This page contains all documentation topics as one long, complete reference sheet.
Doubleclick anywhere to return to the top of the page.
Note - if you are reading this at twiki.org, then you are reading about the most recent code under development.
If you want to read about the features on your local TWiki, then you should read the documentation there!
Note: Read the most up to date version of this document at http://TWiki.org/cgi-bin/view/TWiki/TWikiDocumentation
Related Topics: TWikiSite, TWikiHistory, TWikiPlannedFeatures, TWikiEnhancementRequests
Server and client requirements
Low client and server base requirements are core features that keep TWiki widely deployable, particularly across a range of browser platforms and versions. Many Plugins and contrib modules
exist which enhance and expand TWiki's capabilities; they may have additional requirements.
TWiki is written in Perl 5, uses a number of shell commands, and requires RCS (Revision Control System), a GNU Free Software package. TWiki is developed in a basic Linux/Apache environment. It also works with Microsoft Windows, and should have no problem on any other platform that meets the requirements.
Resource | Required Server Environment * |
---|---|
Perl | 5.8.0 or higher (5.8.4 or higher is recommended) |
RCS | 5.7 or higher (including GNU diff ) Optional, TWiki includes a pure Perl implementation of RCS that can be used instead (although it's slower) |
GNU diff |
GNU diff 2.7 or higher is required when not using the all-Perl RcsLite. Install on PATH if not included with RCS (check version with diff -v ) Must be the version used by RCS, to avoid problems with binary attachments - RCS may have hard-coded path to diff |
GNU df |
Used by the site statistics to record disk usage statistics, optional. The df command is pre-installed on Linux and OS-X. On Windows install the CoreUtils for Windows![]() |
GNU patch |
For upgrades only: GNU patch is required when using the TWiki:Codev.UpgradeTWiki![]() |
GNU fgrep , egrep |
Modify command line parameters in configure if you use non-GNU grep programs |
zip |
Zip archive command line utility. Used by the BackupRestorePlugin to create and restore from backups. |
Cron/scheduler | • Unix: cron • Windows: cron equivalents |
Web server | Apache is well supported; see TWiki:TWiki.InstallingTWiki#OtherWebServers![]() |
Most of the CPAN libraries listesd below are part of a standard Perl installation so you most likely have them all!
See TWiki:TWiki.HowToInstallCpanModules for detailed information on how to install CPAN libraries
The following Perl CPAN modules are used by TWiki:
Module | Preferred version | Comment |
---|---|---|
Algorithm::Diff |
Included in TWiki distribution | |
CGI |
>=3.18 & <=4.03 | A suitable version ships with TWiki since TWiki-6.0.2 using CgiContrib, e.g. it is no longer necessary to install or downgrade this module. Versions 2.89 and 3.37, as well as version > 4.13 must be avoided. |
CGI::Carp |
>=1.26 | |
Config |
>=0 | |
Cwd |
>=3.05 | |
Data::Dumper |
>=2.121 | |
Encode |
>=2.1 | |
Error |
Included in TWiki distribution | |
File::Copy |
>=2.06 | |
File::Find |
>=1.05 | |
File::Spec |
>=3.05 | |
File::Temp |
>=0.18 | This version included in Perl 5.9.5. File::Temp needs to be updated on RedHat 5 and CentOS 5. |
FileHandle |
>=2.01 | |
HTML::Parser |
>=3.28 | Needed by the WysiwygPlugin for WYSIWYG editing |
HTML::Entities |
>=1.25 | Needed by the WysiwygPlugin for WYSIWYG editing |
IO::File |
>=1.10 | |
LWP |
Needed to install extensions in TWiki configure | |
Net::SMTP |
>=2.29 | Used for sending mail |
Text::Diff |
Included in TWiki distribution | |
Time::Local |
>=1.11 |
The following Perl modules may be used by TWiki:
See TWiki:TWiki.HowToInstallCpanModules for detailed information on how to install CPAN libraries
Module | Preferred version | Description |
---|---|---|
Archive::Tar |
May be required by the Extensions Installer in configure if command line tar or unzip is not available | |
Authen::SASL |
Used for SMTP Authentication | |
CGI::Cookie |
>=1.24 | Used for session support |
CGI::Session |
>=3.95 | Used for session support |
Crypt::SMIME |
>=0.09 | Required if S/MIME-signed administrative e-mail is enabled. |
Digest::base |
||
Digest::SHA1 |
||
JSON |
>=0 | Required if JSON objects are stored and retrieved in SetGetPlugin |
Locale::Maketext::Lexicon |
>=0 | Used for I18N support |
Net::SMTP |
>=2.29 | Used for sending mail |
URI |
Used for configure |
Most of them will probably already be available in your installation. You can check version numbers with the configure
script, or if you're still trying to get to that point, check from the command line like this:
perl -e 'use FileHandle; print $FileHandle::VERSION."\n"'
The TWiki standard installation has relatively low browser requirements:
CSS and Javascript are used in most skins, although there is a low-fat skin (Classic skin) available that minimizes these requirements. Some skins will require more recent releases of browsers. The default skin (Pattern) is tested on IE 6, Safari, and Mozilla 5.0 based browsers (such as Firefox).
You can easily select a balance of browser capability versus look and feel. Try the installed skins at TWikiSkinBrowser and more at TWiki:Plugins.SkinPackage.
Related Topics: AdminDocumentationCategory
The following is installation instructions for the TWiki-6.0 production release on an Apache web server on Linux. Visit TWiki:TWiki.InstallingTWiki for the latest updates to this guide and supplemental information for installing or upgrading TWiki, including notes on installing TWiki on different platforms, environments and web hosting sites.
If you are upgrading from a previous version of TWiki, you probably want to read TWikiUpgradeGuide instead.
Before attempting to install TWiki, you are encouraged to review the AdminSkillsAssumptions. This guide assumes you have, at a minimum, basic knowledge of server administration on the system on which TWiki is to be installed. While it is possible to install TWiki with FTP access alone (for example, on a hosted site), it is tricky and may require additional support from your hosting service (for example, in setting file ownership and installing missing Perl CPAN libraries).
To help setup a correct Apache configuration, you are very much encouraged to use the automatic tool TWiki:TWiki.ApacheConfigGenerator which generates the contents for an Apache config file for TWiki based on your inputs.
While this installation guide specifically describes installation on an Apache web server on Linux, TWiki should work fine with any web server and OS that meet the system requirements (see below). For additional notes on installing TWiki on other systems, see TWiki:TWiki.InstallingTWiki#OtherPlatforms.
If you are installing TWiki without Unix/Linux root (administrator) privileges (for example, on a hosted domain), see "Notes on Installing TWiki on Non-Root Account" below for supplemental instructions to the basic steps presented below.
If you are upgrading from an earlier major version of TWiki such as Cairo (TWiki-3) or TWiki 4.x you will need the information found at TWikiUpgradeGuide.
One of the more difficult tasks is installation of additional CPAN libraries. See TWiki:TWiki.HowToInstallCpanModules for detailed information on how to install CPAN libraries.
If you need help, ask a question in the TWiki:Support.WebHome web or on TWiki:Codev.TWikiIRC
(irc.freenode.net, channel #twiki).
TWiki-6.0.1.tgz
for Linux)
/var/www
). Unpack the distribution in it (Example: tar xvfz TWiki-6.0.1.tgz
). The unpack will create a directory called twiki
which contains the TWiki package. In the rest of this document we assume this directory is called twiki
. chmod -R 770 twiki
. The access rules have different meaning for files and directories. This is the most common mistake installers make.
chown -R user:group /path/to/twiki
. The webserver username varies from Distributions. Examples for some major distributions: chown -R apache:apache /path/to/twiki
chown -R www-data:www-data /path/to/twiki
chown -R wwwrun:www /path/to/twiki
/usr/bin/perl
. If it's somewhere else, change the path to Perl in the first line of each script in the twiki/bin
directory.
apt-get install libcgi-pm-perl
. If needed, learn how to install CPAN modules.cgi
or .pl
). This is normally only needed under Windows and only where perl scripts are only recognized by file extension. Linux and Unix users should normally never need to do this. If necessary, rename all files in twiki/bin
(i.e. rename view
to view.pl
etc). If you do this, make sure you set the ScriptSuffix
option in configure
(Step 6).
twiki/bin/LocalLib.cfg
twiki/bin/LocalLib.cfg.txt
. Simply copy LocalLib.cfg.txt to LocalLib.cfg. Make sure the ownership and access rights of the copy are the same as LocalLib.cfg.txt
twiki/bin/LocalLib.cfg
must contain a setting for $twikiLibPath
, which must point to the absolute directory path of your twiki/lib
e.g. /var/www/twiki/lib
.
$CPANBASE
to point to your personal CPANtwiki.conf
). Performance is much better with a config file, and makes setting up a correct and safe installation easier. However using a config file requires that you can restart Apache which again means that you need root or sudo access to stop and start Apache. The TWiki apache config file is included from the main Apache config file httpd.conf. Most distributions have a directory from which any file that ends with .conf
gets included when you restart Apache (Example RedHat/Fedora/Centos: /etc/httpd/conf.d
). If you use a virtual host setup in Apache you should include the twiki.conf file from inside the desired virtual host config in your Apache configuration.
misc/twiki_httpd_conf.txt
(nevertheless, it is better to use the generator).
twiki/bin
directory you find example .htaccess
files you can copy and modify. The files contains help text explaining how to set them up. In twiki/bin
you find .htaccess.txt
which can be copied to .htaccess
and defined access to the CGI scripts.
misc
directory you find pub-htaccess.txt
which you can copy to pub/.htaccess
, subdir-htaccess.txt
which you can copy to all directories as .htaccess
except bin and pub, and you find root-htaccess.txt
which you can copy to .htaccess
in the twiki root directory. But again only use .htaccess files if you do not have root privileges.
configure
script from your browser (enter http://yourdomain/do/configure
into your browser address bar) admin
user password once TWiki is running. $TWiki::cfg{Password}
from LocalSite.cfg
file from {TWIKI_ROOT}/lib
directory.
configure
for the first time, you can only edit the General Path Settings
section. Save these settings, and then return to configure
to continue configuration.
{PermittedRedirectHostUrls}
{WebMasterEmail}
, and {SMTP}{MAILHOST}
must be defined to enable TWiki to send administrative emails, such as for registration and notification of topic changes. Many ISPs have introduced authentication when sending emails to fight spam so you may also have to set {SMTP}{Username}
and {SMTP}{Password}
. If you do not want to enable mailing or want to enable it later you can uncheck {EnableEmail}
.
You now have a basic, unauthenticated installation running. At this point you can just point your web browser at http://yourdomain.com/do/view
and start TWiki-ing away!
Before you continue any further there are some basic and very important security settings you have to make sure are set correctly.
pub
directory. TWiki has some built-in protection which renames files with dangerous file names by appending .txt to the file name. But this is a secondary security measure. The essential action that you must take is to turn off any possible execution of any of the attached files.bin
directory should be script enabled, and the pub
directory should be HTML document enabled. misc/subdir-htaccess.txt
file can be copied as .htaccess
to the data, lib, locale, templates, tools and working directories.
The TWiki:TWiki.ApacheConfigGenerator as well as the example
misc/twiki_httpd_conf.txt
and example misc/htaccess.txt
files include the needed settings that protect against all 3 security elements.
Once you have TWiki installed and running, you might consider the following optional steps for setting up and customizing your TWiki site. Many of the references below refer to topics within your TWiki installation. For example, TWiki.TWikiSkins
refers to the TWikiSkins
topic in your TWiki web. Easy way to jump directly to view the pages is to open your own TWiki in your browser and write TWiki.TWikiSkins
in the Jump test box to the right in the top bar and hit Enter. You can find these topics in the on-line reference copy at the official TWiki website: TWiki-6.0 Release.
This step provides for site access control and user activity tracking on your TWiki site. This is particularly important for sites that are publicly accessible on the web. This guide describes only the most common of several possible authentication setups for TWiki and is suitable for public web sites. For information about other setups, see TWikiUserAuthentication, and TWiki:TWiki.TWikiUserAuthenticationSupplement.
These are the steps for enabling "Template Login" which asks for a username and password in a web page, and processes them using the Apache 'htpasswd' password manager. Users can log in and log out.
Security Settings
pane of configure
: TWiki::LoginManager::TemplateLogin
for {LoginManager}
.
TWiki::Users::HtPasswdUser
for {PasswordManager}
.
configure
settings.
data/.htpasswd
file. If not, you probably got a path wrong, or the permissions may not allow the webserver user to write to that file.
Edit
link at beginning or end of topic) to check if authentication works.
You are strongly encouraged to read TWikiUserAuthentication, TWiki:TWiki.TWikiUserAuthenticationSupplement, and TWiki:TWiki.SecuringTWikiSite
for further information about managing users and security of your TWiki site.
Note: The other LoginManager
option TWiki::LoginManager::ApacheLogin
uses a basic Apache type authentication where the browser itself prompts you for username and password. Most will find the TemplateLogin looking nicer. But ApacheLogin is required when you use Apache authentication methods like mod_ldap where all authentication is handled by an Apache module and not by the TWiki perl code. When you use ApacheLogin the apache configuration must be set up to require authentication of the some but not all the scripts in the bin directory. This section in the Apache config (or .htaccess) controls this
<FilesMatch "(attach|edit|manage|rename|save|upload|mail|logon|rest|.*auth).*"> require valid-user </FilesMatch>
The TWiki:TWiki.ApacheConfigGenerator includes this section when you choose ApacheLogin. In the example
misc/twiki_httpd_conf.txt
and bin/.htaccess.txt
files this section is commented out with #. Uncomment the section when you use ApacheLogin. It is important that this section is commented out or removed when you use TemplateLogin.
Administrators have read and write access to any topic in TWiki, regardless of TWiki access controls. When you install TWiki one of the first things you will want to do is define yourself as an administrator. You become an administrator simply by adding yourself to the TWikiAdminGroup. It is the WikiName and not the login name you add to the group. Editing the Main.TWikiAdminGroup topic requires that you are an administrator. So to add the first administrator you need to login using the internal TWiki admin user login and the password you defined in configure.
Preferences for customizing many aspects of TWiki are set simply by editing a special topic with TWiki.
data/Main/TWikiPreferences.txt
file and all your settings will be kept. Settings in Main.TWikiPreferences overrides settings in both TWiki.TWikiPreferences and any settings defined in plugin topics. See notes at the top of TWiki.TWikiPreferences for more information.
Each TWiki web has an automatic email notification service that sends you an email with links to all of the topics modified since the last alert. To enable this service:
tools/mailnotify
script as described in the MailerContrib topic.
TWiki administrative e-mails are an attractive target for SPAM generators and phishing attacks. One good way to protect against this possibility to enable S/MIME signatures on all administrative e-mails. To do this, you need an an X.509 certificate and private key for the the {WebMasterEmail}
email account. Obtain these as you would for any other S/MIME e-mail user.
To enable TWiki to sign administrative e-mails:
/etc/pki/tls/certs
configure
script, change the following settings under Mail and Proxies: {MailProgram}
to enable an external mail program such as sendmail. Net::SMTP is not supported.
{SmimeCertificateFile}
configuration variable
{SmimeKeyFile}
configuration variable
configure
script an resolve any errors that it identifies
All out-going administrative e-mails will now be signed.
You can generate a listing manually, or on an automated schedule, of visits to individual pages on a per web basis. For information on setting up this feature, see the TWikiSiteTools topic.
Per default TWiki cleans out expired session and lease files each time any topic is viewed. This however comes at a cost of lower performance. It is an advantage to define a negative value in configure
for {Sessions}{ExpireAfter}
(turn on expert mode to see it), and install a cronjob to run the tools/tick_twiki.pl
script. Read The topic TWikiScripts#tick_twiki_pl for details how to do this.
TWiki now supports displaying of national (non-ascii) characters and presentation of basic interface elements in different languages. To enable these features, see the Localization
section of configure
. For more information about these features, see TWiki:TWiki.InternationalizationSupplement.
When a new users registers on your TWiki, a user profile topic is created for them based on the NewUserTemplate topic (and its UserForm). It contains additional resources you can use to:
If you choose to tailor anything you are strongly advised to copy NewUserTemplate and UserForm to the Main web and tailor the Main web copies. TWiki will look for the NewUserTemplate in the Main web first and if it does not exist TWiki uses the default from the TWiki web. By creating a Main.NewUserTemplate and its Main.UserForm you will not loose your customization next time you upgrade TWiki.
If you added or removed fields from the user form you may also want to tailor TWikiRegistration.
By default the TWiki home is Main.WebHome. Users tend to create content starting from the homepage. In most cases it is better to create a new web (workspace) for default content. That way the Main web can be kept clean and used just for users and TWiki groups. For example, you could create an "Intranet" web if TWiki is primarily used as an intranet, or a "KB" web if used as a knowledge base, etc.
If you have a dedicated web as a starting point you obviously want users start at the home of that web. This can be configured in two places: 1. Redirect from site home to web home, and 2. Set the wiki logo URL.
1. Redirect from site home to web home
When a user enters the domain name of your TWiki she expects to see the homepage. You can do that either with an Apache rewrite rule or an HTML meta redirect to redirect from /
to /cgi-bin/view/Intranet/WebHome
. Here is an example index.html
containing an HTML meta redirect you can use: Customize it and put it in your HTML document root on your TWiki sever:
<html> <head> <meta http-equiv="refresh" content="0;/do/view/Intranet/WebHome" /> </head> <body> Redirecting to <a href="/do/view/Intranet/WebHome">Intranet home</a>... </body> </html>
2. Set the wiki logo URL
When a user clicks on the logo in the upper left or on the "Home" link in the top-bar she expects to navigate to the new homepage. You can do that by defining and customizing the following setting in Main.TWikiPreferences as described in the Set TWiki Preferences section:
URL of the logo: * Set WIKILOGOURL = %SCRIPTURLPATH{view}%/Intranet/WebHome
The real power of TWiki lies in its flexibility to be customized to meet your needs. You can easily change the look of the default skins (called TopMenuSkin and PatternSkin) by reading the PatternSkinCustomization.
At the official TWiki website you can find more resources. A good place to start exploring what's possible is TWiki:TWiki.TWikiAdminCookBook which offers tips and tricks for customizing your TWiki site. Many of these are appropriate to implement immediately after installing TWiki and before adding content so now's a good time to look at these.
Some pages are meant to be customized after choice of authentication. If you do not use the internal TWiki password manager the topics that contains the features for changing and resetting passwords and changing the email address should be changed to a note describing how to perform these tasks in your organization. The topics are:
TWiki:Plugins.WebHome is an extensive library of plugins for TWiki, that enhance functionality in a huge number of ways. A few plugins are pre-installed in the TWiki distribution. For more information on these, see InstalledPlugins.
You activate installed plugin in the Plugins section of configure
. In this section you also find a Find More Extensions button which opens an application which can install additional plugins from the TWiki.org website. If you are behind a firewall or your server has no access to the Internet it is also possible to install plugins manually. Manual installation instructions for the plugins can be found in the plugin topics on TWiki.org. Additional documentation on TWiki plugins can be found at TWiki:TWiki.TWikiPluginsSupplement.
Some plugins require that you define their settings in configure
. You fill find these under the Extensions section of configure.
From TWiki release 4.2.0 on the WYSIWYG editor has been replaced by a much better and more powerful editor and it was decided that WYSIWYG would be the default edit mode. An Edit Raw link is available for those that have a need or preference for this mode.
However you may prefer to have the same user interface as in TWiki 4.1 where Edit was the raw text editor and you had a WYSIWYG button. This is possible by adding the following setting in the Main.TWikiPreferences, WebPreferences or user hompages:
At the bottom of each topic you will find a default copyright message saying "Copyright © by the contributing authors. All material on this collaboration platform is the property of the contributing authors." The WEBCOPYRIGHT setting defines this. This is often not adequate.
You change the copy right statement globally by taking these steps.
The first step is to re-run the configure
script and make sure you have resolved all errors, and are satisfied that you understand any warnings.
If, by any chance, you forget the "admin" password, the same used in "configure" script, then please login to the server. Delete $TWiki::cfg{Password}= ' ...';
. Set the new password using "configure" script.
Failing that, please check TWiki:TWiki.InstallingTWiki on TWiki.org, the supplemental documentation that help you install TWiki on different platforms, environments and web hosting sites. For example:
It is also advisable to review TWiki:Codev/KnownIssuesOfTWiki06x00.
If you need help, ask a question in the TWiki:Support web or on TWiki:Codev/TWikiIRC
(irc.freenode.net, channel #twiki)
Low client and server base requirements are core features that keep TWiki widely deployable, particularly across a range of browser platforms and versions. Many Plugins and contrib modules
exist which enhance and expand TWiki's capabilities; they may have additional requirements.
TWiki is written in Perl 5, uses a number of shell commands, and requires RCS (Revision Control System), a GNU Free Software package. TWiki is developed in a basic Linux/Apache environment. It also works with Microsoft Windows, and should have no problem on any other platform that meets the requirements.
Resource | Required Server Environment * |
---|---|
Perl | 5.8.0 or higher (5.8.4 or higher is recommended) |
RCS | 5.7 or higher (including GNU diff ) Optional, TWiki includes a pure Perl implementation of RCS that can be used instead (although it's slower) |
GNU diff |
GNU diff 2.7 or higher is required when not using the all-Perl RcsLite. Install on PATH if not included with RCS (check version with diff -v ) Must be the version used by RCS, to avoid problems with binary attachments - RCS may have hard-coded path to diff |
GNU df |
Used by the site statistics to record disk usage statistics, optional. The df command is pre-installed on Linux and OS-X. On Windows install the CoreUtils for Windows![]() |
GNU patch |
For upgrades only: GNU patch is required when using the TWiki:Codev.UpgradeTWiki![]() |
GNU fgrep , egrep |
Modify command line parameters in configure if you use non-GNU grep programs |
zip |
Zip archive command line utility. Used by the BackupRestorePlugin to create and restore from backups. |
Cron/scheduler | • Unix: cron • Windows: cron equivalents |
Web server | Apache is well supported; see TWiki:TWiki.InstallingTWiki#OtherWebServers![]() |
Most of the CPAN libraries listesd below are part of a standard Perl installation so you most likely have them all!
See TWiki:TWiki.HowToInstallCpanModules for detailed information on how to install CPAN libraries
The following Perl CPAN modules are used by TWiki:
Module | Preferred version | Comment |
---|---|---|
Algorithm::Diff |
Included in TWiki distribution | |
CGI |
>=3.18 & <=4.03 | A suitable version ships with TWiki since TWiki-6.0.2 using CgiContrib, e.g. it is no longer necessary to install or downgrade this module. Versions 2.89 and 3.37, as well as version > 4.13 must be avoided. |
CGI::Carp |
>=1.26 | |
Config |
>=0 | |
Cwd |
>=3.05 | |
Data::Dumper |
>=2.121 | |
Encode |
>=2.1 | |
Error |
Included in TWiki distribution | |
File::Copy |
>=2.06 | |
File::Find |
>=1.05 | |
File::Spec |
>=3.05 | |
File::Temp |
>=0.18 | This version included in Perl 5.9.5. File::Temp needs to be updated on RedHat 5 and CentOS 5. |
FileHandle |
>=2.01 | |
HTML::Parser |
>=3.28 | Needed by the WysiwygPlugin for WYSIWYG editing |
HTML::Entities |
>=1.25 | Needed by the WysiwygPlugin for WYSIWYG editing |
IO::File |
>=1.10 | |
LWP |
Needed to install extensions in TWiki configure | |
Net::SMTP |
>=2.29 | Used for sending mail |
Text::Diff |
Included in TWiki distribution | |
Time::Local |
>=1.11 |
The following Perl modules may be used by TWiki:
See TWiki:TWiki.HowToInstallCpanModules for detailed information on how to install CPAN libraries
Module | Preferred version | Description |
---|---|---|
Archive::Tar |
May be required by the Extensions Installer in configure if command line tar or unzip is not available | |
Authen::SASL |
Used for SMTP Authentication | |
CGI::Cookie |
>=1.24 | Used for session support |
CGI::Session |
>=3.95 | Used for session support |
Crypt::SMIME |
>=0.09 | Required if S/MIME-signed administrative e-mail is enabled. |
Digest::base |
||
Digest::SHA1 |
||
JSON |
>=0 | Required if JSON objects are stored and retrieved in SetGetPlugin |
Locale::Maketext::Lexicon |
>=0 | Used for I18N support |
Net::SMTP |
>=2.29 | Used for sending mail |
URI |
Used for configure |
Most of them will probably already be available in your installation. You can check version numbers with the configure
script, or if you're still trying to get to that point, check from the command line like this:
perl -e 'use FileHandle; print $FileHandle::VERSION."\n"'
The TWiki standard installation has relatively low browser requirements:
CSS and Javascript are used in most skins, although there is a low-fat skin (Classic skin) available that minimizes these requirements. Some skins will require more recent releases of browsers. The default skin (Pattern) is tested on IE 6, Safari, and Mozilla 5.0 based browsers (such as Firefox).
You can easily select a balance of browser capability versus look and feel. Try the installed skins at TWikiSkinBrowser and more at TWiki:Plugins.SkinPackage.
The following supplemental notes to the Basic Installation instructions apply to installing TWiki on a system where you don't have Unix/Linux root (administrator) privileges, for example, on a hosted Web account or an intranet server administered by someone else.
