NAME
CGI::Wiki - A toolkit for building Wikis.
DESCRIPTION
Helps you develop Wikis quickly by taking care of the boring bits for you. The aim is to allow different types of backend storage and search without you having to worry about the details.
NOTE FOR PEOPLE USING THE Search::InvertedIndex BACKEND
Version 0.33 adds the capability for fuzzy title matching to CGI::Wiki::Search::SII, but you will need to re-index all existing nodes in your wiki in order to take advantage of this (see the Changes file for how).
NOTE FOR PEOPLE USING POSTGRES
I added an index to the metadata table in version 0.31 - this really speeds up RecentChanges on larger wikis. See the Changes file for details on applying the index to existing databases. I've not done any benchmarks on MySQL and SQLite yet, so I'm leaving those alone for now.
SYNOPSIS
# Set up a wiki object with an SQLite storage backend, and an
# inverted index/DB_File search backend. This store/search
# combination can be used on systems with no access to an actual
# database server.
my $store = CGI::Wiki::Store::SQLite->new(
dbname => "/home/wiki/store.db" );
my $indexdb = Search::InvertedIndex::DB::DB_File_SplitHash->new(
-map_name => "/home/wiki/indexes.db",
-lock_mode => "EX" );
my $search = CGI::Wiki::Search::SII->new(
indexdb => $indexdb );
my $wiki = CGI::Wiki->new( store => $store,
search => $search );
# Do all the CGI stuff.
my $q = CGI->new;
my $action = $q->param("action");
my $node = $q->param("node");
if ($action eq 'display') {
my $raw = $wiki->retrieve_node($node);
my $cooked = $wiki->format($raw);
print_page(node => $node,
content => $cooked);
} elsif ($action eq 'preview') {
my $submitted_content = $q->param("content");
my $preview_html = $wiki->format($submitted_content);
print_editform(node => $node,
content => $submitted_content,
preview => $preview_html);
} elsif ($action eq 'commit') {
my $submitted_content = $q->param("content");
my $cksum = $q->param("checksum");
my $written = $wiki->write_node($node, $submitted_content, $cksum);
if ($written) {
print_success($node);
} else {
handle_conflict($node, $submitted_content);
}
}
METHODS
- new
-
# Set up store, search and formatter objects. my $store = CGI::Wiki::Store::SQLite->new( dbname => "/home/wiki/store.db" ); my $indexdb = Search::InvertedIndex::DB::DB_File_SplitHash->new( -map_name => "/home/wiki/indexes.db", -lock_mode => "EX" ); my $search = CGI::Wiki::Search::SII->new( indexdb => $indexdb ); my $formatter = My::HomeMade::Formatter->new; my $wiki = CGI::Wiki->new( store => $store, # mandatory search => $search, # defaults to undef formatter => $formatter # defaults to something suitable );
store
must be an object of typeCGI::Wiki::Store::*
andsearch
if supplied must be of typeCGI::Wiki::Search::*
(though this isn't checked yet - FIXME). Ifformatter
isn't supplied, it defaults to an object of class CGI::Wiki::Formatter::Default.You can get a searchable Wiki up and running on a system without an actual database server by using the SQLite storage backend with the SII/DB_File search backend - cut and paste the lines above for a quick start, and see CGI::Wiki::Store::SQLite, CGI::Wiki::Search::SII, and Search::InvertedIndex::DB::DB_File_SplitHash when you want to learn the details.
formatter
can be any object that behaves in the right way; this essentially means that it needs to provide aformat
method which takes in raw text and returns the formatted version. See CGI::Wiki::Formatter::Default for an example. Note that you can create a suitable object from a sub very quickly by using Test::MockObject like so:my $formatter = Test::MockObject->new(); $formatter->mock( 'format', sub { my ($self, $raw) = @_; return uc( $raw ); } );
I'm not sure whether to put this in the module or not - it'd let you just supply a sub instead of an object as the formatter, but it feels wrong to be using a Test::* module in actual code.
- write_node
-
my $written = $wiki->write_node($node, $content, $checksum, \%metadata); if ($written) { display_node($node); } else { handle_conflict(); }
Writes the specified content into the specified node in the backend storage, and indexes/reindexes the node in the search indexes, if a search is set up. Note that you can blank out a node without deleting it by passing the empty string as $content, if you want to.
If you expect the node to already exist, you must supply a checksum, and the node is write-locked until either your checksum has been proved old, or your checksum has been accepted and your change committed. If no checksum is supplied, and the node is found to already exist and be nonempty, a conflict will be raised.
