CMS Decision
Greg DeKoenigsberg
gdk at redhat.com
Tue Dec 6 14:33:59 UTC 2005
Can I have this whole email in "bullet points where Patrick tells us what
to do"? :)
--g
_____________________ ____________________________________________
Greg DeKoenigsberg ] [ the future masters of technology will have
Community Relations ] [ to be lighthearted and intelligent. the
Red Hat ] [ machine easily masters the grim and the
] [ dumb. --mcluhan
On Mon, 5 Dec 2005, Patrick Barnes wrote:
> Okay, I've read over all the posts that have sprung up on this thread
> today, and here's how I see it.
>
> Basically, it sounds like everyone is leaning in one of two directions:
> a.) Drupal is great except that it runs on PHP.
> b.) CVS and good, old-fashioned web skills are a great combination.
>
> Well, I think we all have a pretty good idea of what standard features
> of a CMS are. So lets start from there.
> * How do we break down everything we need between the wiki and CVS?
> We can do calendars using whatever calendar software the user
> prefers and iCal files.
> We can continue to track tasks on the wiki, but is that process
> working well enough for everyone? Do we need an alternative? Would
> calendars with to-do lists work better?
> We probably need static content for translation. What are the pros
> and cons of using the wiki for this? CVS? Wiki with regular exports
> and touch-up for CVS?
> We want revision control. Both the wiki and CVS can provide this.
> We want help tickets. How can we manage this using the wiki, CVS,
> and Bugzilla?
> If we can answer these with smiles on our faces, there's no real need
> for separate CMS software. Can anyone think of other needs to add to
> this list?
>
> If we decide we need a CMS solution, what can we do to make a PHP
> solution like Drupal as secure as possible? We can disable XML-RPC.
> What other features would we need to disable? Would this cripple Drupal
> beyond usefulness? What about access; do we want it to be as open as
> the wiki, or do we want to tighten it a little to protect it? We might
> in particular want to address isolating Drupal (having it on a server by
> itself) and trying to add protections for user information, should it be
> compromised.
>
> Also, a point that was brought up elsewhere was CVS access to MoinMoin.
> Is this something we need or want? Most of MoinMoin would have no need
> for CVS access. Only the plugins and themes would really be sensible to
> allow CVS access to. We might also want to consider this for any CMS
> solution we choose.
>
> Finally, there's the domain consideration. Thus far, we've been talking
> about setting up the CMS solution on fedoraproject.org. I think that if
> we do choose Drupal or another CMS, we should do exactly that. What if
> we use the infrastructure that is in place for fedora.redhat.com? I
> think if we choose to go the CVS route that we should try to put it on
> fedoraproject.org. We do still want to keep fedora.redhat.com, at least
> for Red Hat's own messages about Fedora. Is this something we can do?
>
> My personal opinion so far: I think we can make CVS, MoinMoin, and
> Bugzilla work for our needs. I'd like to see CVS on fedoraproject.org.
> I think that we should use the same account system to manage access to
> fedoraproject.org as we use for fedora.redhat.com, to eliminate having
> two sets of web admins. I'd like to move what we have at
> fedora.redhat.com in CVS HEAD over to fedoraproject.org and begin
> working on it. We can replace the content at fedora.redhat.com with a
> very basic bit of information that relays Red Hat's message about Fedora
> and explains what the exact relationship is and what Red Hat does for
> Fedora. I'm with Seth in that I would like to eliminate as much PHP as
> possible. We currently have a little PHP in use for fedora.redhat.com.
> It is all very simple and generates static content, but I'd like to see
> it eventually replaced with Python anyway. If we are going to use
> Drupal, I'd like to see it as isolated as possible and configured by the
> most paranoid people we can find. I don't want to rule out finding a
> Python CMS solution, and would love to see everyone who can providing
> reviews and insights to that end.
>
> Thoughts?
>
> --
> Patrick "The N-Man" Barnes
> nman64 at n-man.com
>
> www.n-man.com
> --
> Rate my assistance! http://rate.affero.net/nman64/
>
>
>
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