Referring to the Basic Installation steps presented above:
pub
directory.)
twiki/bin
directory (e.g. because CGI bin directories can't be under your home directory and you don't have root access). You can create this directory elsewhere and configure the twiki/bin/LocalLib.cfg
file (done in Step 2). TWiki dir: | What it is: | Where to copy: | Example: |
---|---|---|---|
twiki/ | TWiki package | TWiki root directory, should be secure from public access | /home/smith/twiki/ |
twiki/bin/ | CGI bin | move to script-enabled dirctory | /home/smith/cgi/twiki/ |
twiki/lib/ | library files | leave in TWiki root | /home/smith/twiki/lib/ |
twiki/locale/ | language files | leave in TWiki root | /home/smith/twiki/locale/ |
twiki/pub/ | public files | move to HTML document enabled directory | /home/smith/html/twiki-pub/ |
twiki/data/ | topic data | leave in TWiki root | /home/smith/twiki/data/ |
twiki/templates/ | web templates | leave in TWiki root | /home/smith/twiki/templates/ |
twiki/tools/ | TWiki utlilities | leave in TWiki root | /home/smith/twiki/tools/ |
twiki/working/ | Temporary and internal files | leave in TWiki root | /home/smith/twiki/working/ |
755
(or 775
) and file permissions should be set to 644
(or 664
). If you can run a chmod
command, you can accomplish this in two quick steps by running these commands from the root direct: chmod -R 755 pub
chmod 644 `find pub -type f -print`
.htaccess
file in the pub directory, using the template included in the distribution entitled misc/pub-htaccess.txt
.
.htaccess
in the bin directory that includes the following single line: SetHandler cgi-script
. This informs the server to treat all the perl scripts in the bin directory as scripts.
For additional information about installing TWiki on a hosted accounts, see TWiki:TWiki.InstallingTWiki#WebHostingSites
It is highly recommended to use run configure from the browser when setting up TWiki. Configure does a lot of the hard work for you.
But there may be instances where you do not want to use configure or where configure simply won't run because of a missing dependency.
The manual steps you have to take are:
lib/TWiki.spec
to lib/LocalSite.cfg
$TWiki::cfg{DefaultUrlHost}
, $TWiki::cfg{ScriptUrlPath}
, $TWiki::cfg{PubUrlPath}
, $TWiki::cfg{PubDir}
, $TWiki::cfg{TemplateDir}
, $TWiki::cfg{DataDir}
, $TWiki::cfg{LocalesDir}
, and $TWiki::cfg{OS}
and make sure these settings have the correct values.
$TWiki::cfg{LoginManager}
, $TWiki::cfg{WebMasterEmail}
, $TWiki::cfg{SMTP}{MAILHOST}
, $TWiki::cfg{SMTP}{SENDERHOST}
.
This guide covers upgrading from a previous version of TWiki (such as TWiki-5.1) to TWiki-6.0
TWiki-6.0.0 is a major release that has a shiny new dashboard look. It brings many usability enhancements, strengthens TWiki as an application platform, and scales to very large deployments with thousands of webs and a million pages. Use this guide to upgrade a previous TWiki release to TWiki-6.0. Use the TWikiInstallationGuide if you do not have data to carry forward.
See TWikiReleaseNotes04x00, TWikiReleaseNotes04x01, TWikiReleaseNotes04x02, TWikiReleaseNotes04x03, TWikiReleaseNotes05x00, TWikiReleaseNotes05x01, TWikiReleaseNotes06x00
TWiki now has a new solution to backup, restore and upgrade TWiki sites. It can be used via browser and on the command line. The BackupRestorePlugin is pre-installed in TWiki-5.1 and later releases; it can be installed in older TWiki releases as low as TWiki-2001-09-01 (Athens Release) to easily create a backup that can be restored on a new TWiki release. This offers an easy upgrade path for TWiki. The plugin is currently in Beta, check TWiki:Plugins.BackupRestorePlugin for updates.
The following steps are a rough guide to upgrading only. It is impossible to give detailed instructions, as what you have to do may depend on whether you can configure the webserver or not, and how much you have changed distributed files in your current TWiki release.
The main steps are:
After the extensions are installed (or upgraded) in step 2, take a "golden" backup. That will come in handy for your next patch or upgrade: By checking the differences between the golden copy and your production copy, you will be able to identify all the modifications that you have applied to the core or extensions.
twiki/lib/LocalSite.cfg
as a reference. This way you will not have old obsolete settings in the new LocalSite.cfg
.
LocalSite.cfg
file and re-run configure.
lib/TWiki.cfg
from the old TWiki installation is a good resource for some of the settings you will need but you cannot reuse the old TWiki.cfg.
DEFAULT_TYPE
setting of the CommentPlugin, create a COMMENTPLUGIN_DEFAULT_TYPE
setting in Main.TWikiPreferences.
twiki/data/Engineering
(for page content) and twiki/pub/Engineering
(for attachments).
find data -name '*,v' -exec rcs -u -M '{}' \;
find pub -name '*,v' -exec rcs -u -M '{}' \;
Main.TWikiUsers
topic to the new TWiki. If you upgrade from Cairo you can simply use the old file and add the missing new system users to the list of users. If you upgrade from TWiki-4.0.x simply use the old topic. Starting from 4.2.0 TWiki no longer ships with a Main.TWikiUsers
topic. When you register the first user TWiki now checks for an existing Main.TWikiUsers
and if it does not exist it gets created. {Register}{AllowLoginName}
to 1
.
data/.htpasswd
for authentication copy this file from the old TWiki to the new. tools/upgrade_emails.pl
.
TWiki.TWikiRegistration
. Make sure you either reuse the registration topic from the old installation or apply the same field changes to the new TWiki.TWikiRegistration
topic.
NewUserTemplate
and UserForm
in the TWiki web. If you choose to tailor anything you are strongly advised to copy NewUserTemplate
and UserForm
to the Main web and tailor the Main web copies. TWiki will look for the NewUserTemplate
in the Main web first and if it does not exist it uses the default from the TWiki web. By creating a Main.NewUserTemplate
and its Main.UserForm
you will not loose your tailorings next time you upgrade TWiki.
Main.TWikiPreferences
. This avoids having to write over files in the distribution on a later upgrade.
data/TWiki
of the old and new TWiki installation, and transfer the changes into the new TWiki install. If you can run a GUI on your server, you may find that using a visual diff tool like WinMerge, meld, kdiff3, xxdiff, etc. is helpful.
WebPreferences
topics in the old TWiki Installation with the default from the new TWiki installation and add any new Preferences that may be relevant.
WebLeftBar
topics in the old TWiki Installation with the default from the new TWiki installation and add any new feature that you desire.
Once you have tested the new TWiki you can switch over to the new site.
If the same domain and URL is used:
twiki/bin
that allow content update, such as attach
, edit
, manage
, rename
, save
, upload
, rest
. Alternatively, if you have a recent TWiki version on the old server you can set a READONLYSKINMODE = 1
setting in Main.TWikiPreferences
to turn the skin into read-only mode.
If the domain or URL changes:
Some pages in the TWiki web are meant to be customized after choice of authentication. If you do not use the internal TWiki password manager the topics that contains the features for changing and resetting passwords and changing the email address should be changed to a note describing how to perform these tasks in your organization. If you have made such customizations remember to replace these topics in the TWiki web with the tailored versions from your old installation. The topics are:
TWiki.ChangePassword
TWiki.ResetPassword
TWiki.ChangeEmailAddress
TWiki-4's PatternSkin introduces the use of the favicon feature which most browsers use to show a small icon in front of the URL and for bookmarks.
In TWiki-4 it is assumed that each web has a favicon.ico file attached to the WebPreferences topic. When you upgrade from Cairo to TWiki-4 you do not have this file and you will get flooded with errors the error log of your web server. There are two solutions to this.
To change the location of favicon.ico in TWikiPreferences to the TWiki web add the following setting to Main.TWikiPreferences:
* Set FAVICON = %PUBURLPATH%/%SYSTEMWEB%/%WEBPREFSTOPIC%/favicon.ico
Your old Main.TWikiUsers topic will work in the new TWiki but you will need to ensure that the following four users from the TWikiUsersTemplate topic are copied to the existing TWikiUsers topic in proper alphabetical order:
* TWikiContributor - 2005-01-01 * TWikiGuest - guest - 1999-02-10 * TWikiRegistrationAgent - 2005-01-01 * UnknownUser - 2005-01-01
What these users are:
You additionally need to ensure that TWikiUsers has the Set ALLOWTOPICCHANGE = TWikiAdminGroup, TWikiRegistrationAgent
access control setting. Otherwise people will not be able to register.
TWiki 4.0.5 worked on Perl version 5.6.X. Reports from users has shown that unfortunately TWiki 4.1.0 does not support Perl versions older then 5.8.0. It is the goal that TWiki should work on at least Perl version 5.6.X but none of the developers have had access to Perl installations older than 5.8.0.
Since TWiki 4.1.0 has some urgent bugs the development team decided to release TWiki 4.1.1 without resolving the issue with Perl 5.6.X. We will however address this and try and resolve it for a planned 4.1.2 release. The TWiki community is very interested in contributions from users that have fixes for the code which will enable TWiki to run on older versions of Perl.
See the WhatVersionsOfPerlAreSupported topic to keep up to date with the discussion how to get back support for earlier Perl versions.
Until TWiki 4.0.5 TWikiTemplates the text inside template definition blocks (anything between %TMPL:DEF{"block"}%
and %TMPL:END%
was stripped of leading and trailing white space incl new lines.
This caused a lot of problems for skin developers when you wanted a newline before or after the block text.
From TWiki 4.1.0 this has changed so that white space is no longer stripped. Skins like PatternSkin and NatSkin have been updated so that they work with the new behavior. But if you use an older skin or have written your own you will most likely need to make some adjustments.
It is not difficult. The general rule is - if you get mysterious blank lines in your skin, the newline after the %TMPL:DEF{"block"}%
needs to be removed. Ie. the content of the block must follow on the same line as the TMPL:DEF.
The spec change have the same impact on CommentPlugin templates where you may have to remove the first line break after the TMPL:DEF. See the CommentPluginTemplate for examples of how comment template definitions should look like in TWiki-4.1.X
An example: A CommentPlugin template that adds a comment as appending a row to a table. Before the spec change this would work.
<verbatim> %TMPL:DEF{OUTPUT:tabletest}%%POS:BEFORE% |%URLPARAM{"comment"}%| -- %WIKIUSERNAME% - %DATE% | %TMPL:END% </verbatim>
From Twiki 4.1.0 the old template definition will add an empty line before the new table row. To fix it simply remove the new line before the table.
<verbatim> %TMPL:DEF{OUTPUT:tabletest}%%POS:BEFORE%|%URLPARAM{"comment"}%| -- %WIKIUSERNAME% - %DATE% | %TMPL:END% </verbatim>
The advantage of the spec change is that now you can add leading and trailing white space including new lines. This was not possible before.
An upgrader upgrading to 4.1.1 should note the following important change
The directory for passthrough files and session files have been replaced by a common directory for temporary files used by TWiki. Previously the two configure settings {PassthroughDir}
and {Sessions}{Dir}
were by default set to /tmp
. These config settings have been replaced by {TempfileDir}
with the default setting value /tmp/twiki
. If the twiki
directory does not exist twiki will create it first time it needs it.
It is highly recommended no longer to use the tmp directory common to other web applications and the new default will work fine for most. You may want to delete all the old session files in /tmp after the upgrade to 4.1.1. They all start with cgisess_. It is additionally highly recommended to limit write access to the {TempfileDir}
for security reasons if you have non-admin users with login access to the webserver just like you would do with the other webserver directories.
TWiki now ships with a new WYSIWYG editor based on TinyMCE which replaces the Kupu based editor. TinyMCE is not a perfect Wysiwyg editor but it is magnitudes better than the previously used Kupu editor.
The WysiwygPlugin that drives the engine behind both TinyMCE has additionally been heavily improved so that fewer TWiki Applications are negatively affected by editing in WYSIWYG mode.
When TinyMCEPlugin is enabled, the Edit button by default becomes WYSIWYG editing mode. A new Raw Edit link has been added to enable application developers to edit the good old way.
The WYSIWYG button has been removed.
The NEWTOPICLINKSYMBOL preference which was deprecated in 4.1 has now been removed from the code. If you want to control the appearance of new links, you can use NEWLINKFORMAT.
When a new user registers on TWiki his user topic is created based on the NewUserTemplate
and UserForm
.
The NewUserTemplate
was located in the TWiki web and the UserForm
in the Main web. When upgrading TWiki these were some of the topics you had to take care not to overwrite.
From 4.2.0 the UserForm
and NewUserTemplate
are distributed in the TWiki web. If you create the two in the Main web the Main web version will be used instead. So if you tailor the user topic format or the form then you should always copy the two files to the Main web and modify the ones in the Main web. When you later upgrade TWiki your tailored template and form will not be overwritten.
The Main.TWikiUsers
topic contains all the registered users. It is a topic you do not want to overwrite when you upgrade TWiki.
From 4.2.0 this file is no longer included in the TWiki distribution. When you register the first time TWiki creates the Main.TWikiUsers
topic in the Main web if it does not exist already. This means that you can now upgrade TWiki without risk of overwriting the important TWikiUsers
topic.
working
directory
A new working
directory which by default is located in the twiki root, has been introduced which contains:
Note: Remember to restrict access to this new directory when you upgrade.
The configure setting {WorkingDir}
defines the container directory for temporary files, extensions' work areas, and intermediate registration data. The default is working
under your installation root.
Take care for that change if you run your own routine to delete obsolete session files, which will now be found under working/tmp/cgisess*
.
TWiki 4.2 introduces a new Internal Admin Login feature which uses "admin" (configurable) as username and the password used for configure to become temporary administrator. When you do a new installation you need to use this feature as Main.TWikiAdminGroup is now access restricted by default to avoid security attacks during the hours an installation may take. From configure there is a link to the TWikiAdminGroup topic and on TWikiAdminGroup the step by step instructions are written in a yellow box. Our advice is not to remove this help text in case you need it later.
The TopMenuSkin adds pulldown menus for better usability and corporate/modern look&feel. This skin is based on the PatternSkin, which used the WebLeftBar in each web for navigation. The TopMenuSkin has a new WebTopBar that defines the menu structure in each web. A default menu is shown in case WebTopBar is missing in a web, so you do not need to add a WebTopBar topic to all your existing webs. See TopMenuSkin#WebSpecific instructions in case you need a customized menu structure in a specific web.
A new bookmark feature has been introduced that replaces the personal left-bar links. Bookmarking a page is now a simple point and click operation: In the Account pulldown menu, select "Bookmark this page...". Existing bookmarks can be managed with an edit table in Main.<wikiname>Bookmarks topic, accessible via the "----- Bookmarks -----" pulldown menu of the Account pulldown.
The personal left-bar topics such as JohnSmithLeftBar are no longer used. Ask users to select the "----- Bookmarks -----" pulldown menu of the Account pulldown to initially create the bookmarks topic, then to either bookmark pages, or to manually copy & paste old left-bar links to the bookmarks topic.
Previous user profile pages had a bare bones look and the form fields were more tailored for public TWiki sites. TWiki-5.1 brings a more visual/modern page layout with profile picture selector, as well as default form fields tailored for the workplace.
Changes to the TWiki.UserForm:
Renamed:
FirstName
to First Name
(no change in %META:FIELD name
)
LastName
to Last Name
(no change in %META:FIELD name
)
OrganisationName
to Organization
OrganisationURL
to URL
Profession
to Titles
VoIP
to Skype ID
State
to Region
Address
InstantMessaging (IM)
HomePage
Comment
Department
Status Update
When upgrading user profile pages pay attention to the renamed and removed fields.
From TWiki 4.0 and prior to 6.0, the syntax * Set DENYTOPICVIEW =
(nothing) in a topic means deny nobody the topic view. The reason for this behavior is that it allows public access to a topic in a restricted web, e.g. having * Set ALLOWWEBVIEW = Main.VipGroup
in WebPreferences. This is not symmetric with the fact that an empty DENYWEBVIEW is the same as an undefined DENYWEBVIEW, hence confusing.
From TWiki 6.0 on, an empty DENYTOPICVIEW means the same as not defined. To open up a topic in a restricted web, you need to use * Set ALLOWTOPICVIEW = Main.AllUsersGroup
. The Main.AllUsersGroup is new. It is a pseudo group containing all authenticated and unauthenticated users. You can use Main.AllAuthUsersGroup if you want to specify all authenticated users.
To keep publicly accessible topics in restricted webs publicly accessible, the tools/eliminate_emptydenytopic
script is provided, which replaces * Set DENYTOPIC<action> =
with * Set ALLOWTOPIC<action> = Main.AllUsersGroup
in all topics in all webs.
Note: See more changes since TWiki-6.0.0 in TWikiReleaseNotes06x00.
TWiki site access control and user activity tracking options
Authentication, or "logging in", is the process by which a user lets TWiki know who they are.
Authentication isn't just about access control. TWiki uses authentication to identify users so it can keep track of who made changes, and manage a wide range of personal settings. With authentication enabled, users can personalise TWiki and contribute as recognised individuals, instead of ghosts.
TWiki authentication is very flexible, and can either stand alone or integrate with existing authentication schemes. You can set up TWiki to require authentication for every access or only for changes. Authentication is also essential for access control.
Quick Authentication Test - Use the %USERINFO% variable to return your current identity:
TWiki user authentication is split into four categories: Password management, user mapping, user registration, and login management. Password management deals with how users' personal data is stored. Registration deals with how new users are added to the wiki. Login management deals with how users log in.
Once a user is logged in, they can be remembered using a Client Session stored in a cookie in the browser (or by other less elegant means if the user has cookies disabled). This avoids the need of having to log in again and again.
TWiki user authentication is configured through the Security Settings pane in the configure interface.
Please note that FileAttachments are not protected by TWiki user authentication by default. The TWiki:TWiki.ApacheConfigGenerator has an option to protect file attachments.
Tip: TWiki:TWiki.TWikiUserAuthenticationSupplement
on TWiki.org has supplemental documentation on user authentication.
As shipped, TWiki supports the Apache 'htpasswd' password manager. This manager supports the use of .htpasswd
files on the server. These files can be unique to TWiki, or can be shared with other applications (such as an Apache webserver). A variety of password encodings are supported for flexibility when re-using existing files. See the descriptive comments in the Security Settings section of the configure interface for more details.
You can easily plug in alternate password management modules to support interfaces to other third-party authentication databases.
Often, when you are using an external authentication method, you want to map from an unfriendly "login name" to a more friendly WikiName. Also, an external authentication database may well have user information you want to import into TWiki, such as user groups.
By default, TWiki supports mapping of usernames to wikinames, and supports TWiki groups internal to TWiki. If you want, you can plug in an alternate user mapping module to support importing groups and other entities.
New user registration uses the password manager to set and change passwords, and to store email addresses. It is also responsible for the new user verification process. The registration process supports single user registration via the TWikiRegistration page, and bulk user registration via the BulkRegistration page (for admins only).
The registration process is also responsible for creating user topics and setting up the mapping information used by the User Mapping support.
Note: If you are restricting the entire Main web to TWikiGuest, you are required to add TWikiRegistrationAgent to ALLOWWEBCHANGE in your
Main/WebPreferences
. By doing so, new users are able to register without any errors.
Login management controls how users log in. There are three basic options: No login, login via a TWiki login page, and login using webserver authentication support.
none
in configure) No Login does exactly what it says. Forget about authentication to make your site completely public - anyone can browse and edit freely, in classic Wiki style. All visitors are given the TWikiGuest default identity so you can't track individual user activity.
Note: This setup is not recommended on public websites for security reasons; anyone would be able to change system settings and perform tasks usually restricted to administrators.
TWiki::LoginManager::TemplateLogin
in configure) Template Login asks for a username and password in a web page, and processes them using whatever Password Manager you choose. Users can log in and log out. Client Sessions are used to remember users. Users can choose to have their session remembered so they will automatically be logged in the next time they start their browser.
TWiki::LoginManager::TemplateLogin
login manager (on the Security Settings pane).
{TemplateLogin}{PreventBrowserRememberingPassword}
that you can set to prevent browsers from remembering usernames and passwords if you are concerned about public terminal usage.
.htpasswd
files, check that a new line with the username and encrypted password is added to the .htpasswd
file. If not, you probably got a path wrong, or the permissions may not allow the webserver user to write to that file.
TWikiAccessControl has more information on setting up access controls.
At this time TWikiAccessControls cannot control access to files in the
pub
area, unless they are only accessed through the viewfile
script. If your pub
directory is set up in the webserver to allow open access you may want to add .htaccess
files in there to restrict access.
You can create a custom version of the TWikiRegistration form by copying the topic, and then deleting or adding input tags in your copy. The
name=""
parameter of the input tags must start with: "Twk0..."
(if this is an optional entry), or "Twk1..."
(if this is a required entry). This ensures that the fields are carried over into the user profile page correctly. Do not modify the version of TWikiRegistration shipped with TWiki, as your changes will be overwritten next time you upgrade.
The default new user template page is in TWiki.NewUserTemplate. The same variables get expanded as in the template topics. You can create a custom new user profile page by creating the Main.NewUserTemplate topic, which will then override the default.
TWiki::LoginManager::ApacheLogin
in configure)
Using this method TWiki does not authenticate users internally. Instead it depends on the REMOTE_USER
environment variable, which the webserver passes to TWiki when you enable authentication in the webserver (as described in RFC 3875 - "The Common Gateway Interface v1.1").
The advantage of this scheme is that if you have an existing website authentication scheme using Apache modules, such as mod_authnz_ldap
or mod_authn_dbd
, you can just plug in directly to them.
The disadvantage is that because the user identity is cached in the browser, you can log in, but you can't log out again unless you restart the browser.
TWiki maps the REMOTE_USER
that was used to log in to the webserver to a WikiName using the table in TWikiUsers. This table is updated whenever a user registers, so users can choose not to register (in which case their webserver login name is used for their signature) or register (in which case that login name is mapped to their WikiName).
The same private .htpasswd
file used in TWiki Template Login can be used to authenticate Apache users, using the Apache Basic Authentication support.
Warning: Do not use the Apache htpasswd
program with .htpasswd
files generated by TWiki! htpasswd
wipes out email addresses that TWiki plants in the info fields of this file.
mod_auth
TWiki::LoginManager::ApacheLogin
login manager.
.htpasswd
entries.
.htaccess
file in the twiki/bin
directory.twiki/bin/.htaccess.txt
that you can copy and change. The comments in the file explain what needs to be done..htaccess
does not have the desired effect, you may need to "AllowOverride All" for the directory in httpd.conf
(if you have root access; otherwise, e-mail web server support) pub
area, unless they are only accessed through the viewfile
script. If your pub
directory is set up to allow open access you may want to add .htaccess
files in there as well to restrict access
name=""
parameter of the input tags must start with: "Twk0..."
(if this is an optional entry), or "Twk1..."
(if this is a required entry). This ensures that the fields are carried over into the user profile page correctly. Do not modify the version of TWikiRegistration shipped with TWiki, as your changes will be overwritten next time you upgrade. .htpasswd
file. If not, you may have got a path wrong, or the permissions may not allow the webserver user to write to that file.
Any time a user requests a page that needs authentication, they will be forced to log on. It may be convenient to have a "login" link as well, to give the system a chance to identify the user and retrieve their personal settings. It may be convenient to force them to log in.
The bin/logon
script enables this. If you are using Apache Login, the bin/logon
script must be setup in the bin/.htaccess
file to be a script which requires a valid user
. Once authenticated, it will redirect the user to the view URL for the page from which the logon
script was linked.
TWiki uses the CPAN:CGI::Session and CPAN:CGI::Cookie
modules to track sessions. These modules are de facto standards for session management among Perl programmers. If you can't use Cookies for any reason, CPAN:CGI::Session
also supports session tracking using the client IP address.
You don't have to enable sessions to support logins in TWiki. However it is strongly recommended. TWiki needs some way to remember the fact that you logged in from a particular browser, and it uses sessions to do this. If you don't enable sessions, TWiki will try hard to remember you, but due to limitations in the browsers, it may also forget you (and then suddenly remember you again later!). So for the best user experience, you should enable sessions.
There are a number of TWikiVariables available that you can use to interrogate your current session. You can even add your own session variables to the TWiki cookie. Session variables are referred to as "sticky" variables.
You can get, set, and clear session variables from within TWiki web pages or by using script parameters. This allows you to use the session as a personal "persistent memory space" that is not lost until the web browser is closed. Also note that if a session variable has the same name as a TWiki preference, the session variables value takes precedence over the TWiki preference. This allows for per-session preferences.
To make use of these features, use the variables:
%SESSION_VARIABLE{ "varName" }% |
Read a session variable |
%SESSION_VARIABLE{ "varName" set="varValue" }% |
Set a session variable |
%SESSION_VARIABLE{ "varName" clear="" }% |
Clear a session variable |
Special read-only session variables:
%SESSION_VARIABLE{"AUTHUSER"}%
- user ID, current value:
%SESSION_VARIABLE{"SESSION_REQUEST_NUMBER"}%
- number of pages accessed by current user since login, current value:
Notes:
TWiki normally uses cookies to store session information on a client computer. Cookies are a common way to pass session information from client to server. TWiki cookies simply hold a unique session identifier that is used to look up a database of session information on the TWiki server.
For a number of reasons, it may not be possible to use cookies. In this case, TWiki has a fallback mechanism; it will automatically rewrite every internal URL it sees on pages being generated to one that also passes session information.
This section applies only if you are using authentication with existing login names (i.e. mapping from login names to WikiNames).
TWiki internally manages two usernames: Login Username and TWiki Username.
pthoeny
. This name is normally passed to TWiki by the REMOTE_USER
environment variable, and used internally. Login Usernames are maintained by your system administrator.
PeterThoeny
, is recorded when you register using TWikiRegistration; doing so also generates a user profile page in the Main web.
TWiki can automatically map an Intranet (Login) Username to a TWiki Username if the {AllowLoginName} is enabled in configure. The default is to use your WikiName as a login name.
NOTE: To correctly enter a WikiName - your own or someone else's - be sure to include the Main web name in front of the Wiki username, followed by a period, and no spaces, for exampleMain.WikiUsername
or%USERSWEB%.WikiUsername
. This pointsWikiUsername
to the Main web, where user profile pages are located, no matter which web it's entered in. Without the web prefix, the name appears as a NewTopic everywhere but in the Main web.
If your {PasswordManager} supports password changing, you can change and reset passwords using forms on regular pages.
TWiki/ChangePassword
)
TWiki/ResetPassword
)
If the active {PasswordManager} supports storage and retrieval of user e-mail addresses, you can change your e-mail using a regular page. As shipped, this is true only for the Apache 'htpasswd' password manager.
TWiki/ChangeEmailAddress
)
.htaccess
One of the key features of TWiki is that it is possible to add HTML to topics. No authentication method is 100% secure on a website where end users can add HTML, as there is always a risk that a malicious user can add code to a topic that gathers user information, such as session IDs. TWiki developers have been forced to make certain tradeoffs, in the pursuit of efficiency, that may be exploited by a hacker.
This section discusses some of the known risks. You can be sure that any potential hackers have read this section as well!
At one extreme, the most secure method is to use TWiki via SSL (Secure Sockets Layer), with a login manager installed and Client Sessions turned off.
Using TWiki with sessions turned off is a pain, though, as with all the login managers there are occasions where TWiki will forget who you are. The best user experience is achieved with sessions turned on.
As soon as you allow the server to maintain information about a logged-in user, you open a door to potential attacks. There are a variety of ways a malicious user can pervert TWiki to obtain another users session ID, the most common of which is known as a cross-site scripting attack. Once a hacker has an SID they can pretend to be that user.
To help prevent these sorts of attacks, TWiki supports IP matching, which ensures that the IP address of the user requesting a specific session is the same as the IP address of the user who created the session. This works well as long as IP addresses are unique to each client, and as long as the IP address of the client can't be faked.
Session IDs are usually stored by TWiki in cookies, which are stored in the client browser. Cookies work well, but not all environments or users permit cookies to be stored in browsers. So TWiki also supports two other methods of determining the session ID. The first method uses the client IP address to determine the session ID. The second uses a rewriting method that rewrites local URLs in TWiki pages to include the session ID in the URL.
The first method works well as long as IP addresses are unique to each individual client, and client IP addresses can't be faked by a hacker. If IP addresses are unique and can't be faked, it is almost as secure as cookies + IP matching, so it ranks as the fourth most secure method.
If you have to turn IP matching off, and cookies can't be relied on, then you may have to rely on the second method, URL rewriting. This method exposes the session IDs very publicly, so should be regarded as "rather dodgy".
Most TWiki sites don't use SSL, so, as is the case with most sites that don't use SSL, there is always a possibility that a password could be picked out of the ether. Browsers do not encrypt passwords sent over non-SSL links, so using Apache Login is no more secure than Template Login.
Of the two shipped login managers, Apache Login is probably the most useful. It lets you do this sort of thing: wget --http-user=RogerRabbit --http-password=i'mnottelling http://www.example.com/bin/save/Sandbox/StuffAUTOINC0?text=hohoho,%20this%20is%20interesting i.e. pass in a user and password to a request from the command-line. However it doesn't let you log out.
Template Login degrades to url re-writing when you use a client like dillo that does not support cookies. However, you can log out and back in as a different user.
Finally, it would be really neat if someone was to work out how to use certificates to identify users.....
See TWiki:TWiki.SecuringTWikiSite for more information.
Restricting read and write access to topics and webs, by Users and groups
TWiki Access Control allows you restrict access to single topics and entire webs, by individual user and by user Groups. Access control, combined with TWikiUserAuthentication, lets you easily create and manage an extremely flexible, fine-grained privilege system.
Tip: TWiki:TWiki.TWikiAccessControlSupplement
on TWiki.org has additional documentation on access control.
Your organization will learn that, while fostering an open collaborative environment, soft security (peer review), together with version control (complete audit trail) will take care of any security concern you might have.
Open, free-form editing is the essence of WikiCulture - what makes TWiki different and often more effective than other collaborative environments. For that reason, it is strongly recommended that decisions to restrict read or write access to a web or a topic are made with great care - the more restrictions, the less wiki in the mix. Experience shows that unrestricted write access works very well because:
As a collaboration guideline:
Web | Sitemap | VIEW | CHANGE | RENAME | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Listed | DENY | ALLOW | DENY | ALLOW | DENY | ALLOW | |
![]() ![]() |
on | ||||||
![]() ![]() |
on | TWikiAdminGroup | TWikiAdminGroup | ||||
![]() ![]() |
on |
Please Note:
Note: Above table comes from SitePermissions
Authentication: Identifies who a user is based on a login procedure. See TWikiUserAuthentication.
Access control: Restrict access to content based on users and groups once a user is identified.
Access control is based on the familiar concept of Users and Groups. Users are defined by their WikiNames. They can then be organized in unlimited combinations by inclusion in one or more user Groups. For convenience, Groups can also be included in other Groups.
A user can create an account in TWikiRegistration. The following actions are performed:
The default visitor name is TWikiGuest. This is the non-authenticated user.
The following describes the standard TWiki support for groups. Your local TWiki may have an alternate group mapping manager installed. Check with your TWiki administrator if you are in doubt.
Groups are defined by group topics located in the Main
web. To create a new group, visit TWikiGroups and enter the name of the new group ending in Group
into the "new group" form field. This will create a new group topic with two important settings:
Set GROUP = < list of Users and/or Groups >
Set ALLOWTOPICCHANGE = < list of Users and/or Groups >
The GROUP setting is a comma-separated list of users and/or other groups. Example:
Set GROUP = SomeUser, OtherUser, SomeGroup
The ALLOWTOPICCHANGE setting defines who is allowed to change the group topic; it is a comma delimited list of users and groups. You typically want to restrict that to the members of the group itself, so it should contain the name of the topic. This prevents users not in the group from editing the topic to give themselves or others access. For example, for the MarketingGroup topic write:
Set ALLOWTOPICCHANGE = MarketingGroup
Note: TWiki has strict formatting rules. Make sure you have a real bullet. (In raw edit it is three or six spaces, an asterisk, and an extra space in front of any access control rule.)
A number of TWiki functions (for example, renaming webs) are only available to administrators. Administrators are simply users who belong to the SuperAdminGroup. This is a standard user group, the name of which is defined by {SuperAdminGroup} setting in configure. The default name of this group is the TWikiAdminGroup
. The system administrator may have chosen a different name for this group if your local TWiki uses an alternate group mapping manager but for simplicity we will use the default name TWikiAdminGroup in the rest of this topic.
You can create new administrators simply by adding them to the TWikiAdminGroup topic. For example,
Set GROUP = RobertCailliau, TimBernersLee
You can define who is allowed to read or write to a web or a topic. Note that some plugins may not respect access permissions.
Note that there is an important distinction between CHANGE access and RENAME access. A user can CHANGE a topic, but thanks to version control their changes cannot be lost (the history of the topic before the change is recorded). However if a topic or web is renamed, that history may be lost. Typically a site will only give RENAME access to administrators and content owners.
You can define restrictions on who is allowed to view a TWiki web. You can restrict access to certain webs to selected Users and Groups, by:
Set DENYWEBVIEW = < comma-delimited list of Users and Groups >
Set ALLOWWEBVIEW = < comma-delimited list of Users and Groups >
Set DENYWEBCHANGE = < comma-delimited list of Users and Groups >
Set ALLOWWEBCHANGE = < comma-delimited list of Users and Groups >
Set DENYWEBRENAME = < comma-delimited list of Users and Groups >
Set ALLOWWEBRENAME = < comma-delimited list of Users and Groups >
For example, set this to restrict a web to be viewable only by the MarketingGroup:
Set ALLOWWEBVIEW = Main.MarketingGroup
If your site allows hierarchical webs, then access to sub-webs is determined from the access controls of the parent web, plus the access controls in the sub-web. So, if the parent web has ALLOWWEBVIEW
set, this will also apply to the subweb. Also note that you will need to ensure that the parent web's FINALPREFERENCES
does not include the access control settings listed above. Otherwise you will not be able override the parent web's access control settings in sub-webs.
Creation and renaming of sub-webs is controlled by the WEBCHANGE setting on the parent web (or ROOTCHANGE for root webs). Renaming is additionally restricted by the setting of WEBRENAME in the web itself.
Note: If you restrict access to the Main, make sure to add the TWikiRegistrationAgent
so that users can register. Example:
Set ALLOWWEBCHANGE = TWikiAdminGroup, TWikiRegistrationAgent
Note: For Web level access rights Setting any of these settings to an empty value has the same effect as not setting them at all. Please note that the documentation of TWiki 4.0 and earlier versions of TWiki 4.1 did not reflect the actual implementation, e.g. an empty ALLOWWEBVIEW does not prevent anyone from viewing the web, and an an empty DENYWEBVIEW does not allow all to view the web.
Set DENYTOPICVIEW = < comma-delimited list of Users and Groups >
Set ALLOWTOPICVIEW = < comma-delimited list of Users and Groups >
Set DENYTOPICCHANGE = < comma-delimited list of Users and Groups >
Set ALLOWTOPICCHANGE = < comma-delimited list of Users and Groups >
Set DENYTOPICRENAME = < comma-delimited list of Users and Groups >
Set ALLOWTOPICRENAME = < comma-delimited list of Users and Groups >
For example, set this to restrict a topic to be viewable only by the MarketingExecGroup:
Set ALLOWTOPICVIEW = Main.MarketingExecGroup
See "How TWiki evaluates ALLOW/DENY settings" below for more on how ALLOW and DENY interacts.
If the same setting is defined multiple times the last one overrides the previous. They are not OR'ed together.
You may want to completely open up access to a specific topic within a restricted web - allowing access by anybody. There is a special group for that - Main.AllUsersGroup. The following setting allows view access to the topic by anybody even if they are not authenticated.
Set ALLOWTOPICVIEW = Main.AllUsersGroup
Alternatively, you can grant access only to authenticated users by Main.AllAuthUsersGroup. If an unauthenticated user accesses a topic having the following setting, they are asked to authenticate themself.
Set ALLOWTOPICVIEW = Main.AllAuthUsersGroup
Remember when opening up access to specific topics within a restricted web that other topics in the web - for example, the WebLeftBar - may also be accessed when viewing the topics. The message you get when you are denied access should tell you what topic you were not permitted to access.
As mentioned in the following section, meaning of an empty value set to DENYTOPICVIEW, DENYTOPICCHANGE, and DENYTOPICRENAME has been changed in TWiki 6.0. To keep those TWiki topics having empty DENYTOPICOPERAION accessible by everybody, those need to be replaced with
Set ALLOWTOPICOPERATION = Main.AllUsersGroup
For that, tools/eliminate_emptydenytopic
is provided.
After upgrading from pre 6.0 to post 6.0, you need to run it.
Setting an empty value to an access control variable is the same as not setting at all:
Set ALLOWTOPICVIEW =
Since TWiki 4.0 and prior to TWiki 6.0 setting DENYTOPICVIEW, DENYTOPICCHANGE, or DENYTOPICRENAME to an empty value meant "do not deny anyone regardless of the corresponding ALLOWTOPICX", which is no longer the case. Back then, setting an empty value to DENYTOPICX was the only way to open up a topic to everybody in a restricted web. Now that we have AllUsersGroup and AllAuthUsersGroup, there is no need for that behaviour, which caused a lot of confusion and debate.
By default, TWiki does not secure file attachments. Without making the following changes to the twiki.conf file, it is possible for anyone who has access to the server to gain access to an attachment if they know the attachment's fully qualified path, even though access to the topic associated with the attachment is secured. This is because attachments are referred to directly by Apache, and are not by default delivered via TWiki scripts. This means that the above instructions for controlling to topics do not apply to attachments unless you make the changes as described below.
An effective way to secure attachments is to apply the same access control settings to attachments as those applied to topics. This security enhancement can be accomplished by instructing the webserver to redirect accesses to attachments via the TWiki viewfile
script, which honors the TWiki access controls settings to topics. See the notes below for implications.
The preferred method to secure attachments is by editing the twiki.conf
file to include:
ScriptAlias /do /filesystem/path/to/twiki/bin Alias /pub/TWiki /filesystem/path/to/twiki/pub/TWiki Alias /pub/Sandbox /filesystem/path/to/twiki/pub/Sandbox ScriptAlias /pub /filesystem/path/to/twiki/bin/viewfile
Notes:
viewfile
script. The TWiki web and Sandbox web are excluded for performance reasons.
viewfile
script sets the mime type based upon file name suffix. Unknown types are served as text/plain which can result in corrupt files.
Top level webs are a special case, because they don't have a parent web with a WebPreferences. So there has to be a special control just for the root level.
Set DENYROOTCHANGE = < comma-delimited list of Users and Groups >
Set ALLOWROOTCHANGE = < comma-delimited list of Users and Groups >
ROOTCHANGE
access to rename an existing top-level web. You just need WEBCHANGE
in the web itself.
When deciding whether to grant access, TWiki evaluates the following rules in order (read from the top of the list; if the logic arrives at PERMITTED or DENIED that applies immediately and no more rules are applied). You need to read the rules bearing in mind that VIEW, CHANGE and RENAME access may be granted/denied separately.
Set DENYTOPIC =
)
There are cases where DENYROOTCHANGE, ALLOWROOTCHANGE, DENYWEBCHANGE, and ALLOWWEBCHANGE, and DENYWEBCHANGE are not capable enough to implement web creation permission you want.
To cope with such cases, when a new web is created, the canCreateWeb($cUID, $web)
method of the user mapping manager is called if the method exists.
If it returns true, TWiki goes ahead and create the web without checking access control variables.
Please read AllowWebCreateByUserMappingManager for more details.
You may have an unruly registered users (e.g. a crawler program) who don't follow the rules while you don't have control over such users. And the web application container in which TWiki is installed may be managed by somebody else and you don't have tight and quick control.
To cope with such situations, certain users can be forbidden certain scripts by setting {ForbidUserAction}
.
A good example is worth more than a lengthy explanation, so here it is:
$TWiki::cfg{ForbidUserAction} = ' AggresiveCrawler: edit, oops, search; ReadOnlyUser: !view, viewfile; TotallyForbidden: !nothing; ';In this example:
!
, only the listed scripts are permitted for the user. !
at the beginning of the list negates the list.
There are cases where it's handy to access TWiki on behalf of somebody else retaining a trace of your real identity rather than completely becoming a different user. We call it user masquerading. TWiki provides a framework to implement that. Please read UserMasquerading for more information.
This is an advanced feature and not many TWiki sites are using, but there is a part in the following section mentioning it, it's mentioned here.
There are pitfalls and you need to harden your web to avoid unexpected access. Before using this feature, please read this entire section through carefully.
You may want to restrict access dynamically -- based on topic name, a form field value, or some combination of factors.
To cope with such situations, the dynamic access control mechanism is provided.
If you set DYNAMIC_ACCESS_CONTROL
'on' at WebPreferences of the web, TWiki variables in access control variables mentioned above are expanded.
Let's assume you need to restrict changes only to the CroniesGroup members except with topics whose name ends with Public, which need be changed by anybody. That is achieve by the following settings on WebPrefences.
* Set DYNAMIC_ACCESS_CONTROL = on * Set ALLOWWEBCHANGE = %IF{"'%CALCULATE{$SUBSTRING(%TOPIC%, -6, 6)}%' = 'Public'" then="%WIKINAME%" else="CroniesGroup"}%
Let's assume:
* Set DYNAMIC_ACCESS_CONTROL = on * Set ALLOWWEBVIEW = %IF{"'%CALCULATE{$SUBSTRING(%TOPIC%, 1, 6)}%' = 'ReqEnt' and '%FORMFIELD{Requestor}%' != '%WIKINAME%'" then="SupportGroup" else="%WIKINAME%"}%
Specifically the following access control variables are subject to TWiki variable expansion in their values.
Let's assume WebA has the following lines on WebPreferences.
* Set DYNAMIC_ACCESS_CONTROL = on * Set MEMBERS = JaneSmith, JoeSchmoe * Set ALLOWWEBVIEW = %MEMBERS%This is not a good way to use dynamic access control but it does restrict access only to those listed in MEMBERS. However, access control doesn't work as expected when WebA.TopicB is accessed from WebC.TopicD by
%INCLUDE{WebA.TopicB}%
or other variables.
This is because %MEMBERS%
is defined in WebA and may have a different value in other webs.
You may think the following lines cheat the access control on WebA but actually not.
* Set MEMBERS = %WIKINAME% %INCLUDE{WebA.TopicB}%This is because when a topic (e.g. WebC.TopicD) is accessed from browser and the topic refers to another topic in a different web (e.g. WebA.TopicB) and the different web employs dynamic access control, access to another topic is defined being on the safer side.
On a topic, it's possible to use a variable defined on the topic for topic level access restriction. E.g.
* Set MEMBERS = JaneSmith, JoeSchmoe * Set ALLOWTOPICVIEW = %MEMBERS%[This is not a good way to use dynamic access control
Your user mapping handler may be providing the UserMasquerading feature. In that case, you expect dynamic access control to just work when user masquerading is in effect. Otherwise, you cannot test if your dynamic access control configuration is working as expected on your own.
Dynamic access control does work as expected even if user masquerading is in effect. For that, the following things are happening under the hood.
Let's think about Example 2 mentioned above. When you masquerading as SomebodyElse, you need to be able to see SomebodyElse's requests only. In the access control setting, a form field value is compared with %WIKINAME%. While user masquerading is in effect, your wiki name is YourNameOnBehalfOfSomebodyElse. It cannot match the form field value.
To make dynamic access control work under these circumstances, variable expansion for dynamic access control is skewed as follows. Specifically, the following variables are expanded to the value of SomeboyElse's rather than YourNameOnBehalfOfSomebodyElse's.
By default, user level preferences are read before web level preferences.
This means a user can set a preferences variable at the user level and finalise it.
To prevent this sort of attack, you need to harden your web or site by disabling user preferences by e.g. having the following line on lib/LocalSite.cfg
$TWiki::cfg{DemoteUserPreferences}= 1;and having the following line on your WebPreferences and then finalise
DENYUSERPREFEENCES
.
* Set DENYUSERPREFEENCES = allPlease read TWikiVariables#ControllingUserLevelPrefsOverride for details.
Again by default, predefined variables such as %IF{...}%
can be overridden by preferences variables.
If user preferences are disabled, ordinary users cannot attack using user preferences, but topic level preferences may cause unexpected consequences.
As such, all predefined variables need to be made un-overridable by having the following line on WebPreferences and then finalise OVERRIDABLEPREDEFINEDVARIABLES
.
* Set OVERRIDABLEPREDEFINEDVARIABLES =Please read TWikiVariables#PredefinedVariables for details.
You may not be comfortable with dynamic access control because it may slow things down. Or you may not want to be bothered by questions raised by users about it. If so, you can disable it by setting DYNAMIC_ACCESS_CONTROL 'off' and then finalizing at the local site level. (cf. TWikiVariables#Setting_Preferences_Variables)
ALLOWTOPICVIEW and ALLOWTOPICCHANGE only applies to the topic in which the settings are defined. If a topic A includes another topic B, topic A does not inherit the access rights of the included topic B.
Examples: Topic A includes topic B
When access is denied, a page as follows is displayed:
You may want to customize the passage annotated in the red rectangle. For example, with a web restricting access, you may want to show the link to an access request form.
You can achieve that by setting TOPIC_ACCESS_CONTACT
varialbe on WebPreferences. e.g.
* Set TOPIC_ACCESS_CONTACT = If you need to access this site, please apply [[Main.AccessForm][here]]Please note that setting it on a topic other than WebPreferences does not take effect. This is a limitation of the current implementation.
You can have custom user/group notations such as USER:userid
and LDAPGROUP:group-name
and use them for access control. For example:
* Set ALLOWWEBCHANGE = USER:buzz, LDAPGROUP:foo-barIn a large organization, TWiki may need to depend on user and group data provided by its infrastructure. Custom user/group notations are handy in such situations though it's not trivial to implement. Please read here for details.
In a firewalled TWiki, e.g. an intranet wiki or extranet wiki, you want to allow only invited people to access your TWiki. There are three options:
1. Install TWiki Behind Firewall:
The firewall takes care of giving access to TWiki to authorized people only. This is a typical setup for a company wiki. As for TWiki configuration, no special setup is needed.
2. Extranet TWiki Using Template Login:
All TWiki content (pages and attachments) need to be access controlled. The Template Login allows users to login and logout. Only logged in users can access TWiki content.
Configuration: Follow the default setup, then change these configure settings:
backuprestore
, configure
, login
, logon
and resetpasswd
with the following configure setting: $TWiki::cfg{AuthScripts} = 'attach, changes, edit, manage, oops, preview, rdiff, rdiffauth, register, rename, rest, save, search, twiki_cgi, upload, statistics, view, viewauth, viewfile';
twiki/bin
also to the {AuthScripts}
configure setting. 3. Extranet TWiki Using Apache Login:
All TWiki content (pages and attachments) need to be access controlled. The Apache Login does not offer a logout; typically the browser needs to be restarted to logout. Only logged in users can access TWiki content.
Configuration: Enable user authentication with ApacheLogin and lock down access to the whole twiki/bin
and twiki/pub
directories to all but valid users. In the Apache config file for TWiki (twiki.conf
or .htaccess
), replace the <FilesMatch "(attach|edit|...
section with this:
<FilesMatch ".*"> require valid-user </FilesMatch>
Notes:
Use the following setup to provide unrestricted viewing access to open webs, with authentication only on selected webs. Requires TWikiUserAuthentication to be enabled.
Set DENYWEBVIEW = < list of Users and Groups >
Set ALLOWWEBVIEW = < list of Users and Groups >
DENYWEBVIEW
is evaluated before ALLOWWEBVIEW
. Access is denied if the authenticated person is in the DENYWEBVIEW
list, or not in the ALLOWWEBVIEW
list. Access is granted if DENYWEBVIEW
and ALLOWWEBVIEW
are not defined.
Tip: To hide access control settings from normal browser viewing, you can put them into the topic preference settings by clicking the link
Edit topic preference settings
under More topic actions
menu. Preferences set in this manner are not visible in the topic text, but take effect nevertheless. Access control settings added as topic preference settings are stored in the topic meta data and they override settings defined in the topic text.
Alternatively, place them in HTML comment markers, but this exposes the access setting during ordinary editing.
<!--
* Set DENYTOPICCHANGE = Main.SomeGroup
-->
Another way of hiding webs is to keep them hidden by not publishing the URL and by preventing the all webs
search option from accessing obfuscated webs. Do so by enabling the NOSEARCHALL
variable in WebPreferences:
Set NOSEARCHALL = on
This setup can be useful to hide a new web until content its ready for deployment, or to hide view access restricted webs.
Note: Obfuscating a web without view access control is very insecure, as anyone who knows the URL can access the web.
It is possible to turn the PatternSkin and TopMenuSkin into read-only mode by removing the edit and attach controls (links and buttons). This is mainly useful if you have TWiki application pages or dashboards where you do not want regular users to change content. The read-only skin mode is not a replacement for access control; you can use it in addition to access control. Details at PatternSkinCustomization#ReadOnlySkinMode.
You may need to restrict access to topics of a certain name in all webs. For example, there might be an add-on refering to a certain topic of all webs. And the add-on does things only administrators are supposed to do. In that case, change to the topic needs to be restricted only to administrators and must not be overridable.
Let's say there is AutomationAddOn which refers to WebAutomation of all webs. And WebAutomation needs to be modifable only by administrators. That can be achieved by the following configuration.
$TWiki::cfg{Access}{Topic}{WebAutomation} = { DENYCHANGE => 'Main.AllUsersGroup', };
In addition to ALLOWCHANGE
, you can sepcify DENYCHANGE
, ALLOWVIEW
, DENYVIEW
, ALLOWRENAME
, and DENYRENAME
as follows.
$TWiki::cfg{Access}{Topic}{SpecialTopic} = { DENYVIEW => 'JoeSchmoe', ALLOWVIEW => 'FooGroup', };
$TWiki::cfg{Access}{Topic}{TOPICNAME}
has precedence over DENYTOPIC*
and ALLOWTOPIC*
.
For example, if the configuration for WebAutomation is there as above, there is no way to allow non-adminsitrators to change the WebAutomation topic of any web.
As a way to configure access control, this may look crude.
The reason why configured this way is that this can be part of plugin/add-on/contrib's configuration.
For example, Config.spec
of AutomationAddOn would have the following lines, with which proper access control to WebAutomation topics is implemented without the administrator knowing it.
$TWiki::cfg{Access}{Topic}{WebAutomation} = { DENYCHANGE => 'Main.AllUsersGroup', };
These instructions are for contributors who prefer to use the Raw Edit over the default WYSIWYG editor. Working in TWiki is as easy as typing in text. You don't need to know HTML, though you can use it if you prefer. Links to topics are created automatically when you enter WikiWords. And TWiki shorthand gives you all the power of HTML with a simple coding system that takes no time to learn. It's all laid out below.
Formatting Command: | You write: | You get: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Paragraphs: Blank lines will create new paragraphs. |
1st paragraph 2nd paragraph |
1st paragraph 2nd paragraph |
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Headings: Three or more dashes at the beginning of a line, followed by plus signs and the heading text. One plus creates a top level heading, two pluses a second level heading, etc. The maximum heading depth is 6.
|
---++ Sushi ---+++ Maguro ---+++!! Not in TOC |
SushiMaguroNot in TOC |
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Bold Text: Words get shown in bold by enclosing them in * asterisks.
|
*Bold* |
Bold |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Italic Text: Words get shown in italic by enclosing them in _ underscores.
|
_Italic_ |
Italic |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Bold Italic: Words get shown in bold italic by enclosing them in __ double-underscores.
|
__Bold italic__ |
Bold italic |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Fixed Font: Words get shown in fixed font by enclosing them in = equal signs.
|
=Fixed font= |
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Bold Fixed Font: Words get shown in bold fixed font by enclosing them in double equal signs.
|
==Bold fixed== |
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
![]() * _ __ = == ) indicator
with normal punctuation, such as commas and full stops.
![]() ![]() |
_This works_, _this does not _ _this fails too_ |
This works, |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Separator (Horizontal Rule): Three or more three dashes at the beginning of a line.. |
------- |
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Bulleted List: Multiple of three spaces, an asterisk, and another space. ![]() |
* level 1 * level 2 * back on 1 * A bullet broken over three lines * last bullet |
|
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Icon List: Multiple of three spaces, an asterisk, text icon:name and another space.
