It is installable via yum is you use EPEL: http://download.fedora.redhat.com/pub/epel/5/i386/dokuwiki-0-0.4.20091225.c.el5.noarch.rpm Change the arch in the URL if using x86_64. For more info about EPEL. http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/EPEL Jef On Feb 24, 2010, at 8:42 AM, Bob McConnell <rmcconne@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Paul Bijnens wrote: >> On 2010-02-24 13:06, Robert P. J. Day wrote: >>> any testimonials for some simple wiki software to run on centos 5.4 >>> on an intranet? all i'm after is something uncomplicated that >>> (ideally) yum installs, and that others can start using to start >>> sharing useful info, nothing more. thoughts? >> >> I'm becoming a fan of dokuwiki (http://www.dokuwiki.org/). >> It stores the content in plain text files, so you can even use it to >> document how to fix a broken wikisetup. > > I'll add my vote for dokuwiki. It was simple to set up on RedHat, even > with ACL to track updates. The software is all PHP, while the > content is > mostly text files. It has content management built in, so backing out > inaccurate changes is simple. It does a nightly backup into compressed > files in each directory. We had a nightly cron job that copied those > to > a second drive on the server, and copied that drive to a tape once a > week. > > It may not be installable with yum, but installation consists of > copying > a tree of directories onto the web server. Take a good look at their > collection of add-on features. They make it incredibly flexible. > > Bob McConnell > N2SPP > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos