Book Image

MediaWiki Administrators' Tutorial Guide

By : Mizanur Rahman
Book Image

MediaWiki Administrators' Tutorial Guide

By: Mizanur Rahman

Overview of this book

<p>Run your own MediaWiki collaborative website with this fast-paced, friendly tutorial, which is full of information and advice for creating powerful MediaWiki sites, and filling them with varied and useful collaborative content. Whether you are creating a public wiki for completely open contributions, a private wiki for collaborating within your work team or group of friends, or even a wiki for personal use, this book will show you all the essential steps.</p> <p>You will see the various ways of organizing and managing content, and preventing collaboration from getting out of control. You'll learn how to incorporate images and other media into your pages, as well as becoming a wiki markup wizard to produce intricately formatted pages with tables, lists, and more. On the technical side, the book covers how to administer users, back up and restore content safely, migrate your installation to another server or database, and even make hacks to the code.</p> <p>MediaWiki is the free, open-source wiki engine software that powers Wikipedia and many of the other popular wikis across the Web. Written in PHP, it possesses many features that make it the engine of choice for large collaborative wikis: flexible markup, comprehensive user management, multimedia handling, and more.</p>
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
MediaWiki Administrators' Tutorial Guide
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
Preface
Free Chapter
1
About MediaWiki

About the Reviewers

Mark Alexander Bain hasn't always been the leading authority on open-source software that you know him as now. Back in the late seventies, he started work as a woodsman at Bowood Estates in Wiltshire. After that he spent a number of years working at Lowther Wildlife Park in Cumbria—it's not clear if his character made him suitable for looking after packs of wolves, or whether the experience made him the way he is now.

In the mid eighties there was a general down turn in the popularity of animal parks in the UK, and Mark found himself out of work with two young sons (Simon and Micheal)—but with a growing interest in programming. His wife had recently bought him the state-of-the-art Sinclair ZX 81, and it was she who suggested that he went to college to study computing.

Mark left college in 1989 and joined Vodafone—then a very small company—where he started writing programs using VAX/VMS. It was shortly after that, that he became addicted to something that was to drastically affect the rest of his life—Unix. His demise was further compounded when he was introduced to Oracle. After that there was no saving him. Over the next few years, Vodafone became the multinational company that it is now, and Mark progressed from Technician to Engineer, and from Engineer to Senior Engineer and finally to Principal Engineer.

At the turn of the century, general ill health made Mark reconsider his career; and his wife again came to his rescue when she saw a job advert for a lecturer at the University of Central Lancashire. It was also she who suggested that he should think about writing.

Today Mark writes regularly for Linux Format, Newsforge.com, and Linux Journal. He's still teaching. And (apparently) he writes books as well.

Peter De Decker is the developer of a MediaWiki extension called "IpbWiki", which is an integration plugin that integrates Invision Power Board with MediaWiki. During the ongoing creation of this extension he has become an expert in understanding the MediaWiki source code and layout.