![]() name of any TWikiDocGraphics icon.
|
* icon:tip Icon list * icon:led-red Full * icon:led-green OK * icon:unchecked Item 1 * icon:checked Item 2 * icon:empty No bullet |
|
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Numbered List: Multiple of three spaces, a type character, a dot, and another space. Several types are available besides a number:
|
1. Sushi 1. Dim Sum 1. Fondue A. Sushi A. Dim Sum A. Fondue i. Sushi i. Dim Sum i. Fondue |
|
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Definition List: Three spaces, a dollar sign, the term, a colon, a space, followed by the definition. Deprecated syntax: Three spaces, the term with no spaces, a colon, a space, followed by the definition. |
$ Sushi: Japan $ Dim Sum: S.F. |
|
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Table: Each row of the table is a line containing of one or more cells. Each cell starts and ends with a vertical bar '|'. Any spaces at the beginning of a line are ignored.
![]() |^| multiple-span row functionality, |>> ... <<| multi-line syntax, and additional rendering features
|
| *L* | *C* | *R* | | A2 | B2 | C2 | | A3 | B3 | C3 | | multi span ||| | A5-7 | 5 | 5 | |^| six | six | |^| seven | seven | | split\ | over\ | 3 lines | | A9 |>> | Nested | | table | <<| C9 | |
|
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WikiWord Links: CapitalizedWordsStuckTogether (or WikiWords) will produce a link automatically if preceded by whitespace or parenthesis. ![]() Otherweb.TopicName .
![]() Otherweb.Subweb.TopicName .
![]() ![]() '.' are used to separate webs and subwebs from topic names and therefore cannot be used in topic names.
It's generally a good idea to use the TWikiVariables %SYSTEMWEB% and %USERSWEB% instead of TWiki and Main. |
WebStatistics Sandbox.WebNotify Sandbox.WebHome Sandbox.Subweb.TopicName | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Anchors: You can define a reference inside a TWiki topic (called an anchor name) and link to that. To define an anchor write #AnchorName at the beginning of a line. The anchor name must be a WikiWord of no more than 32 characters. To link to an anchor name use the [[MyTopic#MyAnchor]] syntax. You can omit the topic name if you want to link within the same topic.
|
[[WikiWord#NotThere]] [[#MyAnchor][Jump]] #MyAnchor To here | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
External Links: URLs starting with file , ftp , gopher , http , https , irc , mailto , news , nntp and telnet are linked automatically if preceded by whitespace or parenthesis. External links are indicated with a trailing ![]() ! exclamation point prefix.
|
http://twiki.org https://google.com !http://escaped-link |
http://escaped-link |
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Forced Links: Use double square brackets to create forced links: Write [[link]] or [[link][label]] to force a link. Use the former for singleton words and if automatic linking is disabled. Use the latter one to specify a link label other than the link. For the link, you can use internal link references (e.g. WikiWords) and URLs (e.g. http://TWiki.org/).
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() [[WikiWord]] links if the SHOWTOPICTITLELINK preferences setting is enabled.
|
[[WikiWord]] [[WikiWord?n1=v1;n2=v2]] [[WikiWord#TheAnchor]] [[WikiWord?n=5#TheAnchor]] [[WikiSyntax][wiki syntax]] [[http://gnu.org/][GNU]] [[Singleton]] escaped: ![[WikiSyntax]] |
escaped: [[WikiSyntax]] |
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Topic Title Links: Use double square brackets and a plus sign to create links with topic title: Write [[+TopicName]] or [[+Web.TopicName]] to show the topic title instead of the topic name. The topic title is defined by the form field named "Title", the topic preferences setting named TITLE, or the topic name if neither exists.
![]() [[TopicName][$topictitle]] or [[Web.TopicName][$topictitle]] .
|
[[+BugN1234]] [[+Bugs.BugN1234]] [[BugN1234][$topictitle]] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Prevent a Link: Prevent a WikiWord from being linked by prepending it with an exclamation point. |
!SunOS | SunOS | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Disable Links: You can disable automatic linking of WikiWords by surrounding text with <noautolink> and </noautolink> tags.
![]() |
<noautolink> RedHat & SuSE </noautolink> |
RedHat & SuSE |
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Mailto Links: E-mail addresses are linked automatically. To create e-mail links that have more descriptive link text, specify subject lines or message bodies, or omit the e-mail address, you can write [[mailto:user@domain][descriptive text]] .
|
a@b.com [[mailto:a@b.com]\ [Mail]] [[mailto:?subject=\ Hi][Hi]] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Twitter Links: @twitter IDs are linked automatically. The link rule is defined by the {Links}{TwitterUrlPattern} configure setting.
|
@twiki | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Verbatim Text: Surround code excerpts and other formatted text with <verbatim> and </verbatim> tags.
![]() verbatim tag disables HTML code. Use <pre> and </pre> tags instead if you want the HTML code within the tags to be interpreted.
![]() |
<verbatim> class CatAnimal { void purr() { <code here> } } </verbatim> |
class CatAnimal { void purr() { <code here> } } |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Literal Text: TWiki generates HTML code from TWiki shorthand. Experts surround anything that must be output literally in the HTML code, without the application of TWiki shorthand rules, with <literal>..</literal> tags.
![]() ![]() |
<literal> | Not | A | Table | <literal> |
| Not | A | Table | | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Protected Text: Experts protect text from mangling by WYSIWYG editors using <sticky>..</sticky> tags. Sticky tags don't have any effect on normal
topic display; they are only relevant when content has to be
protected from a WYSIWYG editor (usually because it isn't well-formed HTML, or because it
is HTML that WYSIWYG would normally filter out or modify). Protected
content appears as plain text in the WYSIWYG editor.
|
<sticky> <div> This div is required </div> </sticky> |
This div is required
|
You can use most HTML tags in TWiki topics without a problem. This is useful where you want to add some content that is formatted in a way that is not supported using TWiki shorthand, for example, you can write <strike>deleted text</strike>
to get deleted text.
There are a few usability and technical considerations to keep in mind:
<literal>..</literal>
tags around blocks of HTML to avoid accidental interpretation of TWiki shorthand within the HTML.
Recommendations when pasting HTML from other sources (using the plain-text editor):
<body>
and </body>
tags.
<p />
paragraph tags on empty lines, which causes problems if done between HTML tags that do not allow paragraph tags, like for example between table tags.
<...>
- of a HTML tag are on the same line, or the tag will be broken.
When using a WYSIWYG editor, you can just copy-paste directly into the editor, and the content will be converted to TWiki shorthand automatically when you save.
It is also possible to add Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) and JavaScript
code to TWiki pages, which can be used to make TWiki application more interactive. To prevent TWiki from interpreting some text as markup, it can be enclosed in HTML-escaped <pre>-tags.
JavaScript Example: | CSS Example: |
---|---|
<!-- <pre> --> <script language="javascript"> <!-- // put your JavaScript code here //--> </script> <!-- </pre> --> |
<!-- <pre> --> <style type="text/css"> /* put your CSS code here */ </style> <!-- </pre> --> |
Being able to create links without any special formatting is a core TWiki feature, made possible with WikiWords and inline URLs.
http://...
, https://...
, ftp://...
, gopher://...
, news://...
, file://...
, telnet://...
and mailto:...@...
are linked automatically.
[[URL][label]]
to get an external link with a descriptive text for the link, such as [[http://google.com/][Google home page]]
to get Google home page
name@domain.com
are linked automatically.
TWiki Variables are names enclosed in percent signs that are that are expanded to some other text when the topic is displayed. For example, %TOPIC%
is expanded to TWikiVariablesQuickStart. Some variables can take arguments in curly braces - for example, %INCLUDE{"OtherTopic" arg="value"}%
.
Many TWiki variables are built-in, and others are predefined for your convenience. TWikiVariables describes how you can also define your own TWiki Variables at the entire site, individual web, or individual topic level. Variables are fully expanded before any of the TWiki text formatting rules are applied.
Commonly used variables:
%TOC%
: Automatically generates a table of contents based on headings in a topic - see the top of this page for an example.
%WEB%
: The current web, is TWiki.
%TOPIC%
: The current topic name, is TWikiVariablesQuickStart.
%ATTACHURL%
: The attachment URL of the current topic. Example usage: If you attach a file to a topic you can refer to it as %ATTACHURL%/image.gif
to show the URL of the file or the image in your text.
%INCLUDE{"SomeTopic"}%
: Server side include, includes another topic. The current web is the default web. Example: %INCLUDE{"TWiki.SiteMap"}%
%SEARCH{"sushi"}%
: Inline search showing the search result embedded in a topic. FormattedSearch gives you control over formatting, used to create web-based applications.
%ICON{"help"}%
, %ICON{"tip"}%
, and %ICON{"warning"}%
to get:
To "escape" a variable, prefix it with an exclamation mark. Write:
!%SOMEVARIABLE%
to get: %SOMEVARIABLE%.
Plugins can extend the functionality of TWiki into many other areas. There are a huge number of TWiki plugins available from the Plugins web on TWiki.org.
Currently enabled plugins on this TWiki installation, as listed by %PLUGINDESCRIPTIONS%
:
"$SUM( $ABOVE() )"
to TWiki tables or anywhere in topic text ExternalSite:Page
to link to a page on an external site based on aliases defined in a rules topic :-)
as :eek:
as Check on current Plugin status and settings for this site in TWikiPreferences.
TWiki formatting rules are fairly simple to use and quick to type. However, there are some things to watch out for, taken from the TextFormattingFAQ:
<filename>
is not displayed. How can I show it as it is? '<'
and '>'
characters have a special meaning in HTML, they define HTML tags. You need to escape them, so write '<'
instead of '<'
, and '>'
instead of '>'
. 'prog <filename>'
to get 'prog <filename>'
.
'&'
character sometimes not displayed? '&'
character has a special meaning in HTML, it starts a so-called character entity, e.g. '©'
is the ©
copyright character. You need to escape '&'
to see it as it is, so write '&'
instead of '&'
. 'This & that'
to get 'This & that'
.
Related topics: WikiSyntax, WikiWord, WikiNotation, TextFormattingRules, TWikiEditingShorthand, TWikiRenderingShortcut, TWikiShorthand, TWikiVariablesQuickStart
Special text strings expand on the fly to display dynamic content, such as user data or system info
TWikiVariables are text strings - %VARIABLE%
or %VARIABLE{ parameter="value" }%
- that expand into content whenever a topic is rendered for viewing. There are two types of variables:
%T%
renders as %CALCULATE{}%
is handled by the SpreadSheetPlugin
See list of all TWiki Variables currently defined in this TWiki installation.
Categories:
|
![]() |
Variables:
![]() |
To use a variable type its name. For example,
%T%
to get %TOPIC%
to get TWikiVariables
(a predefined variable)
%CALCULATE{ "$UPPER(Text)" }%
to get TEXT
(a variable defined by a plugin)
Note:
!%TOPIC%
to get %TOPIC%
%ALLVARIABLES%
to get a full listing of all variables defined for a particular topic
Variable names must start with a letter, optionally followed by letters, numbers and underscore '_' characters. Both upper-case and lower-case characters can be used, %MYVAR%
, %MyVar%
, %My2ndVar%
, and %My_Var%
are valid names. Variables are case sensitive, e.g. %MyVAR%
and %MYVAR%
are not the same.
By convention all settings, predefined variables and variables handled by extensions are always UPPER-CASE.
Unlike predefined variables, preferences variables can be defined by the user in various places.
You can set variables in all the following places:
%USERPREFSTOPIC%
in the user's subweb is read instead
$TWiki::cfg{DemoteUserPreferences}
is true, this step is deferred to a later step. On this TWiki installation, $TWiki::cfg{DemoteUserPreferences}
is false
EXTRAPREFERENCES
is defined at this point, it's regarded as having comma separated list of topics. Those topics are read in the listed order as if they were WebPreferences
$TWiki::cfg{DemoteUserPreferences}
is true as mentioned at the step 4
Settings at higher-numbered levels override settings of the same variable at lower numbered levels, unless the variable was included in the setting of FINALPREFERENCES at a lower-numbered level, in which case it is locked at the value it has at that level.
If you are setting a variable and using it in the same topic, note that TWiki reads all the variable settings from the saved version of the topic before it displays anything. This means you can use a variable anywhere in the topic, even if you set it somewhere inconspicuous near the end. But beware: it also means that if you change the setting of a variable you are using in the same topic, preview
will show the wrong thing, and you must save
the topic to see it correctly.
The syntax for setting variables is the same anywhere in TWiki (on its own TWiki bullet line, including nested bullets):
[multiple of 3 spaces] * [space] Set [space] VARIABLENAME [space] = [space] value
Examples:
* Set VARIABLENAME1 = value * Set VARIABLENAME2 = value
Spaces between the = sign and the value will be ignored. You can split a value over several lines by indenting following lines with spaces - as long as you don't try to use * as the first character on the following line.
Example:
* Set VARIABLENAME = value starts here and continues here
Whatever you include in your variable will be expanded on display, exactly as if it had been entered directly.
Example: Create a custom logo variable
%MYLOGO%
, define the Variable on the web's WebPreferences topic, and upload a logo file, ex: mylogo.gif
. You can upload by attaching the file to WebPreferences, or, to avoid clutter, to any other topic in the same web, e.g. LogoTopic
. Sample variable setting in WebPreferences:
* Set MYLOGO = %PUBURL%/%WEB%/LogoTopic/mylogo.gif
You can also set preferences variables on a topic by clicking the link Edit topic preference settings
under More topic actions
. Use the same * Set VARIABLENAME = value
syntax. Preferences set in this manner are not visible in the topic text, but take effect nevertheless.
By default, user level variables are set at the step 4 as stated in the previous section.
That means a user can finalise some preferences variables so that web level or topic level setting cannot override it.
This may result in a situation the web or page owner doesn't expect.
$TWiki::cfg{DemoteUserPreferences}
has been introduced to avoid it.
If it's set to true, user level variables are set at the last step instead of the step 4.
But this is not enough.
To guarantee a certain result, you need to finalise critical preferences variables set at the web or topic level, which is cumbersome.
So preferences variables DENYUSERPREFEENCES
and ALLOWUSERPREFEENCES
have been introduced.
DENYUSERPREFEENCES
and ALLOWUSERPREFEENCES
may have comma separated list of variable names
DENYUSERPREFEENCES
, the variable cannot be overridden at the user level. There is a special value "all", which means no preferences variables can be overridden at the user level
ALLOWUSERPREFEENCES
is set and not empty, only the listed preferences variables can be overridden. There is a special value "all", which means any preferences variable can be overridden at the user level. But actually, "all" is not necessary since a blank value or not setting ALLOWUSERPREFEENCES
has the same effect
DENYUSERPREFEENCES
takes precedence over ALLOWUSERPREFEENCES
. If a variable is listed on both, it cannot be overridden. If DENYUSERPREFEENCES
is "all", the value of ALLOWUSERPREFEENCES
doesn't matter.
* Set DENYUSERPREFERENCES = allIf you allow
INYMCEPLUGIN_DISABLE
and SKIN
to be set at the user level:
* Set ALLOWUSERPREFERENCES = TINYMCEPLUGIN_DISABLE, SKINIf you allow user preferences to set anything other than
TINYMCEPLUGIN_DISABLE
or SKIN
:
* Set DENYUSERPREFERENCES = TINYMCEPLUGIN_DISABLE, SKINPlease note
DENYUSERPREFEENCES
and ALLOWUSERPREFEENCES
affect user preferences regardless of $TWiki::cfg{DemoteUserPreferences}
.
You can set those variables at the site level while $TWiki::cfg{DemoteUserPreferences}
setting to false.
If you do so, you should finalise DENYUSERPREFEENCES
and ALLOWUSERPREFEENCES
.
Otherwise, they might be overridden by user preferences.
You will get the most benefit of DENYUSERPREFEENCES
and ALLOWUSERPREFEENCES
by setting $TWiki::cfg{DemoteUserPreferences}
to true.
That way, each web can specify how much user level preferences overriding is allowed.
It is possible to pass parameters to TWiki variables. This is called a macro in a programming language.
To define a parameterized variable, set a variable that contains other variables, such as:
* Set EXAMPLE = Example variable using %DEFAULT%, %PARAM1% and %PARAM2% * Set DEMO = Demo using %DEFAULT{ default="(undefined)" }%, %PARAM1{ default="(undefined)" }% and %PARAM2{ default="(undefined)" }%
A special %DEFAULT%
variable denotes the default (nameless) parameter of the calling variable. Variables optionally may list a default="..."
parameter that gets used in case the calling variable does not specify that parameter.
To use a parameterized variable (or call a macro), add parameters within the curly brackets, such as:
* %EXAMPLE{ "foo" PARAM1="bar" PARAM2="baz" }% * %DEMO{ "demo" PARAM2="parameter 2" }% -- note that PARAM1 is missingwhich resolves to:
Parameters in the variable definition are expanded using the following sequence:
%PARAM1%
gets expanded to bar
.
Define variables:
* Set DRINK = red wine * Set FAVORITE = My %DEFAULT{default="favorite"}% dish is %DISH{default="steak"}%, my %DEFAULT{default="favorite"}% drink is %DRINK%.
%DISH{default="steak"}%
), or as a preferences setting (Set DRINK = ...
).
Use Variables:
%FAVORITE{ DISH="Sushi" DRINK="Sake" }%Returns:
%FAVORITE{}%Returns:
%FAVORITE{ "preferred" }%Returns:
These are special types of preferences variables to control access to content. TWikiAccessControl explains these security settings in detail.
Certain topics (a users home topic, web site and default preferences topics) have a problem; variables defined in those topics can have two meanings. For example, consider a user topic. A user may want to use a double-height edit box when they are editing their home topic - but only when editing their home topic. The rest of the time, they want to have a normal edit box. This separation is achieved using Local
in place of Set
in the variable definition. For example, if the user sets the following in their home topic:
* Set EDITBOXHEIGHT = 10 * Local EDITBOXHEIGHT = 20Then when they are editing any other topic, they will get a 10 high edit box. However when they are editing their home topic, they will get a 20 high edit box.
Local
can be used wherever a preference needs to take a different value depending on where the current operation is being performed.
Use this powerful feature with great care! %ALLVARIABLES%
can be used to get a listing of the values of all variables in their evaluation order, so you can see variable scope if you get confused.
The following preferences variables are frequently used. They are defined in TWikiPreferences#Miscellaneous_Settings:
%BB%
- line break and bullet combined
%BB2%
- level 2 bullet with line break
%BB3%
- level 3 bullet with line break
%BB4%
- level 4 bullet with line break
%BR%
- line break
%BULLET%
- bullet sign
%CARET%
- caret symbol
%VBAR%
- vertical bar
%H%
- %I%
- %M%
- %N%
- %P%
- %Q%
- %S%
- %T%
- %U%
- %X%
- %Y%
- %RED% text %ENDCOLOR%
- colored text (also %YELLOW%
, %ORANGE%
, %PINK%
, %PURPLE%
, %TEAL%
, %NAVY%
, %BLUE%
, %AQUA%
, %LIME%
, %GREEN%
, %OLIVE%
, %MAROON%
, %BROWN%
, %BLACK%
, %GRAY%
, %SILVER%
, %WHITE%
)
%REDBG% text %ENDBG%
- colored background (also %YELLOWBG%
, %ORANGEBG%
, %PINKBG%
, %PURPLEBG%
, %TEALBG%
, %NAVYBG%
, %BLUEBG%
, %AQUABG%
, %LIMEBG%
, %GREENBG%
, %OLIVEBG%
, %MAROONBG%
, %BROWNBG%
, %BLACKBG%
, %GRAYBG%
, %SILVERBG%
, %WHITEBG%
)
There are additional useful preferences variables defined in TWikiPreferences, in Main.TWikiPreferences, and in WebPreferences of every web.
Most predefined variables return values that were either set in the configuration when TWiki was installed, or taken from server info (such as current username, or date and time). Some, like %SEARCH%
, are powerful and general tools.
%IF{...}%
, %SCRIPT{...}%
, and %INCLUDE{...}%
can be overridden
OVERRIDABLEPREDEFINEDVARIABLES
having a comma separated list of predefined variables specifies which predefined variables are overridable
*Set OVERRIDABLEPREDEFINEDVARIABLES =
DATE
and LANGUAGE
predefined variables can be overridden but all the other predefined variables cannot*Set OVERRIDABLEPREDEFINEDVARIABLES = DATE, LANGUAGE
%INCLUDINGTOPIC%
, %INCLUDE%
, and the mighty %SEARCH%
.
All TWiki Variables: ACTIVATEDPLUGINS, ADDTOHEAD, ALLVARIABLES, AQUA, ATTACHURL, ATTACHURLPATH, AUTHREALM, BASETOPIC, BASEWEB, BB, BB2, BB3, BB4, BLACK, BLUE, BR, BROWN, BUBBLESIG, BULLET, CALC, CALCULATE, CARET, CHILDREN, COLORPICKER, COMMENT, CONTENTMODE, COPY, DASHBOARD, DATE, DATEPICKER, DISPLAYTIME, DISPLAYTIME2, EDITACTION, EDITFORMFIELD, EDITTABLE, ENCODE, ENDBG, ENDCOLOR, ENDCOLUMNS, ENDSECTION, ENTITY, ENV, EXAMPLEVAR, FAILEDPLUGINS, FORMFIELD, FOURCOLUMNS, GET, GMTIME, GMTIME2, GRAY, GREEN, GROUPS, H, HEADLINES, HIDE, HIDEINPRINT, HOMETOPIC, HTTP, HTTPHOST, HTTPS, I, ICON, ICONURL, ICONURLPATH, IF, INCLUDE, INCLUDINGTOPIC, INCLUDINGWEB, JQENDTAB, JQENDTABPANE, JQTAB, JQTABPANE, LANGUAGE, LANGUAGES, LAQUO, LIME, LOCALSITEPREFS, LOGIN, LOGINURL, LOGOUT, LOGOUTURL, M, MAINWEB, MAKETEXT, MAROON, MDREPO, META, METASEARCH, N, NAVY, NBSP, NOP, NOTIFYTOPIC, OLIVE, ORANGE, P, PARENTBC, PARENTTOPIC, PINK, PLUGINDESCRIPTIONS, PLUGINVERSION, PUBURL, PUBURLPATH, PURPLE, Q, QUERYPARAMS, QUERYSTRING, RAQUO, RED, REDBG, REG, REMOTEADDR, REMOTEPORT, REMOTEUSER, RENDERLIST, REVINFO, REVINFO2, S, SCRIPTNAME, SCRIPTSUFFIX, SCRIPTURL, SCRIPTURL2, SCRIPTURLPATH, SCRIPTURLPATH2, SEARCH, SERVERTIME, SERVERTIME2, SESSIONID, SESSIONVAR, SESSIONVARIABLE, SET, SETGETDUMP, SILVER, SITENAME, SITESTATISTICSTOPIC, SLIDESHOWEND, SLIDESHOWSTART, SPACEDTOPIC, SPACEOUT, STARTINCLUDE, STARTSECTION, STATISTICSTOPIC, STOPINCLUDE, SYSTEMWEB, T, TABLE, TEAL, THREECOLUMNS, TM, TOC, TOC2, TOPIC, TOPICLIST, TOPICTITLE, TOPICURL, TWIKIWEB, TWISTY, TWOCOLUMNS, U, URLPARAM, USERINFO, USERNAME, USERREPORT, USERSIG, USERSWEB, VAR, VBAR, WEB, WEBLIST, WEBPREFSTOPIC, WHITE, WIKIHOMEURL, WIKILOGOALT, WIKILOGOIMG, WIKILOGOURL, WIKINAME, WIKIPREFSTOPIC, WIKITOOLNAME, WIKIUSERNAME, WIKIUSERSTOPIC, WIKIVERSION, WIP, X, Y, YELLOW, total 185 variables
This section is for people documenting TWiki variables of the TWiki core and TWiki extensions.
Each variable is documented in a topic named Var<name>
in the TWiki web. For example, a %LIGHTSABER%
variable has a documentation topic called VarLIGHTSABER. The topic is expected to have a specific format so that reports in this TWikiVariables topic, in TWikiVariablesSearch and in category topics work as expected.
Basic structure of a variable documentation topic:
#VarLIGHTSABER
---+++
(level 3) heading with variable name, --
, short description
Syntax:
bullet with example syntax
Parameters:
bullet with a table explaining the parameters (optional)
Example:
bullet or two with examples
Expands to:
bullet with expanded variable (optional)
Note:
bullet with notes (optional)
Category:
bullet with one or more of the TWiki variables categories:Related:
bullet with related links. Links have conditional IF so that links work properly locally in variable documentation topics and in the TWikiVariables topic
Example content of a VarLIGHTSABER
topic:
#VarLIGHTSABER ---+++ LIGHTSABER -- laser sword to fend of unethical competition * The =%<nop>LIGHTSABER{}%= variable is handled by the LightsaberPlugin. * Syntax: =%<nop>LIGHTSABER{ _parameters_ }%= * Parameters: | *Parameter* | *Description* | *Default* | | =color="..."= | Color: =red=, =glue=, =green= | =white= | | =sound="..."= | Sound: =none=, =standard=, =loud= | =none= | * Example: =%<nop>LIGHTSABER{ color="red" }%= shows a red Lightsaber * Expands to: =%LIGHTSABER{ color="red" }%= * Note: The Lightsaber is a fictional weapon in the Star Wars universe, a "laser sword." * Category: FormattingAndRenderingVariables, UIAndVisualizationVariables * Related: [[%IF{"'%INCLUDINGTOPIC%'='TWikiVariables'" then="#"}%VarPLASMA][PLASMA]], LightsaberPlugin
Each topic can have one or more files of any type attached to it by using the Attach screen to upload (or download) files from your local PC. Attachments are stored under revision control: uploads are automatically backed up; all previous versions of a modified file can be retrieved.
File Attachments can be used to archive data, or to create powerful customized groupware solutions, like file sharing and document management systems, and quick Web page authoring.
Attach
link at the bottom of the page. The Attach
screen lets you browse for a file, add a comment, and upload it. The uploaded file will show up in the File Attachment table. *.php
files are renamed to *.php.txt
so that no one can place code that would be read in a .php file.
