Awesome
Yaki - A fast, powerful filesystem-based wiki
Deprecation Warning:
This is being superseded by yaki-tng, which is a nearly complete re-write atop Bottle.
About
This was the second public release of Yaki (the first was in Google Code, and is long obsolete).
Yaki is a filesystem-based wiki that is used as the underpinnings of The Tao of Mac (and a few other sites that started using the initial release).
Features
- 100% pure Python, with extensive UTF-8 support
- Entirely self-hosting, running atop a modified Snakelets application framework
- Completely filesystem-based (pages are stored on a directory structure, not a database)
- Heavily optimized HTTP processing:
- Pages are pre-processed to HTML
- HTML and other internal info are stored in a single-file cache, a la Haystack
- Everything is served via
sendfile(2)
calls whenever possible - Uses every HTTP caching trick in the book to minimize actual page hits
- Completely markup-agnostic - all the internal processing relies on Beautiful Soup, and it ships with support for:
- raw HTML
- Textile
- Markdown
- Any markup engine that generates HTML can be added, and markup can be defined on a site-wide or page-per-page basis
- Has all the usual features, like:
- Page aliasing
- Interwiki
- RecentChanges
- etc.
- Has a number of unusual Bliki features, like a blog-like home page, linkblog support, and the SeeAlso table at the bottom of each page.
- Supports full-text indexing and search using Whoosh
Requirements
- Python 2.6 (2.7 will work just as well, and 2.5 may work with minimal tweaks)
- That's it.
License
Yaki is released under the MIT License. Some third-party libraries in the userlibs
folder are licensed differently and are included merely to ease deployment.
The Twitter Bootstrap HTML+CSS which is used as the default theme is licensed under the Apache License v2.0.
Credits
The Snakelets application server was originally developed by Irmen de Jong, and as far as I know this is the only publicly maintained version of it.