = PhpBliki

[Sorry, I'm a bit late for the French to English Translation]
Writing free software has much to do with the process of itchification (apologies to M. Revell).
What is a Blog? What is a Wiki? Well... a Bliki is a Blog AND a Wiki system. The very first Bliki system was Vanilla, written in REBOL by Chris Langreiter.
Being interested by TiddlyWiki, I've tried to find out a simple Weblog / Wiki CMS on a LAMP-based server (Where "P" stands for PHP). Unfortunately, I didn't find a *simple* solution. Blog CMS have Wiki plugins, and using a Wiki as a blog is usually cheating with the WikiNameRules.

Hence, spending a few hours of my precious free-time[1], I've written PhpBliki, an easy-to-use, lightweight and straightforward Bliki System. It's being distributed as Free Software and released under the BSD License.
You may download its version 1.0 from its home page.

Since it's functional (IMHO), it's not completely finished, so I have to warn you.

  • PhpBliki doesn't handle revisions yet. Hence, if you edit an article, the former version will be erased.
  • PhpBliki doesn't manage users yet. Anyone can edit or add articles. Hence, it might be spammed or vandalised really easily. I highly recommend not to deploy PhpBliki in a professionnal / working environment.
  • The install script wipes *everything* out, without asking for confirmation or anything. You've been warned, don't tell me you've lost the whole wiki stuff. When you're done with install, it's safer to remove this file from the webserver so it can't be launched for evil purposes.

3 Oct. 2005 - 21:31, par Xalior

You've got a dangling footnote.

-Dx


Toutes les balises HTML seront supprimées.
Tu peux ajouter des liens comme suit :
J'ajoute [a http://exemple.com "un joli lien"]
Tu peux aussi mettre *en gras* ou {en italique}.