%ATTACHFILESIZELIMIT%
variable of the TWikiPreferences, currently set at 10000 KB.
An attachment can be moved between topics.
Manage
on the Attachment to be moved.
Move
. The attachment and its version history are moved. The original location is stored as topic Meta Data.
Move unwanted Attachments to web Trash
, topic TrashAttachment
.
Attach
file: Sample.txt
Edit
topic and enter: %ATTACHURL%/Sample.txt
Preview
: %ATTACHURL%/Sample.txt
text appears as: /cgi-pub/TWiki/FileAttachment/Sample.txt, a link to the text file.
%PUBURLPATH%/%WEB%/OtherTopic/Sample.txt
(if it's within the same web)
%PUBURLPATH%/Otherweb/OtherTopic/Sample.txt
(if it's in a different web)
Attach
file: Sample.txt
Edit
topic and write text: %INCLUDE{"%ATTACHURL%/Sample.txt"}%
Attach
file: Smile.gif
Edit
topic and write text: %ATTACHURL%/Smile.gif
Preview
: text appears as /cgi-pub/TWiki/FileAttachment/Smile.gif, an image.
Files attached to a topic are displayed in a directory table, displayed at the bottom of the page, or optionally, hidden and accessed when you click Attach.
I | Attachment | History | Action | Size | Date | Who | Comment |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() |
Sample.txt | manage | 0.1 K | 2000-07-22 - 19:37 | TWikiContributor | Just a sample | |
![]() |
Smile.gif | manage | 0.1 K | 2000-07-22 - 19:38 | TWikiContributor | Smiley face |
Clicking on a Manage
link takes you to a new page that looks a bit like this (depending on what skin is selected):
Select a new local file to update attachment Sample.txt
(UploadingUser)
Upload up to 10000 KB.
h
means the attachment is hidden, it isn't listed when viewing a topic.
Hide file
checkbox, then click Change properties
.
File systems tend to be liberal about characters used in file names. But there are characters which may cause problems if they are used in a file name of a TWiki attachment. As such, when TWiki saves an uploaded file attachment, it's saved as a file whose name is cleansed to avoid problems. Specifically:
.txt
extension is appended to some filenames for security reasons
~
, $
, @
, %
are removed
Add structure to content with forms attached to twiki topics. TWiki forms (with form fields) and formatted search are the base for building database applications.
By adding form-based input to free form content, you can structure topics with unlimited, easily searchable categories. A form is enabled for a web and can be added to a topic. The form data is shown in tabular format when the topic is viewed, and can be changed in edit mode using edit fields, radio buttons, check boxes and list boxes. Many different form types can be defined in a web, though a topic can only have one form attached to it at a time.
Typical steps to build an application based on TWiki forms:
Tip: The blog How to Create a TWiki Application
on TWiki.org is a good tutorial to get started with TWiki forms based applications.
A Form Template specifies the fields in a form. A Form Template is simply a page containing a TWiki table, where each row of the table specifies one form field.
YourForm
, ExpenseReportForm
, InfoCategoryForm
, RecordReviewForm
, whatever you need. Name
, Type
, Size
, Values
, Tooltip message
, and Attributes
(see sample below).
Example:
| *Name* | *Type* | *Size* | *Values* | *Tooltip message* | *Attributes* |
| TopicClassification | select | 1 | NoDisclosure, PublicSupported, PublicFAQ | blah blah... | |
| OperatingSystem | checkbox | 3 | OsHPUX, OsLinux, OsSolaris, OsWin | blah blah... | |
| OsVersion | text | 16 | | blah blah... | |
Name Type Size Values Tooltip message Attributes TopicClassification select 1 NoDisclosure, PublicSupported, PublicFAQ blah blah... OperatingSystem checkbox 3 OsHPUX, OsLinux, OsSolaris, OsWin blah blah... OsVersion text 16 blah blah...
See structure of a form for full details of what types are available and what all the columns mean.
You can also retrieve possible values for select
, checkbox
or radio
types from other topics:
Example:
- In the WebForm topic, define the form:
Name Type Size Values Tooltip message Attributes TopicClassification select 1 blah blah... OperatingSystem checkbox 3 blah blah... OsVersion text 16 blah blah...
Leave the
Values
field blank.
- Then in the TopicClassification topic, define the possible values:
| *Name* |
| NoDisclosure |
| Public Supported |
| Public FAQ |
Name NoDisclosure Public Supported Public FAQ
Field values can also be set using the result of expanding other TWiki variables. For example,
%SEARCH{"Office$" scope="topic" web="%USERSWEB%" nonoise="on" type="regex" format="$web.$topic" separator=", " }%
When used in the value field of the form definition, this will find all topic names in the Main web which end in "Office" and use them as the legal field values.
WebTopicEditTemplate
topic in a web, or a new topic that serves as an application specific template topic.
formtemplate
parameter in the (edit or save) URL. Initial values can then be provided in the URLs or as form values: name
, ex: ?BugPriority=1
namevalue=1
, ex: ?ColorRed=1
. <form name="newtopic" action="%SCRIPTURLPATH{"edit"}%/%WEB%/"> <input type="hidden" name="formtemplate" value="MyForm" /> New topic name <input type="text" name="topic" size="40" /> <input type="submit" class="twikiSubmit" value="Create" /> </form>
save
script instead of the edit
script in the form action. When you specify the save
script you have to use the "post" method. Example: <form name="newtopic" action="%SCRIPTURLPATH{"save"}%/%WEB%/" method="post"> ..... </form>
edit
and save
scripts understand many more parameters, see TWikiScripts#edit and TWikiScripts#save for details.
A Form Template specifies the fields in a form. A Form Template is simply a page containing a TWiki table, where each row of the table specifies one form field.
Each row of the table defines one element of an input field:
Name | Type | Size | Values | Tooltip message | Attributes |
---|
The Name
, Type
and Size
columns are required. Other columns are optional. The form template must have a header row, e.g. at least | *Name* | *Type* | *Size* |
is required. Columns:
Name
is the name of the form field.
Type
, Size
and Value
describe the type, size and initial value of this form field. Type text
, checkbox
, select
and more are described in the Form Field Types section below.
Tooltip message
will be displayed when the cursor is hovered over the field in edit
view.
Attributes
may contain additional key="value" form field attributes, separated by space. hidden="1"
attribute indicates that this field is hidden, e.g. not shown in view mode. However, the field is available for editing and storing information. The deprecated H
attribute has the same function, it is still supported but might be removed in a future TWiki release. mandatory="1"
attribute indicates that this field is mandatory. The topic cannot be saved unless a value is provided for this field. If the field is found empty during topic save, an error is raised and the user is redirected to an oops
page. Mandatory fields are indicated by an asterisks next to the field name. The deprecated M
attribute has the same function, it is still supported but might be removed in a future TWiki release.
onfocus="..."
and spellcheck=".."
.
For example, a simple form just supporting entry of a name and a date would look as follows:
| *Name* | *Type* | *Size* | | Name | text | 80 | | Date | date | 30 |
Field Name Notes:
Aeroplane Manufacturers
is equivalent to AeroplaneManufacturers
.
label
field has no name, it will not be shown when the form is viewed, only when it is edited.
select
, checkbox
or radio
field, and want to get the values from another topic, you can use [[...]]
links. This notation can also be used when referencing another topic to obtain field values, but a name other than the topic name is required as the name of the field.
Field Value Notes:
label
, text
, and textarea
fields the value may also contain commas. checkbox
fields cannot be initialized through the form template.
|
character in the initial values field, you have to precede it with a backslash, thus: \|
.
<nop>
to prevent TWiki variables from being expanded.
General Notes:
Each table row of a form template defines one element of an input field:
Name | Type | Size | Values | Tooltip message | Attributes |
---|
Many types of form fields are available. Some are TWiki internal, some are provided by extensions. Find more TWiki form field extensions on TWiki.org. The
Size
, Value
and Attributes
depend on the Type
used. Form field types:
Type | Description | Size | Value |
---|---|---|---|
text |
One-line text field | Text box width in number of characters | Initial (default) content |
textarea |
Multi-line text box | Columns x rows, such as 80x6 ; default is 40x5 |
Initial (default) content |
label |
Read-only text label | Text of the label | |
checkbox |
One or more checkboxes that can be toggled individually | Number of checkboxes shown per line | Comma-space-separated list of item labels - can be a dynamic SEARCH |
checkbox+buttons |
Like checkbox , adding [Set] and [Clear] buttons |
||
radio |
Radio buttons, mutually exclusive; only one can be selected | Number of radio buttons shown per line | Comma-space-separated list of item labels - can be a dynamic SEARCH |
combobox |
![]() |
Text box width in number of characters | Comma-space-separated list of options of the select box - can be a dynamic SEARCH |
select |
Select box, rendered as a picklist or a multi-row selector box depending on the size value | • 1 : Show a picklist • Number > 1: Multi-row selector box of specified size • Range e.g. 3..10 : Multi-row selector box with variable size - the box will never be smaller than 3 items, never larger than 10, and will be 5 high if there are only 5 options |
Comma-space-separated list of options of the select box - can be a dynamic SEARCH |
select+multi |
Like select , turning multi-select on, to allow Shift+Click and Ctrl+Click to select (or deselect) multiple items |
||
select+values |
Like select , allowing definition of values that are different to the displayed text. An option is defined as value: title , where the value is the value passed on form submit, and title is the option text shown to the user. For example:| Field 9 | select+values | 3 | One, 2: Two, III: Three | Various values formats | shows but the values of options Two and Three are 2 and III , respectively. A legacy title=value syntax is supported as well, for example: One, Two=2, Three=III . |
||
select+multi+values |
Combination of select+multi and select+values |
||
color |
![]() #123456 . An attribute of type="popup" shows a button that, when clicked, opens a color picker popup. |
Text box width in number of characters | Initial (default) color |
date |
![]() |
Text box width in number of characters | Initial (default) date |
Note on Attributes:
text
type: id, max, maxlength, min, pattern, placeholder
textarea
type: autocomplete, id, maxlength, minlength, pattern, placeholder, wrap
label
type: id, max, maxlength, min
combobox
type: max, maxlength, min, pattern, placeholder
As described above, you can also retrieve possible values for select, checkbox or radio types from other topics. For example, if you have a rows defined like this:
| *Name* | *Type* | *Size* | | AeroplaneManufacturers | select | |the TWiki will look for the topic AeroplaneManufacturers to get the possible values for the
select
.
The AeroplaneManufacturers topic must contain a table, where each row of the table describes a possible value. The table only requires one column, Name
. Other columns may be present, but are ignored.
For example:
| *Name* | | Routan | | Focke-Wulf | | De Havilland |
Notes:
Values
column must be empty in the referring form definition.
You can use a form template on a different web by specifying a form template in the WEB.TOPIC format.
In addition, you can put a comma separated list of webs in the TWIKIFORMPATH
variable.
It's referred to only when a form template is spcified without a web (TOPIC instead of WEB.TOPIC).
The webs in TWIKIFORMPATH
are examined in the listed order until the specified template is found.
TWIKIFORMPATH
may contain TWiki variables. For example:
* Set TWIKIFORMPATH = %APPLICATION_WEB%, %WEB%
If TWIKIFORMPATH
is defined, the current web is examined only if all the webs listed in it don't have the form template.
You can extend the range of data types accepted by forms by using TWikiPlugins. All such extended data types are single-valued (can only have one value) with the following exceptions:
checkbox
+multi
anywhere in the name
In some cases you want to change only the form data. You have the option of hiding the topic text with two methods:
form
(see details).
action=form
parameter to the edit URL string, such as%SCRIPTURL{edit}%/%BASEWEB%/%BASETOPIC%?t=%SERVERTIME{$epoch}%;action=form
(see details).
New topics with a form are created by simple HTML forms asking for a topic name. For example, you can have a SubmitExpenseReport
topic where you can create new expense reports, a SubmitVacationRequest
topic, and so on. These can specify the required template topic with its associated form. Template topics has more.
A Form Template specifies the fields in a form. A Form Template is simply a page containing a TWiki table, where each row of the table specifies one form field.
All the form fields are shown and can be updated when editing a topic that has a form. It is possible to have more control over the layout of a form, or update just a subset of the form fields by using a custom HTML form. For example, in a bug tracker, each topic would include a header topic that shows a form with some fields to update specific form fields of the bug item. Use the EDITFORMFIELD variable to easily create this form in the header topic. Example:
%EDITFORMFIELD{ "form" type="start" action="save" topic="%BASETOPIC%" }% | Priority: | %EDITFORMFIELD{ "Priority" topic="%BASETOPIC%" }% | | Status: | %EDITFORMFIELD{ "Status" topic="%BASETOPIC%" }% | | | %EDITFORMFIELD{ "form" type="submit" value="Update" }% | %EDITFORMFIELD{ "LastUpdate" type="hidden" value="%SERVERTIME{$year-$mo-$day}%" }% %EDITFORMFIELD{ "form" type="end" }%
Assuming the base topic has a BugForm with Priority and Status fields of type select, a LastUpdate field of type text, and some other fields. Above form shows a table with selectors for Priority and Status, and an Update button. On form submit, the Priority, Status and LastUpdate fields are updated in the base topic.
TWiki Forms accept user-input data, stored as TWikiMetaData. Meta data also contains program-generated info about changes, attachments, etc. To find, format and display form and other meta data, see TWikiMetaData, EDITFORMFIELD, FORMFIELD, SEARCH and METASEARCH variables in TWikiVariables, and TWiki Formatted Search.
Example
TWiki users often want to have an overview of topics they contributed to. With the$formfield
parameter it is easy to display the value of a classification field next to the topic link:| *Topic* | *Classification* | %SEARCH{"%USERSWEB%.UserName" scope="text" nosearch="on" nototal="on" sort="modified" reverse="on" format="|<b>[[$web.$topic][$topic]]</b> |<nop>$formfield(TopicClassification) |" web="Sandbox"}%
Searching forms this way is obviously pretty inefficient, but it's easy to do. If you want better performance, take a look at some of the structured wiki extensions that support higher performance searching e.g. TWiki:Plugins.DBCachePlugin.
text
fields when a topic is saved. If you need linefeeds in a field, make sure it is a textarea
.
Definition of the templates used to render all HTML pages displayed in TWiki
Templates are plain text with embedded template directives that tell TWiki how to compose blocks of text together, to create something new.
There are two types of template:
Tip: TWiki:TWiki.TWikiTemplatesSupplement
on TWiki.org has supplemental documentation on TWiki templates.
Master templates are also used in the definition of TWikiSkins.
Master templates are stored as text files with the extension .tmpl
.
They are usually HTML with embedded template directives.
The directives are expanded when TWiki wants to generate a user interface screen.
%TMPL:<key>%
and %TMPL:<key>{"attr"}%
.
%TMPL:INCLUDE{"file"}%
: Includes a template file. The file is found as described below.
%TMPL:DEF{"block"}%
: Define a block. All text between this and the next %TMPL:END%
directive is removed and saved for later use with %TMPL:P
.
%TMPL:END%
: Ends a block definition.
%TMPL:P{"var"}%
: Includes a previously defined block.
%{...}%
: is a comment.
twiki.tmpl
master template, like twiki.print.tmpl
, that redefines the header and footer.
TMPL:P also supports simple parameters. For example, given the definition
%TMPL:DEF{"x"}% x%P%z%TMPL:END%
then %TMPL:P{"x" P="y"}%
will expand to xyz
.
Note that parameters can simply be ignored; for example, %TMPL:P{"x"}%
will expand to x%P%z.
Any alphanumeric characters can be used in parameter names. You are highly recommended to use parameter names that cannot be confused with TWikiVariables.
Note that three parameter names, context
, then
and else
are reserved.
They are used to support a limited form of "if" condition that you can use to select which of two templates to use, based on a context identifier:
%TMPL:DEF{"link_inactive"}%<input type="button" disabled value="Link>%TMPL:END% %TMPL:DEF{"link_active"}%<input type="button" onclick="link()" value="Link" />%TMPL:END% %TMPL:P{context="inactive" then="inactive_link" else="active_link"}% for %CONTEXT%When the "inactive" context is set, then this will expand the "link_inactive" template; otherwise it will expand the "link_active" template. See IfStatements for details of supported context identifiers.
The master templates shipped with a twiki release are stored in the twiki/templates directory.
As an example, twiki/templates/view.tmpl
is the default template file for the twiki/bin/view
script.
You can save templates in other directories as long as they are listed in the {TemplatePath}
configuration setting.
The {TemplatePath}
is defined in the Miscellaneous section of the configure page.
You can also save templates in user topics (IF there is no possible template match in the templates
directory).
The {TemplatePath}
configuration setting defines which topics will be accepted as templates.
Templates that are included with an explicit '.tmpl'
extension are looked for only in the templates/
directory.
For instance %TMPL:INCLUDE{"example.tmpl"}%
will only return templates/example.tmpl
, regardless of {TemplatePath}
and SKIN settings.
The out-of-the-box setting of {TemplatePath}
supports the following search order to determine which template file or topic to use for a particular script or %TMPL:INCLUDE{"script"}%
statement.
The skin path is set as described in TWikiSkins.
view
, edit
View
dragon
, pattern
. All skins are checked at each stage, in the order they appear in the skin path.
Dragon
For example, the example
template file will be searched for in the following places, when the current web is Thisweb
and the skin path is print,pattern
:
templates/Thisweb/example.print.tmpl
deprecated; don't rely on it
templates/Thisweb/example.pattern.tmpl
deprecated; don't rely on it
templates/example.print.tmpl
templates/example.pattern.tmpl
templates/Thisweb/example.tmpl
deprecated; don't rely on it
templates/example.tmpl
Thisweb.PrintSkinExampleTemplate
Thisweb.PatternSkinExampleTemplate
Thisweb.ExampleTemplate
TWiki.PrintSkinExampleTemplate
TWiki.PatternSkinExampleTemplate
TWiki.ExampleTemplate
Template names are usually derived from the name of the currently executing script; however it is also possible to override these settings in the view
and edit
scripts, for example when a topic-specific template is required. Two preference variables can be used to override the templates used:
VIEW_TEMPLATE
sets the template to be used for viewing a topic
EDIT_TEMPLATE
sets the template for editing a topic.
view
and edit
respectively. The template search order is as specified above.
Tip: If you want to override existing templates, without having to worry that your changes will get overwritten by the next TWiki update, change the
{TemplatePath}
so that another directory, such as the %USERSWEB%
appears at the front. You can then put your own templates into that directory or web and these will override the standard templates. (Note that such will increase the lookup time for templates by searching your directory first.)
If there is recursion in the TMPL:INCLUDE chain (eg twiki.classic.tmpl contains %TMPL:INCLUDE{"twiki"}%
, the templating system will include the next twiki.SKIN in the skin path.
For example, to create a customization of pattern skin, where you only want to over-ride the breadcrumbs for the view script, you can create only a view.yourlocal.tmpl:
%TMPL:INCLUDE{"view"}% %TMPL:DEF{"breadcrumb"}% We don't want any crumbs %TMPL:END%and then set SKIN=yourlocal,pattern
The default {TemplatePath}
will not give you the desired result if you put these statements in the topic Thisweb.YourlocalSkinViewTemplate
. The default {TemplatePath}
will resolve the request to the template/view.pattern.tmpl
, before it gets to the Thisweb.YourlocalSkinViewTemplate
resolution. You can make it work by prefixing the {TemplatePath}
with: $web.YourlocalSkin$nameTemplate
.
twiki.tmpl
is the default master template. It defines the following sections.
Template variable: | Defines: |
---|---|
%TMPL:DEF{"sep"}% |
"|" separator |
%TMPL:DEF{"htmldoctype"}% |
Start of all HTML pages |
%TMPL:DEF{"standardheader"}% |
Standard header (ex: view, index, search) |
%TMPL:DEF{"simpleheader"}% |
Simple header with reduced links (ex: edit, attach, oops) |
%TMPL:DEF{"standardfooter"}% |
Footer, excluding revision and copyright parts |
The second type of template in TWiki are template topics. Template topics define the default text for new topics. There are four types of template topic:
Topic Name: | What it is: |
---|---|
WebTopicViewTemplate | Alert page shown when you try to view a nonexistent topic. This page is usually used as a prompt to help you create a new topic. |
WebTopicNonWikiTemplate | Alert page shown when you try to view a nonexistent topic with a non-WikiName. Again, this page is used as a prompt to help you create the new topic. |
WebTopicEditTemplate | Default text used in a new topic. |
<MyCustomNamed>Template | Whenever you create a topic ending in the word "Template", it is automatically added to the list of available templates in the "Use Template" drop down field on the WebCreateNewTopic page. |
When you create a new topic using the edit
script, TWiki locates a topic to use as a content template according to the following search order:
templatetopic
CGI parameter TWikiVariables located in template topics get expanded as follows when a new topic is created.
The following variables used in a template topic automatically get expanded when new topic is created based on it:
Variable: | Description: |
---|---|
%DATE% |
Signature format date. See VarDATE |
%GMTIME% |
Date/time. See VarGMTIME |
%GMTIME{...}% |
Formatted date/time. See VarGMTIME2 |
%NOP% |
A no-operation variable that gets removed. Useful to prevent a SEARCH from hitting an edit template topic; also useful to escape a variable, such as %URLPA%NOP%RAM{...}% escaping URLPARAM |
%STARTSECTION{type="templateonly"}% |
Text that gets removed when a new topic based on the template is created. See notes below. |
%SERVERTIME% |
Date/time. See VarSERVERTIME |
%SERVERTIME{...}% |
Formatted date/time. See VarSERVERTIME2 |
%USERNAME% |
Login name of user who is instantiating the new topic, e.g. guest |
%URLPARAM{"name"}% |
Value of a named URL parameter. See VarURLPARAM. |
%WIKINAME% |
WikiName of user who is instantiating the new topic, e.g. TWikiGuest |
%WIKIUSERNAME% |
User name of user who is instantiating the new tpoic, e.g. Main.TWikiGuest |
In a template topic, embed text that you do not want expanded inside a %STARTSECTION{type="templateonly"}% ... %ENDSECTION{type="templateonly"}%
section. For example, you might want to write this in the template topic:
%STARTSECTION{type="templateonly"}% This template can only be changed by: * Set ALLOWTOPICCHANGE = Main.TWikiAdminGroup %ENDSECTION{type="templateonly"}%This will restrict who can edit the template topic, but will be removed when a new topic based on that template topic is created.
%NOP%
can be used to prevent expansion of TWiki variables that would otherwise be expanded during topic creation. For example, escape %SERVERTIME%
with %SER%NOP%VERTIME%
.
You can forcefully expand TWikiVariables by placing them inside a type="expandvariables"
section in the template topic, such as:
...
Example:
If you have the following content in a template topic:
* %SYSTEMWEB%.ATasteOfTWiki - view a short introductory presentation on TWiki for beginners * %SYSTEMWEB%.WelcomeGuest - starting points on TWiki * %SYSTEMWEB%.TWikiUsersGuide - complete TWiki documentation * Sandbox.%HOMETOPIC% - try out TWiki on your own * Sandbox.%TOPIC%Sandbox - just for me
you will get this raw text in new topics based on that template topic:
* TWiki.ATasteOfTWiki - view a short introductory presentation on TWiki for beginners * TWiki.WelcomeGuest - starting points on TWiki * TWiki.TWikiUsersGuide - complete TWiki documentation * Sandbox.WebHome - try out TWiki on your own * Sandbox.JimmyNeutronSandbox - just for me
You may want to mix variables to be expanded and variables not to be.
By prepending a variable name with EOTC__
(EOTC followed by two underscores; EOTC stands for Expand On Topic Creation), you can have the variable expanded.
Here's an example.
%EOTC__SEARCH{"." topic="%URLPARAM{prefix}%*" nonoise="on" format="$percntINCLUDE{$topic}$percnt" separator="$n" }%This yields a series of
%INCLUDE{...}%
s, which are not expanded.
This is not achievable by an expandvariables
section.
When you create a new topic based on a template, you often want the new topic to have a form attached to it. You can attach a form to the template topic, in which case it will be copied into the new topic.
Sometimes this isn't quite what you want, as it copies all the existing data from the template topic into the new topic. To avoid this and use the default values specified in the form definition instead, you can use the formtemplate
CGI parameter to the edit
script to specify the name of a form to attach.
See TWikiScripts for information about all the other parameters to edit
.
For TWiki applications it is useful to be able to automatically generate unique topic names, such as BugID0001, BugID0002, etc. You can add AUTOINC<n>
to the topic name in the edit and save scripts, and it will be replaced with an auto-incremented number on topic save. <n>
is a number starting from 0, and may include leading zeros. Leading zeros are used to zero-pad numbers so that auto-incremented topic names can sort properly. Deleted topics are not re-used to ensure uniqueness of topic names. That is, the auto-incremented number is always higher than the existing ones, even if there are gaps in the number sequence.
Examples:
BugAUTOINC0
- creates topic names Bug0
, Bug1
, Bug2
, ... (does not sort properly)
ItemAUTOINC0000
- creates topic names Item0000
, Item0001
, Item0002
, ... (sorts properly up to 9999)
DocIDAUTOINC10001
- start with DocID10001
, DocID10002
, ... (sorts properly up to 99999; auto-links)
Characters after AUTOINC<n>
are preserved, but are not taken into account when calculating the next increment. Use this to create topic names that have a unique identifier (serial number) and a descriptive text.
