On Mon, Apr 07, 2008 at 05:38:48PM +0100, Richard W.M. Jones wrote:
On Mon, Apr 07, 2008 at 11:47:37AM -0400, Daniel Veillard wrote:
> My previous experience hosting a Wiki on
xmlsoft.org (a.k.a.
libvirt.org)
> has been rather painful, admitedly that was a few years ago ...
> I'm not sure what's the best way, hosting yet another wiki or reusing
> an existing one.
Wikis, as you point out, require active management.
I'm running several low-traffic OCaml wikis (might as well advertise
them:
http://ocaml-tutorial.org/ and
http://cocan.org/) with
reasonable success. We require authenticated email addresses for all
editing, a diff of all edits are CC'd daily to subscribers, and we
have people who act as editors for particular pages / sections of the
wiki.
This has controlled spam reasonably successfully. One Ubuntu
developer who shall remain nameless turned out to have a sideline in
blackhat "SEO" (wiki spamming) and actually signed up with his valid
email address to spam the wiki. This was spotted almost instantly and
he was kicked off. We had another case where someone signed up using
http://mailinator.com and set up a
http://bugmenot.com account which
we also found quickly and eliminated. The daily emailed diffs of the
whole wiki, plus the ability to roll back a day, basically make any
long-term wiki spam impossible to carry out (or so we think ...[1])
The benefits of all this management can be useful, user-driven
resources, and _if_ carefully structured and edited, this can be
better than Google + mailing lists or asking the same questions over
and over on IRC.
Well if you have maintainance experience, why not ... except
libvirt.org
is a RHEL-4 box, i.e. not the easiest for bleeding edge stuff.
if you feel this is reasonnable, and won't waste too much time, I agree
this can be really useful too, I'm fine with the idea.
Daniel
--
Red Hat Virtualization group
http://redhat.com/virtualization/
Daniel Veillard | virtualization library
http://libvirt.org/
veillard(a)redhat.com | libxml GNOME XML XSLT toolkit
http://xmlsoft.org/
http://veillard.com/ | Rpmfind RPM search engine
http://rpmfind.net/