The first three parameters are mandatory. The metadata hashref is optional, but if it is supplied then each of its keys must be either a scalar or a reference to an array of scalars.
(If you want to supply metadata but have no checksum (for a newly-created node), supply a checksum of
undef
.)Returns 1 on success, 0 on conflict, croaks on error.
- format
-
my $cooked = $wiki->format($raw);
Passed straight through to your chosen formatter object.
- store
-
my $store = $wiki->store; my $dbname = eval { $wiki->store->dbname; } or warn "Not a DB backend";
Returns the storage backend object.
- search_obj
-
my $search_obj = $wiki->search_obj;
Returns the search backend object.
- formatter
-
my $formatter = $wiki->formatter;
Returns the formatter backend object.
- Methods provided by storage backend
-
See the docs for your chosen storage backend to see how these work.
delete_node (also calls the delete_node method in the search backend, if any)
list_all_nodes
list_backlinks
list_nodes_by_metadata
list_recent_changes
node_exists
retrieve_node
verify_checksum
- Methods provided by search backend
-
See the docs for your chosen search backend to see how these work.
fuzzy_title_match (only works with CGI::Wiki::Search::SII)
search_nodes
supports_phrase_searches
- Methods provided by formatter backend
-
See the docs for your chosen formatter backend to see how these work.
format
SEE ALSO
For a very quick Wiki startup without any of that icky programming stuff, see Max Maischein's CGI::Wiki::Simple, which uses CGI::Wiki with CGI::Application to get you up and running in one or two minutes.
Or for the specialised application of a wiki about a city, see the OpenGuides distribution.
CGI::Wiki allows you to use different formatting modules. Text::WikiFormat might be useful for anyone wanting to write a custom formatter. Existing formatters include:
CGI::Wiki::Formatter::Default (in this distro)
There's currently a choice of three storage backends - all database-backed.
CGI::Wiki::Store::MySQL (in this distro)
CGI::Wiki::Store::Pg (in this distro)
CGI::Wiki::Store::SQLite (in this distro)
CGI::Wiki::Store::Database (parent class for the above - in this distro)
A search backend is optional:
CGI::Wiki::Search::DBIxFTS (in this distro, uses DBIx::FullTextSearch)
CGI::Wiki::Search::SII (in this distro, uses Search::InvertedIndex)
Standalone plugins can also be written - currently they should only read from the backend storage, but write access guidelines are coming soon. Plugins written so far and available from CPAN:
If writing a plugin you might want an easy way to run tests for it on all possible backends:
CGI::Wiki::TestConfig::Utilities (in this distro)
Other ways to implement Wikis in Perl include:
CGI::Wiki::Simple (based on CGI::Wiki)
CGI::Kwiki (an instant wiki)
UseModWiki http://usemod.com
Chiq Chaq http://chiqchaq.sourceforge.net/
AUTHOR
Kake Pugh (kake@earth.li).
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2002-2003 Kake Pugh. All Rights Reserved.
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
FEEDBACK
Please send me mail and tell me what you think of this. It's my first CPAN module, so stuff probably sucks. Tell me what sucks, send me patches, send me tests. Or if it doesn't suck, tell me that too. I love getting mail, even if all it says is "I used your thing and I like it", or "I didn't use your thing because of X".
blair christensen, Clint Moore and Max Maischein won the beer.
CREDITS
Various London.pm types helped out with code review, encouragement, JFDI, style advice, code snippets, module recommendations, and so on; far too many to name individually, but particularly Richard Clamp, Tony Fisher, Mark Fowler, and Chris Ball.
blair christensen sent patches and gave me some good ideas. chromatic continues to patiently apply my patches to Text::WikiFormat. Paul Makepeace helped me add support for connecting to non-local databases. The grubstreet team keep me well-supplied with encouragement and bug reports.
CGI::WIKI IN ACTION!
Max Maischein has set up a CGI::Wiki-based wiki describing various file formats, at http://www.corion.net/cgi-bin/wiki.cgi
I've set up a clone of grubstreet, a usemod wiki, at http://the.earth.li/~kake/cgi-bin/cgi-wiki/wiki.cgi -- it's not yet feature complete, but it's pure CGI::Wiki, using the new CGI::Wiki::Formatter::UseMod formatter. Code is at http://the.earth.li/~kake/code/cgi-wiki-usemod-emulator/
GRATUITOUS PLUG
I'm only obsessed with Wikis because of grubstreet, the Open Community Guide to London -- http://grault.net/grubstreet/