Example:
BlogAUTOINC0001-my-first-blog
- creates topic name Blog0001-my-first-blog
BlogAUTOINC0001-my-crazy-cats
- creates topic name Blog0002-my-crazy-cats
BlogAUTOINC0001-fondue-recipe
- creates topic name Blog0003-fondue-recipe
Example link to create a new topic:
[[%SCRIPTURLPATH{edit}%/%WEB%/BugIDAUTOINC00001?templatetopic=BugTemplate;topicparent=%TOPIC%;t=%SERVERTIME{"$day$hour$min$sec"}%][Create new item]]
Here is an example for creating new topics (in the Sandbox web) based on a specific template topic and form:
The above form asks for a topic name. A hidden input tag named templatetopic
specifies ExampleTopicTemplate as the template topic to use. Here is the raw text of the form:
%EDITFORMFIELD{ "new" type="start" action="edit" topic="Sandbox.%TOPIC%" }% * New example topic: %EDITFORMFIELD{ "topic" type="text" value="ExampleTopicAUTOINC0001" size="30" }% %EDITFORMFIELD{ "templatetopic" type="hidden" value="%SYSTEMWEB%.ExampleTopicTemplate" }% %EDITFORMFIELD{ "topicparent" type="hidden" value="%HOMETOPIC%" }% %EDITFORMFIELD{ "onlywikiname" type="hidden" value="on" }% %EDITFORMFIELD{ "onlynewtopic" type="hidden" value="on" }% %EDITFORMFIELD{ "form" type="submit" value="Create" }% %EDITFORMFIELD{ "form" type="end" }%
Here is the equivalent form using a hand-crafted HTML form:
<form name="new" action="%SCRIPTURLPATH{edit}%/Sandbox/%HOMETOPIC%"> * New example topic: <input type="text" name="topic" value="ExampleTopicAUTOINC0001" size="30" /> <input type="hidden" name="templatetopic" value="%SYSTEMWEB%.ExampleTopicTemplate" /> <input type="hidden" name="topicparent" value="%HOMETOPIC%" /> <input type="hidden" name="onlywikiname" value="on" /> <input type="hidden" name="onlynewtopic" value="on" /> <input type="submit" class="twikiSubmit" value="Create" /> </form>
Note: You can create a topic in one step, without going through the edit screen. To do that, specify the
save
script instead of the edit
script in the form action. When you specify the save script in an HTML form tag you have to use the "post" method. This is done automatically when using the EDITFORMFIELD variable. Example when using the HTML form tag:
<form name="new" action="%SCRIPTURLPATH{save}%/Sandbox/" method="post"> ... </form>
The
edit
and save
scripts understand many more parameters, see TWikiScripts#edit and TWikiScripts#save for details.
TIP: You can use the
%WIKIUSERNAME%
and %DATE%
variables in your topic templates to include the signature of the person creating a new topic. The variables are expanded into fixed text when a new topic is created. The standard signature is:
-- %WIKIUSERNAME% - %DATE%
When you use TWikiVariables such as %PUBURL% and %PUBURLPATH% in templates you should be aware that using %PUBURL% instead of %PUBURLPATH% puts absolute URLs in the produced HTML. This means that when a user saves a TWiki page in HTML and emails the file to someone outside a company firewall, the receiver has a severe problem viewing it. It is therefore recommended always to use the %PUBURLPATH% to refer to images, CSS, Javascript files etc so links become relative. This way browsers just give up right away and show a usable html file.
Related Topics: TWikiSkins, TWikiForms, TWikiScripts, DeveloperDocumentationCategory, AdminDocumentationCategory
A skin overlays regular templates to provide specific look and feel to TWiki screens.
TWiki uses TWikiTemplates files as the basis of all the screens it uses to interact with users. Each screen has an associated template file that contains the basic layout of the screen. This is then filled in by the code to generate what you see in the browser.
TWiki ships with a default set of template files that give a very basic, CSS-themable, look-and-feel. TWiki also includes support for skins that can be selected to give different, more sophisticated, look and feel. A default TWiki installation will usually start up with the PatternSkin already selected. Skins may also be defined by third parties and loaded into a TWiki installation to give more options. To see how TWiki looks when no skin is selected, view the current page with a non-existing skin.
TWiki topic content is not affected by the choice of skin, however a skin can be defined to use a CSS (Cascading Style Sheet) which can provide a radically different appearance to the text layout.
Relevant links on TWiki.org:
See other types of extensions: TWikiAddOns, TWikiContribs, TWikiPlugins
TWiki ships with the TopMenuSkin activated by default. You can set a skin for the whole site, a single web, a single topic, or for each user individually. This is done by setting the SKIN preferences setting to the name of a skin. If the skin you select doesn't exist, then TWiki will pick up the default templates. For example, to make the SKIN setting work across all topics and webs, put it in TWikiPreferences.
Skins can cascade using a skin path explained below. One skin can be based on another one, and extensions can introduce additional screen elements. For example, the TagMePlugin adds tag elements to the TopMenuSkin, and the TopMenuSkin is based on the PatternSkin, resulting in this skin path:
* Set SKIN = tagme, topmenu, pattern
You may want to define your own skin, for example to comply with corporate web guidelines, or because you have a aesthetic vision that you want to share. There are a couple of places you can start doing this.
The TWikiTemplates files used for skins are located in the twiki/templates
directory and are named according to the skin: <scriptname>.<skin>.tmpl
. Skin files may also be defined in TWiki topics - see TWikiTemplates for details.
To start creating a new skin, copy the default TWikiTemplates (like view.tmpl
), or copy an existing skin to use as a base for your own skin. You should only need to copy the files you intend to customize, as TWiki can be configured to fall back to another skin if a template is not defined in your skin. Name the files as described above (for example view.myskin.tmpl
).
If you use PatternSkin as your starting point, and you want to modify the layout, colors or even the templates to suit your own needs, have a look first at the topics PatternSkinCustomization and PatternSkinCssCookbook.
For your own TWiki skin we encourage you to show a small TWiki logo at the bottom of your skin:
Note: TWiki.org has no marketing budget, e.g. we rely on TWiki users to spread the word of TWiki. You can support the open source project by adding logos that point back to TWiki.org, and by mentioning TWiki in social media.
The standard TWiki skins show the logo in the %WEBCOPYRIGHT%
variable.
Note: Two skin names have reserved meanings;
text
skin, and skin names starting with rss
have hard-coded meanings.
The following template files are used for TWiki screens, and are referenced in the TWiki core code. If a skin doesn't define its own version of a template file, then TWiki will fall back to the next skin in the skin path, or finally, to the default version of the template file.
(Certain template files are expected to provide certain TMPL:DEFs - these are listed in sub-bullets)
addform
- used to select a new form for a topic
attachagain
- used when refreshing an existing attachment
attachnew
- used when attaching a new file to a topic
attachtables
- defines the format of attachments at the bottom of the standard topic view ATTACH:files:footer
, ATTACH:files:header
, ATTACH:files:row
, ATTACH:versions:footer
, ATTACH:versions:header
, ATTACH:versions:row
changeform
- used to change the form in a topic
changes
- used by the changes
script
edit
- used for the edit screen
form
formtables
- used to defined the format of forms FORM:display:footer
, FORM:display:header
, FORM:display:row
login
- used for loggin in when using the TemplateLoginManager LOG_IN
, LOG_IN_BANNER
, LOG_OUT
, LOGGED_IN_BANNER
, NEW_USER_NOTE
, UNRECOGNISED_USER
moveattachment
- used when moving an attachment
oopsaccessdenied
- used to format Access Denied messages no_such_topic
, no_such_web
, only_group
, topic_access
oopsattention
- used to format Attention messages already_exists
, bad_email
, bad_ver_code
, bad_wikiname
, base_web_missing
, confirm
, created_web
, delete_err
, invalid_web_color
, invalid_web_name
, in_a_group
, mandatory_field
, merge_notice
, missing_action
, missing_fields
, move_err
, missing_action
, no_form_def
, no_users_to_reset
, notwikiuser
, oversized_upload
, password_changed
, password_mismatch
, problem_adding
, remove_user_done
, rename_err
, rename_not_wikiword
, rename_topic_exists
, rename_web_err
, rename_web_exists
, rename_web_prerequisites
, reset_bad
, reset_ok
, save_error
, send_mail_error
, thanks
, topic_exists
, unrecognized_action
, upload_name_changed
, web_creation_error
, web_exists
, web_missing
, wrong_password
, zero_size_upload
oopschangelanguage
- used to prompt for a new language when internationalisation is enabled
oopsgeneric
- a basic dialog for user information; provides "ok" button only
oopslanguagechanged
- used to confirm a new language when internationalisation is enabled
oopsleaseconflict
- used to format lease Conflict messages lease_active
, lease_old
preview
- used for previewing edited topics before saving
rdiff
- used for viewing topic differences
registernotify
- used by the user registration system
registernotifyadmin
- used by the user registration system
rename
- used when renaming a topic
renameconfirm
- used when renaming a topic
renamedelete
- used when renaming a topic
renameweb
- used when renaming a web
renamewebconfirm
- used when renaming a web
renamewebdelete
- used when renaming a web
searchbookview
- used to format inline search results in book view
searchformat
- used to format inline search results
search
- used by the search
CGI script
settings
view
- used by the view
CGI script
viewprint
- used to create the printable view
twiki.tmpl
is a master template conventionally used by other templates, but not used directly by code.
Note: Make sure templates do not end with a newline. Any newline will expand to an empty
<p />
in the generated html. It will produce invalid html, and may break the page layout.
You can use recursion in the TMPL:INCLUDE chain (e.g. twiki.pattern.tmpl
contains %TMPL:INCLUDE{"twiki"}%
, the templating system will include the next twiki.SKIN in the skin path (which is explained below). For example, to create a customization of pattern skin, where you only want to remove the edit & WYSIWYG buttons from view page, you create only a view.yourlocal.tmpl
:
%TMPL:INCLUDE{"view"}% %TMPL:DEF{"edit_topic_link"}%%TMPL:END% %TMPL:DEF{"edit_wysiwyg_link"}%%TMPL:END%and then set
SKIN=yourlocal,pattern
.
You can use template variables, TWikiVariables, and other predefined variables to compose your skins. Some commonly used variables in skins:
Variable: | Expanded to: |
---|---|
%WEBLOGONAME% |
Filename of web logo |
%WEBLOGOIMG% |
Image URL of web logo |
%WEBLOGOURL% |
Link of web logo |
%WEBLOGOALT% |
Alt text of web logo |
%WIKILOGOURL% |
Link of page logo |
%WIKILOGOIMG% |
Image URL of page logo |
%WIKILOGOALT% |
Alt text of page logo |
%WEBBGCOLOR% |
Web-specific background color, defined in the WebPreferences |
%WIKITOOLNAME% |
The name of your TWiki site |
%SCRIPTURL% |
The script URL of TWiki |
%SCRIPTURLPATH% |
The script URL path |
%SCRIPTSUFFIX% |
The script suffix, ex: .pl , .cgi |
%WEB% |
The name of the current web. |
%TOPIC% |
The name of the current topic. |
%WEBTOPICLIST% |
Common links of current web, defined in the WebPreferences. It includes a Jump box |
%TEXT% |
The topic text, e.g. the content that can be edited |
%META{"form"}% |
TWikiForm, if any |
%META{"attachments"}% |
FileAttachment table |
%META{"parent"}% |
The topic parent |
%EDITTOPIC% |
Edit link |
%REVTITLE% |
The revision title, if any, ex: (r1.6) |
%REVINFO% |
Revision info, ex: r1.6 - 24 Dec 2002 - 08:12 GMT - TWikiGuest |
%WEBCOPYRIGHT% |
Copyright notice, defined in the WebPreferences |
%BROADCASTMESSAGE% |
Broadcast message at the beginning of your view template, can be used to alert users of scheduled downtimes; can be set in TWikiPreferences |
The default skins include a Jump Box, to jump to a topic.
The box also understands URLs, e.g. you can type http://www.google.com/
to jump to an external web site. The feature is handy if you build a skin that has a select box of frequently used links, like Intranet home, employee database, sales database and such. A little JavaScript gets into action on the onchange
method of the select tag to fill the selected URL into the "Go" box field, then submits the form.
Here is an example form that has a select box and the Jump Box for illustration purposes. You need to have JavaScript enabled for this to work:
Note: Redirect to a URL only works if it is enabled in configure
(Miscellaneous, {AllowRedirectUrl}
).
CSS files are gererally attachments to the skin topic that are included in the the skin templates - in the case of PatternSkin in the template styles.pattern.tmpl
.
<style type='text/css' media='all'>@import url('%PUBURLPATH%/%SYSTEMWEB%/MySkin/mystyle.css');</style>
The format of standard attachment tables is defined through the use of special TWiki template macros which by default, are defined in the attachtables.tmpl
template using the %TMPL:DEF
macro syntax described in TWikiTemplates. These macros are:
Macro | Description |
---|---|
ATTACH:files:header |
Standard title bar |
ATTACH:files:row |
Standard row |
ATTACH:files:footer |
Footer for all screens |
ATTACH:files:header:A |
Title bar for upload screens, with attributes column |
ATTACH:files:row:A |
Row for upload screen |
ATTACH:files:footer:A |
Footer for all screens |
The format of tables of file versions in the Upload screen can also be changed, using the macros:
Macro | Description |
---|---|
ATTACH:versions:header |
Header for versions table on upload screen |
ATTACH:versions:row |
Row format for versions table on upload screen |
ATTACH:versions:footer |
Footer for versions table on upload screen |
The ATTACH:row
macros are expanded for each file in the attachment table, using the following special tags:
Tag | Description |
---|---|
%A_URL% |
viewfile URL that will recover the file |
%A_REV% |
Revision of this file |
%A_ICON% |
A file icon suitable for representing the attachment content |
%A_FILE% |
The name of the file. To get the 'pub' url of the file, use %PUBURL%/%WEB%/%TOPIC%/%A_FILE% |
%A_SIZE% |
The size of the file |
%A_DATE% |
The date the file was uploaded |
%A_USER% |
The user who uploaded it |
%A_COMMENT% |
The comment they put in when uploading it |
%A_ATTRS% |
The attributes of the file as seen on the upload screen e.g "h" for a hidden file |
See TWiki:Plugins/SkinPackagingHowTo and TWiki:Plugins/SkinDeveloperFAQ
You can try out all installed skins in the TWikiSkinBrowser.
TWiki uses a skin search path, which lets you combine skins additively. The skin path is defined using a combination of TWikiVariables and URL parameters.
TWiki works by asking for a template for a particular function - for example, 'view'. The detail of how templates are searched for is described in TWikiTemplates, but in summary, the templates directory is searched for a file called view.
skin.tmpl
, where skin is the name of the skin e.g. pattern
. If no template is found, then the fallback is to use view.tmpl
. Each skin on the path is searched for in turn. For example, if you have set the skin path to local,pattern
then view.local.tmpl
will be searched for first, then view.pattern.tmpl
and finally view.tmpl
.
The basic skin is defined by a SKIN
setting:
Set SKIN = catskin, bearskin
You can also add a parameter to the URL, such as ?skin=catskin,bearskin
:
Setting SKIN
(or the ?skin
parameter in the URL) replaces the existing skin path setting, for the current page only. You can also extend the existing skin path as well, using covers.
Set COVER = ruskin
This pushes a different skin to the front of the skin search path (so for our example above, that final skin path will be ruskin, catskin, bearskin
). There is also an equivalent cover
URL parameter. The difference between setting SKIN
vs. COVER
is that if the chosen template is not found (e.g., for included templates), SKIN
will fall back onto the next skin in line, or the default skin, if only one skin was present, while COVER
will always fall back onto the current skin.
An example would be invoking the printable mode, which is achieved by applying ?cover=print
. The view.print.tmpl
simply invokes the viewprint
template for the current skin which then can appropriately include all other used templates for the current skin. Where the printable mode be applied by using SKIN
, all skins would have the same printable appearance.
The full skin path is built up as follows: SKIN
setting (or ?skin
if it is set), then COVER
setting is added, then ?cover
.
TWiki skins can be activated conditionally using IfStatements. For example, you might want to use a mobile skin for iPhone and Android user agents, and the default skin otherwise. This example uses the print skin on iPhone and Android:
* Set SKIN = %IF{ "'%HTTP{"User-Agent"}%'~'*iPhone*' OR '%HTTP{"User-Agent"}%'~'*Android*'" then="print, pattern" else="topmenu, pattern" }%
The text
skin is reserved for TWiki internal use.
Skin names starting with rss
also have a special meaning; if one or more of the skins in the skin path starts with 'rss' then 8-bit characters will be encoded as XML entities in the output, and the content-type
header will be forced to text/xml
.
Related Topics: TWikiSkinBrowser, AdminDocumentationCategory, DeveloperDocumentationCategory, TWiki:TWiki.TWikiSkinsSupplement
-- Contributors: TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny, TWiki:Main.MikeMannix
, TWiki:Main.CrawfordCurrie
Inline search feature allows flexible formatting of search result
The default output format of a %SEARCH{...}%
is a table consisting of topic names and topic summaries. Use the format="..."
parameter to customize the search result. The format parameter typically defines a bullet or a table row containing variables, such as %SEARCH{ "food" format="| $topic | $summary |" }%
. See %SEARCH{...}%
for other search parameters, such as separator=""
.
Three parameters can be used to customize a search result:
header="..."
parameter
Use the header parameter to specify the header of a search result. It should correspond to the format of the format parameter. This parameter is optional.
Example: header="| *Topic:* | *Summary:* |"
Variables that can be used in the header string:
Name: | Expands To: |
---|---|
$web |
Name of the web |
$n or $n() |
New line. Use $n() if followed by alphanumeric character, e.g. write Foo$n()Bar instead of Foo$nBar |
$nop or $nop() |
Is a "no operation". This variable gets removed; useful for nested search |
$quot or \" |
Double quote (" ) |
$aquot |
Apostrophe quote (' ) |
$percnt |
Percent sign (% ) |
$dollar |
Dollar sign ($ ) |
$lt |
Less than sign (< ) |
$gt |
Greater than sign (> ) |
format="..."
parameter
Use the format parameter to specify the format of one search hit.
Example: format="| $topic | $summary |"
Variables that can be used in the format string:
Name: | Expands To: |
---|---|
$web |
Name of the web |
$topic |
Topic name |
$topic(20) |
Topic name, "- " hyphenated each 20 characters |
$topic(30, -<br />) |
Topic name, hyphenated each 30 characters with separator "-<br />" |
$topic(40, ...) |
Topic name, shortened to 40 characters with "..." indication |
$topictitle |
Topic title, in order of sequence defined by: Form field named "Title", topic preference setting named TITLE, topic name |
$parent |
Name of parent topic; empty if not set |
$parent(20) |
Name of parent topic, same hyphenation/shortening like $topic() |
$text |
Formatted topic text. In case of a multiple="on" search, it is the line found for each search hit. |
$text(encode:type) |
Same as above, but encoded in the specified type. Possible types are the same as in ENCODE. Though ENCODE can take the extra parameter, $text(encode:type) cannot. Example: $text(encode:html) |
$locked |
LOCKED flag (if any) |
$date |
Time stamp of last topic update, e.g. 2025-03-14 - 23:06 |
$isodate |
Time stamp of last topic update, e.g. 2025-03-14T23:06Z |
$rev |
Number of last topic revision, e.g. 4 |
$username |
Login name of last topic update, e.g. jsmith |
$wikiname |
Wiki user name of last topic update, e.g. JohnSmith |
$wikiusername |
Wiki user name of last topic update, like Main.JohnSmith |
$createdate |
Time stamp of topic revision 1 |
$createusername |
Login name of topic revision 1, e.g. jsmith |
$createwikiname |
Wiki user name of topic revision 1, e.g. JohnSmith |
$createwikiusername |
Wiki user name of topic revision 1, e.g. Main.JohnSmith |
$summary |
Topic summary, just the plain text, all TWiki variables, formatting and line breaks removed; up to 162 characters |
$summary(50) |
Topic summary, up to 50 characters shown |
$summary(showvarnames) |
Topic summary, with %ALLTWIKI{...}% variables shown as ALLTWIKI{...} |
$summary(expandvar) |
Topic summary, with %ALLTWIKI{...}% variables expanded |
$summary(noheader) |
Topic summary, with leading ---+ headers removedNote: The tokens can be combined, for example $summary(100, showvarnames, noheader) |
$changes |
Summary of changes between latest rev and previous rev |
$changes(n) |
Summary of changes between latest rev and rev n |
$formname |
The name of the form attached to the topic; empty if none |
$formfield(name) |
The field value of a form field; for example, $formfield(TopicClassification) would get expanded to PublicFAQ . This applies only to topics that have a TWikiForm |
$formfield(name, encode:type) |
Form field value, encoded in the specified type. Possible types are the same as in ENCODE: quote , moderate , safe , entity , html , url and csv . The encode:type parameter can be combined with other parameters described below, but it needs to be the last parameter. Example: $formfield(Description, 20, encode:html) |
$formfield(name, render:display) |
Form field value, rendered for display. For example, a form field of type color will render as a colored box. If not specified, the raw value is returned, such as a color value #336699 . The render:display parameter can be combined with other parameters, but must be used after the parameters described below. |
$formfield(name, 10) |
Form field value, "- " hyphenated each 10 characters |
$formfield(name, 20, -<br />) |
Form field value, hyphenated each 20 characters with separator "-<br />" |
$formfield(name, 30, ...) |
Form field value, shortened to 30 characters with "..." indication |
$query(query-syntax) |
Access topic meta data using SQL-like QuerySearch syntax. Example: • $query(attachments.arraysize) returns the number of files attached to the current topic • $query(attachments[name~'*.gif'].size) returns an array with size of all .gif attachments, such as 848, 1425, 923 • $query(parent.name) is equivalent to $parent |
$query(query-syntax, quote:") |
Strings in QuerySearch result are quoted with the specified quote. Useful to triple-quote strings for use in SpreadSheetPlugin's CALCULATE, such as $query(attachments.comment, quote:''') which returns a list of triple-quoted attachment comment strings -- the spreadhseet funcions will work properly even if comment strings contain commas and parenthesis |
$query(query-syntax, encode:type) |
QuerySearch result is encoded in the specified type. This is in parallel to $formfield(name, encode:type) mentioned above |
$pattern(reg-exp) |
A regular expression pattern to extract some text from a topic (does not search meta data; use $formfield instead). In case of a multiple="on" search, the pattern is applied to the line found in each search hit.• Specify a RegularExpression that covers the whole text (topic or line), which typically starts with .* , and must end in .* • Put text you want to keep in parenthesis, like $pattern(.*?(from here.*?to here).*) • Example: $pattern(.*?\*.*?Email\:\s*([^\n\r]+).*) extracts the e-mail address from a bullet of format * Email: ... • This example has non-greedy .*? patterns to scan for the first occurance of the Email bullet; use greedy .* patterns to scan for the last occurance • Limitation: Do not use .*) inside the pattern, e.g. $pattern(.*foo(.*)bar.*) does not work, but $pattern(.*foo(.*?)bar.*) does • Note: Make sure that the integrity of a web page is not compromised; for example, if you include an HTML table make sure to include everything including the table end tag |
$pattern(reg-exp, encode:type) |
A text extracted by reg-exp is encoded in the specified type. This is in parallel to $formfield(name, encode:type) mentioned above |
$count(reg-exp) |
Count of number of times a regular expression pattern appears in the text of a topic (does not search meta data). Follows guidelines for use and limitations outlined above under $pattern(reg-exp) . Example: $count(.*?(---[+][+][+][+]) .*) counts the number of <H4> headers in a page. |
$ntopics |
Number of topics found in current web. This is the current topic count, not the total number of topics |
$tntopics |
The total number of topics matched |
$nwebs |
The number of webs searched |
$nhits |
Number of hits if multiple="on" . Cumulative across all topics in current web. Identical to $ntopics unless multiple="on" |
$n or $n() |
New line. Use $n() if followed by alphanumeric character, e.g. write Foo$n()Bar instead of Foo$nBar |
$nop or $nop() |
Is a "no operation". This variable gets removed; useful for nested search |
$quot or \" |
Double quote (" ) |
$aquot |
Apostrophe quote (' ) |
$percnt |
Percent sign (% ) |
$dollar |
Dollar sign ($ ) |
$lt |
Less than sign (< ) |
$gt |
Greater than sign (> ) |
footer="..."
parameter
Use the footer parameter to specify the footer of a search result. It should correspond to the format of the format parameter. This parameter is optional.
Example: footer="| *Topic* | *Summary* |"
Variables that can be used in the footer string:
Name: | Expands To: |
---|---|
$web |
Name of the web |
$ntopics |
Number of topics found in current web |
$tntopics |
The total number of topics matched |
$nwebs |
The number of webs searched |
$nhits |
Number of hits if multiple="on" . Cumulative across all topics in current web. Identical to $ntopics unless multiple="on" |
$n or $n() |
New line. Use $n() if followed by alphanumeric character, e.g. write Foo$n()Bar instead of Foo$nBar |
$nop or $nop() |
Is a "no operation". This variable gets removed; useful for nested search |
$quot or \" |
Double quote (" ) |
$aquot |
Apostrophe quote (' ) |
$percnt |
Percent sign (% ) |
$dollar |
Dollar sign ($ ) |
$lt |
Less than sign (< ) |
$gt |
Greater than sign (> ) |
default="..."
parameter
Use the default parameter to specify a default message if there are no hits in a web. This parameter is optional.
Example: default="| *Note* | Nothing found in the [[$web.WebHome][$web]] web |"
Variables that can be used in the default string:
Name: | Expands To: |
---|---|
$web |
Name of the web |
$n or $n() |
New line. Use $n() if followed by alphanumeric character, e.g. write Foo$n()Bar instead of Foo$nBar |
$nop or $nop() |
Is a "no operation". This variable gets removed; useful for nested search |
$quot or \" |
Double quote (" ) |
$aquot |
Apostrophe quote (' ) |
$percnt |
Percent sign (% ) |
$dollar |
Dollar sign ($ ) |
$lt |
Less than sign (< ) |
$gt |
Greater than sign (> ) |
When a search return many results, you may want to paginate them having the following line below the results.
SearchResultsPagination describes how to do it.
By default, variables embedded in the format parameter of %SEARCH{}%
are evaluated once before the search. This is OK for variables that do not change, such as %SCRIPTURLPATH%
. Variables that should be evaluated once per search hit must be escaped. For example, to escape a conditional:
%IF{ "..." then="..." else="..." }%
write this:
format="$percntIF{ \"...\" then=\"...\" else=\"...\" }$percnt"
Here are some samples of formatted searches. The SearchPatternCookbook has other examples, such as creating a picklist of usernames, searching for topic children and more.
Write this:
%SEARCH{ "FAQ" scope="topic" nosearch="on" nototal="on" header=" * *Topic: Summary:*" format=" * [[$topic]]: $summary" footer=" * *Topic: Summary*" }%
To get this:
In a web where there is a form that contains a TopicClassification
field, an OperatingSystem
field and an OsVersion
field we could write:
| *Topic:* | *OperatingSystem:* | *OsVersion:* |
%SEARCH{ "[T]opicClassification.*?value=\"[P]ublicFAQ\"" scope="text" type="regex" nosearch="on" nototal="on" format="| [[$topic]] | $formfield(OperatingSystem) | $formfield(OsVersion) |" }%
To get this:
Topic: | OperatingSystem | OsVersion |
---|---|---|
IncorrectDllVersionW32PTH10DLL | OsWin | 95/98 |
WinDoze95Crash | OsWin | 95 |
Write this:
%SEARCH{ "__Back to\:__ TWikiFAQ" scope="text" type="regex" nosearch="on" nototal="on" header="TWiki FAQs:" format=" * $pattern(.*?FAQ\:[\n\r]*([^\n\r]+).*) [[$topic][Answer...]]" }%
To get this:
TWiki FAQs:
Search can be nested. For example, search for some topics, then form a new search for each topic found in the first search. The idea is to build the nested search string using a formatted search in the first search.
Here is an example. Let's search for all topics that contain the word "culture" (first search), and let's find out where each topic found is linked from (second search).
%SEARCH{ "culture" format=" * $topic is referenced by: (list all references)" nosearch="on" nototal="on" }%
%SEARCH{ "(topic found in first search)" format="$topic" nosearch="on" nototal="on" separator=", " }%
$percnt
to escape the leading percent of the second search
\"
to escape the double quotes
$dollar
to escape the $
of $topic
$nop
to escape the }%
sequence
Write this:
%SEARCH{ "culture" format=" * $topic is referenced by:$n * $percntSEARCH{ \"$topic\" format=\"$dollartopic\" nosearch=\"on\" nototal=\"on\" separator=\", \" }$nop%" nosearch="on" nototal="on" }%
To get this:
Note: Nested search can be slow, especially if you nest more then 3 times. Nesting is limited to 16 levels. For each new nesting level you need to "escape the escapes", e.g. write $dollarpercntSEARCH{
for level three, $dollardollarpercntSEARCH{
for level four, etc.
Write this:
%SEARCH{ "\.*" scope="topic" type="regex" nosearch="on" nototal="on" sort="modified" reverse="on" format="| [[$topic]] | $wikiusername | $date |" limit="7" }%=
To get this:
TWikiRegistration | TWikiGuest | 2022-01-29 - 20:19 |
SourceCode | TWikiContributor | 2015-11-29 - 10:27 |
TWikiUICopyDotPm | TWikiContributor | 2013-10-14 - 08:02 |
TWikiUIMdrepoUIDotPm | TWikiContributor | 2013-10-14 - 08:02 |
TWikiUISearchDotPm | TWikiContributor | 2013-10-14 - 08:02 |
TWikiUIEditDotPm | TWikiContributor | 2011-04-12 - 00:50 |
TWikiUIUploadDotPm | TWikiContributor | 2010-05-29 - 14:44 |
A regular expression search is flexible, but there are limitations. For example, you cannot show all topics that are up to exactly one week old, or create a report that shows all records with invalid form fields or fields within a certain range, etc. You need some additional logic to format output based on a condition:
This requires the TWiki:Plugins.SpreadSheetPlugin. The following example shows all topics in the Main web that have been updated in the last 7 days.
Write this:
%CALCULATE{$SET(weekold, $TIMEADD($TIME(), -7, day))}%
%SEARCH{ "." scope="topic" type="regex" web="Main" nonoise="on" sort="modified" reverse="on" format="$percntCALCULATE{$IF($TIME($date) < $GET(weekold), <nop>, | [[$web.$topic][$topic]] | $wikiusername | $date | $rev |)}$percnt" limit="100" }%
weekold
variable to the serialized date of exactly one week ago
$percnt
makes sure that the CALCULATE gets executed once for each search hit
weekold
date
<nop>
is returned, which gets removed at the end of the TWiki rendering process
date="..."
paramter in SEARCH to restrict the date.
To get this:
The condition can be anything you like. To restrict search based on a date range it is easier to use the date=""
parameter as shown in the next example.
A search can be restricted based on a date range. The following example is identical to the previous one, showing all topics in the Main web that have been updated in the last 7 days.
Write this:
%SEARCH{ "." scope="topic" type="regex" web="%USERSWEB%" nonoise="on" sort="modified" reverse="on" format="| [[$web.$topic][$topic]] | $wikiusername | $date | $rev |" limit="100" date="P1w/$today" }%=
To get this:
Use an HTML form and an embedded formatted search on the same topic. You can link them together with an %URLPARAM{"..."}%
variable. Example:
Write this:
<form action="%SCRIPTURLPATH{"view"}%/%WEB%/%TOPIC%"> Find Topics: <input type="text" name="q" size="32" value="%URLPARAM{"q" encode="entity"}%" /> <input type="submit" class="twikiSubmit" value="Search" /> </form> Result: %SEARCH{ search="%URLPARAM{"q" encode="quote"}%" type="keyword" format=" * $web.$topic: %BR% $summary" nosearch="on" }%
To get this:
Result:
Related Topics: UserDocumentationCategory, SearchHelp, VarSEARCH, VarENCODE, SearchResultsPagination, SearchPatternCookbook, RegularExpression, QuerySearch
-- Contributors: TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny, TWiki:Main.CrawfordCurrie
, TWiki:Main.SopanShewale
Additional topic data, program-generated or from TWikiForms, is stored embedded in the topic text using META:
tags
By default, TWiki stores topics in files on disk, in a really simple and obvious directory structure. The big advantage of this approach is that it makes it really easy to manipulate topics from outside TWiki, and is also very safe; there are no complex binary indexes to maintain, and moving a topic from one TWiki to another is as simple as copying a couple of text files.
To keep everything together in one place, TWiki uses a simple method for embedding additional data (program-generated or from TWikiForms) in topics. It does this using META:
tags.
META:
data includes program-generated info like FileAttachment and topic movement data, and user-defined TWikiForms info.
%META:<type>{key1="value1" key2="value2" ...}%
name
, this appears first for easier searching (note the order of the variables themselves is defined).
Example of Format%META:TOPICINFO{version="1.6" date="976762663" author="LastEditorWikiName" format="1.0"}% text of the topic %META:TOPICMOVED{from="Codev.OldName" to="Codev.NewName" by="TopicMoverWikiName" date="976762680"}% %META:TOPICPARENT{name="NavigationByTopicContext"}% %META:FILEATTACHMENT{name="Sample.txt" version="1.3" ... }% %META:FILEATTACHMENT{name="Smile.gif" version="1.1" ... }% %META:FORM{name="WebFormTemplate"}% %META:FIELD{name="OperatingSystem" value="OsWin"}% %META:FIELD{name="TopicClassification" value="PublicFAQ"}%
The current version of Meta Data is 1.0, with support for the following variables.
Key | Comment |
---|---|
version | Same as RCS version |
date | integer, unix time, seconds since start 1970 |
author | last to change topic, is the REMOTE_USER |
format | Format of this topic, will be used for automatic format conversion |
This is optional, exists if topic has ever been moved. If a topic is moved more than once, only the most recent META:TOPICMOVED meta variable exists in the topic, older ones are to be found in the rcs history.
%META:TOPICMOVED{from="Codev.OldName" to="Codev.NewName" by="talintj" date="976762680"}%
Key | Comment |
---|---|
from | Full name, i.e., web.topic |
to | Full name, i.e., web.topic |
by | Who did it, is the REMOTE_USER, not WikiName |
date | integer, unix time, seconds since start 1970 |
Notes:
Key | Comment |
---|---|
name | The topic from which this was created, typically when clicking on a red-link, or by filling out a form. Normally just TopicName , but it can be a full Web.TopicName format if the parent is in a different Web. |
Key | Comment |
---|---|
name | Name of file, no path. Must be unique within topic |
version | Same as RCS revision |
path | Full path file was loaded from |
size | In bytes |
date | integer, unix time, seconds since start 1970 |
user | the REMOTE_USER, not WikiName |
comment | As supplied when file uploaded |
attr | h if hidden, optional |
Extra fields that are added if an attachment is moved:
Key | Comment |
---|---|
movedfrom | full topic name - web.topic |
movedby | the REMOTE_USER, not WikiName |
movedto | full topic name - web.topic |
moveddate | integer, unix time, seconds since start 1970 |
Key | Comment |
---|---|
name | A topic name - the topic represents one of the TWikiForms. Can optionally include the web name (i.e., web.topic), but doesn't normally |
Should only be present if there is a META:FORM entry. Note that this data is used when viewing a topic, the form template definition is not read.
Key | Name |
---|---|
name | Ties to entry in TWikiForms template, is title with all bar alphanumerics and . removed |
title | Full text from TWikiForms template |
value | Value user has supplied via form |
There is no absolute need for Meta Data variables to be listed in a specific order within a topic, but it makes sense to do so a couple of good reasons:
diff
function output appears in a logical order
The recommended sequence is:
META:TOPICINFO
META:TOPICPARENT
(optional)
META:TOPICMOVED
(optional)
META:FILEATTACHMENT
(0 or more entries)
META:FORM
(optional)
META:FIELD
(0 or more entries; FORM required)
When viewing a topic the Raw Text
link can be clicked to show the text of a topic (i.e., as seen when editing). This is done by adding raw=on
to URL. raw=debug
shows the meta data as well as the topic data, ex: debug view for this topic
Meta Data is rendered with the %META% variable. This is mostly used in the view
, preview
and edit
scripts.
You can render form fields in topic text by using the FORMFIELD variable. Example:
%FORMFIELD{"TopicClassification"}%
For details, see VarFORMFIELD.
Current support covers:
Variable usage: | Comment: |
---|---|
%META{"form"}% |
Show form data, see TWikiForms. |
%META{"formfield"}% |
Show form field value. Parameter: name="field_name" . Example:%META{ "formfield" name="TopicClassification" }% |
%META{"attachments"}% |
Show attachments, except for hidden ones. Options: all="on" : Show all attachments, including hidden ones. |
%META{"moved"}% |
Details of any topic moves. |
%META{"parent"}% |
Show topic parent. Options: dontrecurse="on" : By default recurses up tree, at some cost. nowebhome="on" : Suppress WebHome. prefix="..." : Prefix for parents, only if there are parents, default "" . suffix="..." : Suffix, only appears if there are parents, default "" . separator="..." : Separator between parents, default is " > " . |
Note: SEARCH can also be used to render meta data, see examples in FormattedSearch and SearchPatternCookbook.
Related Topics: DeveloperDocumentationCategory, UserDocumentationCategory
Add functionality to TWiki with readily available plugins; create plugins based on APIs
You can add plugins to extend TWiki functionality, without altering the core code. A plug-in approach lets you:
Everything to do with TWiki plugins - demos, new releases, downloads, development, general discussion - is available at TWiki.org, in the TWiki:Plugins web.
TWiki plugins are developed and contributed by interested members of the community. Plugins are provided on an 'as is' basis; they are not a part of TWiki, but are independently developed and maintained.
Relevant links on TWiki.org:
See other types of extensions: TWikiAddOns, TWikiContribs, TWikiSkins
The TWiki:Plugins web on TWiki.org is the repository for TWiki plugins. Each plugin such as the TWiki:Plugins.ChartPlugin
has a topic with user guide, step-by-step installation instructions, a detailed description of any special requirements, version details, and a working example for testing. There's usually a number of other related topics, such as a developers page, and an appraisal page.
Most TWiki plugins are packaged so that they can be installed and upgraded using the configure script. To install a plugin, open up the Extensions tab, follow the "Find More Extensions" link, and follow the instructions. A plugin needs to be enabled after installation.
Plugins can also be installed manually: Download the zip or tgz package of a TWiki plugin from the TWiki.org repository, upload it to the TWiki server, unpack it, and follow the installation instructions found in the plugin topic on TWiki.org.
Special Requirements: Some plugins need certain Perl modules to be pre-installed on the host system. Plugins may also use other resources, like graphics, other modules, applications, and templates. You should be able to find detailed instructions in the plugin's documentation. Use the package manager of the server OS (yum
, apt-get
, rpm
, etc) to install dependent libraries.
If available, install CPAN (Comprehensive Perl Archive Network) libraries with the OS package manager. For example, to install IO::Socket::SSL
on Fedora/RedHat/CentOS, run yum install perl-IO-Socket-SSL
. CPAN modules can also be installed natively, see TWiki:TWiki.HowToInstallCpanModules.
If you have a mission critical TWiki installation and you are concerned about installing new plugins, you can test new plugins before making them available by creating a second test TWiki installation, and test the plugin there. It is also possible to configure this test TWiki to use the live data. You can allow selected users access to the test area. Once you are satisfied that it won't compromise your primary installation, you can install it there as well.
InstalledPlugins shows which plugins are: 1) installed, 2) loading properly, and 3) what TWiki:Codev.PluginHandlers they invoke. Any failures are shown in the Errors section. The
%FAILEDPLUGINS%
variable can be used to debug failures. You may also want to check your webserver error log and the various TWiki log files.
The performance of the system depends to some extent on the number of plugins installed and on the plugin implementation. Some plugins impose no measurable performance decrease, some do. For example, a Plugin might use many Perl libraries that need to be initialized with each page view (unless you run mod_perl). You can only really tell the performance impact by installing the plugin and by measuring the performance with and without the new plugin. Use the TWiki:Plugins.PluginBenchmarkAddOn, or test manually with the Apache
ab
utility. Example on Unix:
time wget -qO /dev/null /cgi-bin/view/TWiki/AbcPlugin
If you need to install an "expensive" plugin, but you only need its functionality only in a subset of your data, you can disable it elsewhere by defining the %DISABLEDPLUGINS% TWiki variable.
Define DISABLEDPLUGINS
to be a comma-separated list of names of plugins to disable. Define it in Main.TWikiPreferences to disable those plugins everywhere, in the WebPreferences topic to disable them in an individual web, or in a topic to disable them in that topic. For example,
* Set DISABLEDPLUGINS = SpreadSheetPlugin, EditTablePlugin
Some plugins require additional settings or offer extra options that you have to select. Also, you may want to make a plugin available only in certain webs, or temporarily disable it. And may want to list all available plugins in certain topics. You can handle all of these management tasks with simple procedures:
Plugins can be enabled and disabled with the configure script in the Plugins section. An installed plugin needs to be enabled before it can be used.
By default, TWiki executes plugins in alphabetical order on plugin name. It is possible to change the order, for example to evaluate database variables before the spreadsheet CALCs. This can be done with {PluginsOrder}
in the plugins section of configure.
Plugins can be configured with 1. preferences settings and/or 2. with configure settings. Older plugins use plugin preferences settings defined in the plugin topic, which is no longer recommended.
1. Use preferences settings:
Adinistrators can set plugin-specific settings in the local site preferences at Main.TWikiPreferences and users can overload them at the web level and page level. This approach is recommended if users should be able to overload settings. For security this is not recommended for system settings, such as a path to an executable. By convention, preferences setting names start with the plugin name in all caps, and an underscore. For example, to set the cache refresh period of the TWiki:Plugins.VarCachePlugin, add this bullet in Main.TWikiPreferences
Set VARCACHEPLUGIN_REFRESH = 24
Preferences settings that have been defined in Main.TWikiPreferences can be retrieved anywhere in TWiki with %<pluginname>_<setting>%
, such as %VARCACHEPLUGIN_REFRESH%
.
To learn how this is done, use the TWiki:Plugins.VarCachePlugin documentation and Perl plugin code as a reference.
2. Use configure settings:
The administrator can set plugin settings in the configure interface. Recommended if only site administrators should be able to change settings. Chose this option to set sensitive or dangerous system settings, such as passwords or path to executables. To define plugin-specific configure settings,
lib/TWiki/Plugins/YourPlugin/
with variables, such as$TWiki::cfg{Plugins}{RecentVisitorPlugin}{ShowIP} = 0;
$showIP = $TWiki::cfg{Plugins}{RecentVisitorPlugin}{ShowIP} || 0;
To learn how this is done, use the TWiki:Plugins.RecentVisitorPlugin documentation and Perl plugin code as a reference.
In either case, define a SHORTDESCRIPTION setting in two places:
Set SHORTDESCRIPTION = Show recent visitors to a TWiki site
our $SHORTDESCRIPTION = 'Show recent visitors to a TWiki site';
For better performance, make sure you define this in the plugin package:
our $NO_PREFS_IN_TOPIC = 1;
Plugin status variables let you list all active plugins wherever needed.
This site is running TWiki version TWiki-6.0.2, Sun, 29 Nov 2015, build 29687, plugin API version 6.02
%ACTIVATEDPLUGINS%
%PLUGINDESCRIPTIONS%
"$SUM( $ABOVE() )"
to TWiki tables or anywhere in topic text ExternalSite:Page
to link to a page on an external site based on aliases defined in a rules topic :-)
as :eek:
as %FAILEDPLUGINS%
Plugin | Errors |
---|---|
SpreadSheetPlugin | none |
BackupRestorePlugin | none |
ColorPickerPlugin | none |
CommentPlugin | none |
DatePickerPlugin | none |
EditTablePlugin | none |
HeadlinesPlugin | none |
InterwikiPlugin | none |
JQueryPlugin | none |
PreferencesPlugin | none |
SetGetPlugin | none |
SlideShowPlugin | none |
SmiliesPlugin | none |
TablePlugin | none |
TagMePlugin | none |
TinyMCEPlugin | none |
TwistyPlugin | none |
WatchlistPlugin | none |
WysiwygPlugin | none |
Handler | Plugins |
---|---|
afterEditHandler | WysiwygPlugin |
afterRenameHandler | TagMePlugin WatchlistPlugin |
afterSaveHandler | TagMePlugin WatchlistPlugin |
beforeCommonTagsHandler | EditTablePlugin PreferencesPlugin TwistyPlugin WysiwygPlugin |
beforeEditHandler | TinyMCEPlugin WysiwygPlugin |
beforeMergeHandler | WysiwygPlugin |
beforeSaveHandler | CommentPlugin WatchlistPlugin WysiwygPlugin |
commonTagsHandler | SpreadSheetPlugin BackupRestorePlugin CommentPlugin EditTablePlugin JQueryPlugin SlideShowPlugin SmiliesPlugin |
initPlugin | SpreadSheetPlugin BackupRestorePlugin ColorPickerPlugin CommentPlugin DatePickerPlugin EditTablePlugin HeadlinesPlugin InterwikiPlugin JQueryPlugin PreferencesPlugin SetGetPlugin SlideShowPlugin SmiliesPlugin TablePlugin TagMePlugin TinyMCEPlugin TwistyPlugin WatchlistPlugin WysiwygPlugin |
modifyHeaderHandler | WysiwygPlugin |
postRenderingHandler | PreferencesPlugin WysiwygPlugin |
preRenderingHandler | InterwikiPlugin SmiliesPlugin TablePlugin |
The Application Programming Interface (API) for TWiki plugins provides the specifications for hooking into the core TWiki code from your external Perl plugin module.
The TWikiFuncDotPm module (lib/TWiki/Func.pm
) describes all the interfaces available to plugins. Plugins should only use the interfaces described in this module.
Note: If you use other core functions not described in
Func.pm
, you run the risk of creating security holes. Also, your plugin will likely break and require updating when you upgrade to a new version of TWiki.
In addition to TWiki core functions, plugins can use predefined hooks, or callbacks, as described in the lib/TWiki/Plugins/EmptyPlugin.pm
module.
#
from all lines of the callback.
TWiki:Codev.StepByStepRenderingOrder helps you decide which rendering handler to use.
eval
block like this:eval { require IPC::Run }
return "<font color=\"red\">SamplePlugin: Can't load required modules ($@)</font>" if $@;
lib/TWiki/Plugins/BathPlugin/
.
$NO_PREFS_IN_TOPIC
in your plugin package as that will stop TWiki from reading the plugin topic for every page. Use Config.spec or preferences settings instead. (See details).
To eliminate the incompatibility problems that are bound to arise from active open plugin development, a plugin versioning system is provided for automatic compatibility checking.
$VERSION
variable. This should be an integer, or a subversion version id.
initPlugin
handler should check all dependencies and return 1 if the initialization is OK or 0 if something went wrong. initPlugin
handler).
$TWiki::Plugins::VERSION
in the TWiki::Plugins
module contains the TWiki plugin API version, currently 6.02. %PLUGINVERSION{}%
variable to query the plugin API version or the version of installed plugins.
%TWiki::cfg
hash than adding it as preferences in the plugin topic. configure
describes the steps
With a reasonable knowledge of the Perl scripting language, you can create new plugins or modify and extend existing ones. Basic plug-in architecture uses an Application Programming Interface (API), a set of software instructions that allow external code to interact with the main program. The TWiki Plugin API provides the programming interface for TWiki. Understanding how TWiki is working at high level is beneficial for plugin development.
A (very) basic TWiki plugin consists of two files:
MyFirstPlugin.pm
MyFirstPlugin.txt
The Perl module can be a block of code that talks to with TWiki alone, or it can include other elements, like other Perl modules (including other plugins), graphics, TWiki templates, external applications (ex: a Java applet), or just about anything else it can call.
In particular, files that should be web-accessible (graphics, Java applets ...) are best placed as attachments of the MyFirstPlugin
topic. Other needed Perl code is best placed in a lib/TWiki/Plugins/MyFirstPlugin/
directory.
The plugin API handles the details of connecting your Perl module with main TWiki code. When you're familiar with the Plugin API, you're ready to develop plugins.
The TWiki:Plugins.BuildContrib module provides a lot of support for plugins development, including a plugin creator, automatic publishing support, and automatic installation script writer. If you plan on writing more than one plugin, you probably need it.
Copy file lib/TWiki/Plugins/EmptyPlugin.pm
to <name>Plugin.pm
. The EmptyPlugin.pm
module contains mostly empty functions, so it does nothing, but it's ready to be used. Customize it. Refer to the Plugin API specs for more information.
If your plugin uses its own modules and objects, you must include the name of the plugin in the package name. For example, write Package MyFirstPlugin::Attrs;
instead of just Package Attrs;
. Then call it using:
use TWiki::Plugins::MyFirstPlugin::Attrs; $var = MyFirstPlugin::Attrs->new();
The plugin documentation topic contains usage instructions and version details. It serves the plugin files as FileAttachments for downloading. (The doc topic is also included in the distribution package.) To create a documentation topic:
MyFirstPlugin
, press enter and create the new topic
OUTLINE: Doc Topic Contents
Check the plugins web on TWiki.org for the latest plugin doc topic template. Here's a quick overview of what's covered:Syntax Rules: <Describe any special text formatting that will be rendered.>"
Example: <Include an example of the plugin in action. Possibly include a static HTML version of the example to compare if the installation was a success!>"
Plugin Settings: <Description and settings for custom plugin %VARIABLES%, and those required by TWiki.>"
Plugin Installation Instructions: <Step-by-step set-up guide, user help, whatever it takes to install and run, goes here.>"
Plugin Info: <Version, credits, history, requirements - entered in a form, displayed as a table. Both are automatically generated when you create or edit a page in the TWiki:Plugins
web.>"
The TWiki:Plugins.BuildContrib is a powerful build environment that is used by the TWiki project to build TWiki itself, as well as many of the plugins. You don't have to use it, but it is highly recommended!
If you don't want (or can't) use the BuildContrib, then a minimum plugin release consists of a Perl module with a WikiName that ends in Plugin
, ex: MyFirstPlugin.pm
, and a documentation page with the same name(MyFirstPlugin.txt
).
lib/TWiki/Plugins/MyFirstPlugin.pm
data/TWiki/MyFirstPlugin.txt
pub/TWiki/MyFirstPlugin/uparrow.gif
[a required graphic]
MyFirstPlugin.zip
) and add the entire directory structure from Step 1. The archive should look like this: lib/TWiki/Plugins/MyFirstPlugin.pm
data/TWiki/MyFirstPlugin.txt
pub/TWiki/MyFirstPlugin/uparrow.gif
A high quality plugin performs well. You can use the TWiki:Plugins.PluginBenchmarkAddOn to measure your TWiki:Plugins.PluginBenchmarks
. The data is needed as part of the Documentation Topic.
See also Hints on Writing Fast Plugins.
You can release your tested, packaged plugin to the TWiki community through the TWiki:Plugins web. All plugins submitted to TWiki.org are available for download and further development in TWiki:Plugins/PluginPackage
.
Publish your plugin by following these steps:
MyFirstPlugin
MyFirstPlugin.zip
Dev
, ex: MyFirstPluginDev
. This is the discussion page for future development. (User support for plugins is handled in TWiki:Support
Once you have done the above steps once, you can use the BuildContrib to upload updates to your plugin.
Thank you very much for sharing your plugin with the TWiki community
Plugins sometimes need to store data. This can be plugin internal data such as cache data, or data generated for browser consumption such as images. Plugins should store data using TWikiFuncDotPm functions that support saving and loading of topics and attachments.
You can create a plugin "work area" using the TWiki::Func::getWorkArea()
function, which gives you a persistent directory where you can store data files. By default they will not be web accessible. The directory is guaranteed to exist, and to be writable by the webserver user. For convenience, TWiki::Func::storeFile()
and TWiki::Func::readFile()
are provided to persistently store and retrieve simple data in this area.
Topic-specific data such as generated images can be stored in the topic's attachment area, which is web accessible. Use the TWiki::Func::saveAttachment()
function to store the data.
Recommendation for file name:
_GaugePlugin_img123.gif
Web specific data can be stored in the plugin's attachment area, which is web accessible. Use the TWiki::Func::saveAttachment()
function to store the data.
Recommendation for file names in plugin attachment area:
_Main_roundedge-ul.gif
configure
configure
rather than trying to use TWiki preferences variables. These extensions use Config.spec
files to publish their configuration requirements.
Config.spec
files are read during TWiki configuration. Once a Config.spec
has defined a configuration item, it is available for edit through the standard configure
interface. Config.spec
files are stored in the 'plugin directory' e.g. lib/TWiki/Plugins/BathPlugin/Config.spec
.
Config.spec
file Config.spec
file for an extension starts with the extension announcing what it is:
# ---+ Extensions # ---++ BathPlugin # This plugin senses the level of water in your bath, and ensures the plug # is not removed while the water is still warm.This is followed by one or more configuration items. Each configuration item has a type, a description and a default. For example:
# **SELECT Plastic,Rubber,Metal** # Select the plug type $TWiki::cfg{BathPlugin}{PlugType} = 'Plastic'; # **NUMBER** # Enter the chain length in cm $TWiki::cfg{BathPlugin}{ChainLength} = 30; # **BOOLEAN EXPERT** # Set this option to 0 to disable the water temperature alarm $TWiki::cfg{BathPlugin}{TempSensorEnabled} = 1;The type (e.g.
**SELECT**
) tells configure
to how to prompt for the value. It also tells configure
how to do some basic checking on the value you actually enter. All the comments between the type and the configuration item are taken as part of the description. The configuration item itself defines the default value for the configuration item. The above spec defines the configuration items $TWiki::cfg{BathPlugin}{PlugType}
, $TWiki::cfg{BathPlugin}{ChainLength}
, and $TWiki::cfg{BathPlugin}{TempSensorEnabled}
for use in your plugin. For example,
if( $TWiki::cfg{BathPlugin}{TempSensorEnabled} && $curTemperature > 50 ) { die "The bathwater is too hot for comfort"; }
The Config.spec file is read by configure
, which then writes LocalSite.cfg
with the values chosen by the local site admin.
A range of types are available for use in Config.spec
files:
BOOLEAN | A true/false value, represented as a checkbox |
COMMAND length | A shell command |
LANGUAGE | A language (selected from {LocalesDir} |
NUMBER | A number |
OCTAL | An octal number |
PASSWORD length | A password (input is hidden) |
PATH length | A file path |
PERL | A perl structure, consisting of arrays and hashes |
REGEX length | A perl regular expression |
SELECT choices | Pick one of a range of choices |
SELECTCLASS root | Select a perl package (class) |
STRING length | A string |
URL length | A url |
URLPATH length | A relative URL path |
All types can be followed by a comma-separated list of attributes.
EXPERT | means this an expert option |
M | means the setting is mandatory (may not be empty) |
H | means the option is not visible in configure |
See lib/TWiki.spec
for many more examples.
Config.spec
files for non-plugin extensions are stored under the Contrib
directory instead of the Plugins
directory.
Note that from TWiki 5.0 onwards, CGI scripts (in the TWiki bin
directory) provided by extensions must also have an entry in the Config.spec
file. This entry looks like this (example taken from PublishContrib)
# **PERL H** # Bin script registration - do not modify $TWiki::cfg{SwitchBoard}{publish} = [ "TWiki::Contrib::Publish", "publish", { publishing => 1 } ];
PERL
specifies a perl data structure, and H
a hidden setting (it won't appear in configure
). The first field of the data value specifies the class where the function that implements the script can be found. The second field specifies the name of the function, which must be the same as the name of the script. The third parameter is a hash of initial context settings for the script.
TWiki:TWiki/SpecifyingConfigurationItemsForExtensions has supplemental documentation on configure settings.
Each published plugin has a plugin development topic on TWiki.org. Plugin development topics are named after your plugin and end in Dev
, such as MyFirstPluginDev
. The plugin development topic is a great resource to discuss feature enhancements and to get feedback from the TWiki community.
The plugin interface (TWikiFuncDotPm functions and plugin handlers) evolve over time. TWiki introduces new API functions to address the needs of plugin authors. Plugins using unofficial TWiki internal functions may no longer work on a TWiki upgrade.
Organizations typically do not upgrade to the latest TWiki for many months. However, many administrators still would like to install the latest versions of a plugin on their older TWiki installation. This need is fulfilled if plugins are maintained in a compatible manner.
Tip: Plugins can be written to be compatible with older and newer TWiki releases. This can be done also for plugins using unofficial TWiki internal functions of an earlier release that no longer work on the latest TWiki codebase.
Here is an example; the TWiki:TWiki.TWikiPluginsSupplement#MaintainPlugins
has more details.
if( $TWiki::Plugins::VERSION >= 1.1 ) { @webs = TWiki::Func::getListOfWebs( 'user,public' ); } else { @webs = TWiki::Func::getPublicWebList( ); }
From time-to-time, the TWiki developers will add new functions to the interface (either to TWikiFuncDotPm, or new handlers). Sometimes these improvements mean that old functions have to be deprecated to keep the code manageable. When this happens, the deprecated functions will be supported in the interface for at least one more TWiki release, and probably longer, though this cannot be guaranteed.
When a plugin defines deprecated handlers, a warning will be shown in the list generated by %FAILEDPLUGINS%. Admins who see these warnings should check TWiki.org and if necessary, contact the plugin author, for an updated version of the plugin.
Updated plugins may still need to define deprecated handlers for compatibility with old TWiki versions. In this case, the plugin package that defines old handlers can suppress the warnings in %FAILEDPLUGINS%.
This is done by defining a map from the handler name to the TWiki::Plugins
version in which the handler was first deprecated. For example, if we need to define the endRenderingHandler
for compatibility with TWiki::Plugins
versions before 1.1, we would add this to the plugin:
package TWiki::Plugins::SinkPlugin; use vars qw( %TWikiCompatibility ); $TWikiCompatibility{endRenderingHandler} = 1.1;If the currently-running TWiki version is 1.1 or later, then the handler will not be called and the warning will not be issued. TWiki with versions of
TWiki::Plugins
before 1.1 will still call the handler as required.
Utilities for searching, navigation, and monitoring site activity
TWiki Site Tools include utilities for navigating, searching and keeping up with site activity. Preferences can be configured by web or site-wide. You are currently in the TWiki web. In particular, TWiki provides two highly configurable, automated site monitoring tools, WebNotify, to e-mail alerts when topics are edited, and WebStatistics, to generate detailed activity reports.
Each TWiki web has an automatic e-mail alert service that sends a list of recent changes on a preset schedule, like once a day. Users can subscribe and unsubscribe using WebNotify in each web. The Perl script mailnotify
is called by a background process at regular intervals. The script sends an automated e-mail to subscribed users if topics were changed in a web since the script was last run.
%NOTIFYTOPIC%
Each TWiki web has an automatic e-mail notification service that sends you an e-mail with links to all of the topics modified since the last alert.
Users subscribe to email notifications using their WikiName or an alternative email address, and can specify the webs/topics they wish to track, Whole groups of users can also be subscribed for notification.
The general format of a subscription is:
three spaces *
subscriber [ :
topics ]
Where subscriber can be a WikiName, an E-mail address, or a group name. If subscriber contains any characters that are not legal in an email address, then it must be enclosed in 'single' or "double" quotes. Please note that the guest user TWikiGuest does not have an email address mapped to it, and will never receive email regardless of the configuration of that user.
topics is an optional space-separated list of topics:
*
in a topic name, where it is treated as a wildcard character*
will match zero or more other characters - so, for example, Fred*
will match all topic names starting with Fred
, *Fred
will match all topic names ending with Fred
, and *
will match all topic names.
Examples: Subscribe Daisy to all changes to topics in this web.
* daisy.cutter@flowers.comSubscribe Daisy to all changes to topics that start with
Web
.
* daisy.cutter@flowers.com : Web*Subscribe Daisy to changes to topics starting with
Petal
, and their immediate children, WeedKillers and children to a depth of 3, and all topics that match start with Pretty
and end with Flowers
e.g. PrettyPinkFlowers
* DaisyCutter: Petal* (1) WeedKillers (3) Pretty*FlowersSubscribe StarTrekFan to changes to all topics that start with
Star
except those that end in Wars
, sInTheirEyes
or shipTroopers
.
* StarTrekFan: Star* - *Wars - *sInTheirEyes - *shipTroopersSubscribe Daisy to the full content of NewsLetter whenever it has changed
* daisy@flowers.com: NewsLetter?Subscribe buttercup to NewsLetter and its immediate children, even if it hasn't changed.
* buttercup@flowers.com: NewsLetter! (1)Subscribe GardenGroup (which includes Petunia) to all changed topics under AllnewsLetters to a depth of 3. Then unsubscribe Petunia from the ManureNewsLetter, which she would normally get as a member of GardenGroup:
* GardenGroup: AllNewsLetters? (3) * petunia@flowers.com: - ManureNewsLetterSubscribe
IT:admins
(a non-TWiki group defined by a custom user mapping) to all changes to Web* topics.
* 'IT:admins' : Web*In addition to single quotes ('), double quotes (") do the same job for a non-TWiki group.
A user may be listed many times in the WebNotify topic. Where a user has several lines in WebNotify that all match the same topic, they will only be notified about changes that topic once (though they will still receive individual mails for news topics).
If a group is listed for notification, the group will be recursively expanded to the e-mail addresses of all members.
Warning: Because an email address is not linked to a user name, there is no way for TWiki to check access controls for subscribers identified by email addresses. A subscriber identified by an email address alone will only be sent change notifications if the topic they are subscribed to is readable by guest users. You can limit what email addresses can be used in WebNotify, or even block use of emails altogether, using the
{MailerContrib}{EmailFilterIn} setting in =configure
.
Tip: List names in alphabetical order to make it easier to find the names.
Note for System Administrators: Notification is supported by an add-on to the TWiki kernel called the MailerContrib. See the MailerContrib topic for details of how to set up this service.
Note: If you prefer a news feed, point your reader to WebRss (for RSS 1.0 feeds) or WebAtom (for ATOM 1.0 feeds). Learn more at WebRssBase and WebAtomBase, respectively.
You can also use %USERSWEB%
instead of Main
, but this is not necessary even if you have renamed the main web by configuring {MainWebName}
in configure.
WebSearch is an extremely fast and flexible search facility, part of the core TWiki feature set. WebSearchAdvanced offers more options, including:
See also: SearchHelp for help; TWikiVariables and FormattedSearch for including hard-coded searches in text.
To check for the most recently edited topics while on-site, use the WebChanges link, usually located in the toolbar. It lists the most recently modified topics, newest first, along with the first couple of lines of the page content.
This is simply a preset SEARCH
. The number of topics listed by the limit
parameter.:
%SEARCH{ ".*" web="TWiki" type="regex" nosearch="on" sort="modified" reverse="on" limit="50" }%
You can point your news reader at WebRss and WebAtom to find out what is new in a TWiki web. WebRssBase and WebAtomBase have the details. Like WebChanges, this is based on a %SEARCH{}%
.
WebIndex lists all web topics in alphabetical order, with the first couple of lines of text. This is simply a preset SEARCH
:
%SEARCH{ "\.*" scope="topic" type="regex" nosearch="on" }%
You can generate a listing manually, or on an automated schedule, of visits to individual pages, on a per web basis. Compiled as a running total on a monthly basis. Includes totals for Topic Views, Topic Saves, Attachment Uploads, Most Popular Topics with number of views, and Top Contributors showing total of saves and attachment uploads. Previous months are saved.
You can create a WebStatistics link using TWikiVariables with
%STATISTICSTOPIC%
TWiki also generates overall site usage statistics in Main.SiteStatistics (do not create that page, it is created automatically based on SiteStatisticsTemplate). On a monthly basis, the following items are recorded using system data and TWiki log data across all webs: Number of webs, number of topics, number of attachments, number of topic views, number of topic updates, number of files uploads, data size, pub size, disk use, number of users, number of groups, number of plugins installed compared to total number of plugins available, and the 10 top contributors.
{Log}{view}
, {Log}{save}
and {Log}{upload}
are set in configure. This will generate log file entries (see below).
twiki/bin/statistics
script from a cron job - once a day is recommended. This will update the SiteStatistics and the WebStatistics topics in all webs.
nobody
or www-data
. Example crontab entry: 0 0 * * * (cd /path/to/twiki/bin; ./statistics >/dev/null 2>&1)
nobody
: Run the utility twiki/tools/geturl.pl
in your cron job and specify the URL of the twiki/bin/statistics
script as a parameter. Example: 0 0 * * * (cd /path/to/twiki/tools; ./geturl.pl mydomain.com /urlpath/to/twiki/bin/statistics >/dev/null 2>&1)
geturl.pl
will do a TWiki CGI request as the TWikiGuest user, so if you use this workaround, the WebStatistics topics you are updating will have to be writable by TWikiGuest.
When running from the command line or a cron job, you can pass parameters to the script like this:
cd twiki/bin; ./statistics -logdate 2011-05 -webs TWiki,Sandbox
{Stats}{DisableInvocationFromBrowser}
config parameter is false (it's false in this installation), the twiki/bin/statistics
script can also be executed as a CGI script - just enter the URL in your browser. Examples: /cgi-bin/statistics
/cgi-bin/statistics/Main
/cgi-bin/statistics/Main?logdate=2025-03
/cgi-bin/statistics?logdate=2025-03;webs=ProjectX,ProjectY,ProjectZ
There are columns having a list of items. The maximum number of items listed in a column is specified as follows.
Topic | Column and part | Configuration parameter | Default |
---|---|---|---|
WebStatistics of webs | Affiliation breakdown in "Topic views", "Topic saves", and "File uploads" columns | {Stats}{TopAffiliation} |
10 |
"Most popular topic views" column | {Stats}{TopViews} |
10 | |
"Top viewers" column | {Stats}{TopViewers} |
10 | |
"Top contributors for tpoic save and uploads" column | {Stats}{TopContrib} |
10 | |
Main.SiteStatistics | The list of webs viewed the most number of times in the "Webs Viewed" column | {Stats}{SiteTopViews} |
0 |
The list of webs updated the most number of times in the "Webs Updated" column | {Stats}{SiteTopUpdates} |
0 | |
Affiliation breakdown in "Topic Views", "Topic Saves", and "File Uploads" columns | {Stats}{SiteTopAffiliation} |
10 | |
"Top Viewers" column | {Stats}{SiteTopViewers} |
10 | |
"Top Contributors" column | {Stats}{SiteTopContrib} |
10 |
If you run TWiki in an orgaization, you may want to see division breakdown of topic views, topic saves, and file uploads - in a month, how many topic views are there from the R&D division, the Sales division, etc.
You can have affiliation breakdown at the Topic views, Topic saves, and File uploads columns of WebStatistics and SiteStatistics as follows.
Month: | Topic views: |
Topic saves: |
File uploads: |
Most popular topic views: |
Top viewerss: | Top contributors for topic save and uploads: |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2013-08 | 10325 (150 unique users) 6921 R&D 1736 Operation 927 Sales 623 Management 98 Unknown |
7 (3 unique users) 7 R&D |
3 (1 unique users) 3 R&D |
6941 WebHome 872 WebSearch 848 ToolSiteMap 376 ToolDashboard 223 WebSearchAdvanced 185 ContRequests 127 WebTopicList 89 ToolPersonalWebs 72 ToolMasquerading 70 TWikiAdminUser |
525 PeterThoeny 49 MahiroAndo 9 HdeyoImazu |
5 HdeyoImazu 1 MahiroAndo 1 PeterThoeny |
Affiliation breakdown is turned off by default. To turn it on, you need to do two things.
getAffiliation($cUID)
object method in the current user mapping handler. It's supposed return the affiliation (division, department, etc.) of the $cUID
. If the affiliation is unknown, it returns undef
.
{Stats}{Breakdown}
configuration papameter true by putting the following line in lib/LocalSite.cfg
. $TWiki::cfg{Stats}{Breakdown} = 1;
You can exclude webs from WebStatistics update by specifying {Stats}{ExcludedWebRegex}
config parameter as follows.
$TWiki::cfg{Stats}{ExcludedWebRegex} = '^(Trash(x\d+x)?\d*|Sandbox\d*)\b';
You may wonder when this is needed.
There are webs not worth updating WebStatistics such as the Trash web. When a web is deleted, it becomes a subweb of the Trash web. By default, not only the Trash web but also subwebs of the Trash web are subject to WebStatistics update.
On a large TWiki site, you may have dozens of Trash webs - you may rotate Trash webs and you may be UsingMultipleDisks (each disk requires its own Trash - e.g. Trashx1x and Trashx2x). If you have Trash, Trash1, ..., Trash10 for rotation and if you use 3 disks for TWiki, you end up having 33 Trashes.
WebStatistics topics grow in size every month. By default you have only 10 lines per month, but you may have a lot more. If so, in 5 years, WebStatistics gets really big. Besides, if you run the statistics
script every day, you increase the revision of each WebStatistics by one every day. If a topic has hundreds of revision, some operations such as getting the original creator of the topic takes long.
There is an option to prevent the boundless growth of WebStatistics.
If you set $TWiki::cfg{Stats}{TopicPerYear}
true, the statistics
script writes the result to WebStatisticsYYYY where YYYY is the current year (e.g. WebStatistics2025) instead of WebStatistics. The parameter is false by default.
{Stats}{TopicPerYear}
to true but before you run the statistics
script, you should run twiki/tools/switch2yearlystats
to rename WebStatistics of all webs to WebStatisticsYYYY of the year. In case WebStatistics is not in the same format as its current template, it's renamed to WebStatistics0000.
The description above is applied to Main.SiteStatistics as well.
If {Stats}{TopicPerYear}
is true:
twiki/tools/switch2yearlystats
renames Main.SiteStatistics to Main.SiteStatisticsYYYY of the year or Main.SiteStatistics0000.
There are several changes made to WebStatistics and SiteStatistics.
If existing statistics topics are kept as they are, topic update by the statistics
script doesn't work well.
By running tools/convert_stats_twiki6
after upgrade, all statistics topics are converted for the current version of statistics
.
The number of contributors listed on the "Top Contributors" column on SiteStatistics is specified by {Stats}{SiteTopContrib}
.
Prior to TWiki 6.0, it was specified by {Stats}{TopContrib}
.
If you have a custom {Stats}{TopContrib}
value, you need to set {Stats}{SiteTopContrib}
as well. Otherwise, the number of "Top Contributors" on SiteStatistics becomes the default value, which is 10.
TWiki generates monthly log files which are used by the statistics script
log<year><month>.txt
twiki/logs/log202503.txt
| <time in GMT> | <wikiusername> | <action> | <web>.<topic> | <extra info> | <IP address> |
| 14 Mar 2025 - 23:06 | Main.TWikiGuest | view | TWiki.WebRss | | 66.124.232.02 |
Script | Action name | Extra info |
---|---|---|
attach | attach | when viewing attach screen of previous uploaded attachment: filename |
changes | changes | |
edit | edit | when editing non-existing topic: (not exist) |
login, logon, attach, edit, register, rest, view, vewfile | sudologin , sudologout | Login name of administrator user who is logging in or out |
manage | changepasswd | Login name of user who's password is changed |
mdrepo | mdrepo | operation and its arguments |
rdiff | rdiff | higher and lower revision numbers: 4 3 |
register | regstart | WikiUserName, e-Mail address, LoginName: user attempts to register |
register | register | E-mail address: user successfully registers |
register | bulkregister | WikiUserName of new, e-mail address, admin ID |
rename | rename | when moving topic: moved to Newweb.NewTopic |
rename | renameweb | when renaming a web: moved to Newweb |
rename | move | when moving attachment: Attachment filename moved to Newweb.NewTopic |
resetpasswd | resetpasswd | Login name of user who's password is reset |
save | save | when replacing existing revision: repRev 3 when user checks the minor changes box: dontNotify when user changes attributes to an exising attachment: filename.ext |
save | cmd | special admin parameter used when saving |
search | search | search string |
upload | upload | filename |
view | view | when viewing non-existing topic: (not exist) when viewing previous topic revision: r3 |
viewfile | viewfile | Attachment name and revision: File.txt, r3 |
Outgoing mail is required for TWikiRegistration and for recent changes alert.
TWiki will use the Net::SMTP
module if it is installed on your system. Set this with the {SMTP}{MAILHOST}
setting in configure.
{SMTP}{SENDERHOST}
configure setting to set the mail sender host - some SMTP installations require this.
$ sudo setsebool -P httpd_can_sendmail on
$ sudo setsebool -P httpd_can_network_connect on
You can use an external mail program, such as sendmail
, if the Net::SMTP
module is not installed or not functioning properly. Set the program path in {MailProgram}
and set {SMTP}{MAILHOST}
to an empty value in configure.
The notify e-mail uses the default changes.tmpl
template, or a skin if activated in the TWikiPreferences.
mailnotify also relies on two hidden files in each twiki/data/Web
directory: .changes
and .mailnotify.
Make sure both are writable by your web server process. .changes
contains a list of changes; go ahead and make this empty. .mailnotify
contains a timestamp of the last time notification was done.
For Unix platforms: Edit the cron
table so that mailnotify
is called in an interval of your choice. Please consult man crontab
of how to modify the table that schedules program execution at certain intervals. Example:
% crontab -e 0 1 * * * (cd /path/to/twiki; perl -I bin tools/mailnotify -q)The above line will run mailnotify nightly at 01:00. The
-q
switch suppresses all normal output. Details at MailerContrib.
For ISP installations: Many ISPs don't allow hosted accounts direct cron access, as it's often used for things that can heavily load the server. Workaround scripts are available.
On Windows: You can use a scheduled task if you have administrative privileges. TWiki:Codev/CronTabWin is a free scheduler for Windows.
TWiki has a solution to backup, restore and upgrade TWiki sites. It can be used via browser and on the command line. The BackupRestorePlugin is pre-installed in TWiki-5.1 and later releases; it can be installed in older TWiki releases as low as TWiki-2001-09-01 (Athens Release) to easily create a backup that can be restored on a new TWiki release. This offers an easy upgrade path for TWiki. See also TWikiUpgradeGuide.
The crontab command is used to schedule commands to be executed periodically.
Related Topics: AdminDocumentationCategory, AdminToolsCategory
Browser-based rename, move, and delete for individual topics
You can use browser-based controls to change a topic's name, move it to another TWiki web, or delete it to a hidden Trash
web.
[More topic actions]
(bottom right of page) on the topic to be changed, then, in the new screen, on [Delete topic]
or [Rename/move topic]
. You can now rename and/or move/delete in one operation:
[Rename/Move]
: the topic will be renamed and links to the topic updated as requested. [Rename/Move]
.
Rename/Move/Delete
- an instruction line and undo link will appear at the bottom of the modified topic. This allows you to revert from the last modification only.
Deleted topics are moved to a special Trash
web - they are NOT physically erased from the server. All webs share Trash
- in case of a name conflict with a topic already Trash
, the user is alerted and asked to choose a new name.
The Trash
web should be be cleared periodically, by archiving (saving) the text and RCS files if required (recommended), then deleting them from the Trash
directory.
Trash
directory is all that's required for maintenance, it's possible to grant Trash
admin privileges to multiple users, while strictly limiting server access.
You can use TWikiMetaData to place a command in the WebTopicViewTemplate and WebTopicNonWikiTemplate that will indicate that a topic has been moved by searching for %META:TOPICMOVED{...}%
. Customize something like this:
%METASEARCH{type="topicmoved" web="%WEB%" topic="%TOPIC%" title="This topic used to exist and was moved to: "}%
Note: Do not modify the TWiki.WebTopicViewTemplate - modifications would be lost on the next TWiki upgrade. Instead, create a WebTopicViewTemplate in the Main web with the same content and modify it to your needs.
%SEARCH%
, with a special template, finds and displays all occurrences of the topic name in other topics, site-wide. These referring links are by default automatically changed to the new topic and/or web name. This includes relevant TWikiMetaData definitions. <pre>
and <verbatim>
are honored - no changes are made to text within these areas.
First, matching topics in the current web are listed - matches are to topic
. Next, all webs (including the current one) are listed that match web.topic
. All webs will be searched during rename, even if NOSEARCHALL
is defined on a web, though access permissions will of course be honored.
Changed references are kept are as short as possible, ex: topic
is used in preference to web.topic
.
User permissions affect the 'rename' functions in various ways. To rename a topic, you need all of VIEW
, CHANGE
and RENAME
access to that topic. To alter referring topics, you need CHANGE
access. See TWikiAccessControl for information on setting up access permissions.
Consider carefully whether to make browser-based Rename/Move/Delete widely available, or to restrict it to an administrator/moderator group. Allowing all users to easily manipulate topics can be extremely useful in refactoring a busy web or site. However, there are at least two significant potential drawbacks to take into account:
Ultimately, the size, objectives, and policies of your TWiki site, the real-world behavior of your user group, and most importantly, the initial TWiki site management leadership, will determine the most effective implementation of this feature, and the success of the site overall.
Rename/Move is fairly complicated due to the dynamic generation of links. Ideally, it would be possible to run the required part of rendering in a way that would allow identification of the text to be changed. Unfortunately, these hooks don't exist in TWiki at present. Instead, %SEARCH% is used with a special template to show the text to be changed, and the selected topics are then altered. One drawback is that search
can show matches that will not be updated due to case differences. Other mismatches with actual rendered output are also possible as the approaches are so different.
The following shows some limitations of square bracket processing.
[[Old Topic]] => [[NewTopic][Old Topic]] [[old topic]] => [[NewTopic][old topic]] [[old t opic]] => not changed [[OldTopic]] => [[NewTopic]]
Related Topics: UserDocumentationCategory, AdminDocumentationCategory
Adding, renaming and deleting webs are all web-based operations.
A TWikiSite is divided into webs; each one represents one workspace, one area of collaboration. Each web is a container for topics. Each topic is a container for page content and attachments. Administrators can add/rename/delete webs.
The name of the web and topic is represented in the page URL. For example, http://twiki.example.com/do/view/Sandbox/WebNotify
tells us that we view topic WebNotify located in the Sandbox web.
Tip: The URL of a web's homepage ends in
/WebHome
by default. The name of the homepage topic can safely be omitted to make for shorter and more legible links. For example, http://twiki.example.com/do/view/Sandbox
links to the homepage of the Sandbox web.
New webs are based on a web you specify. There are two types of webs you can use to create a new web:
_default
).
In either case all topics in the template web will be copied into the new web. Make sure to verify that your new web has all the custom modifications that you desire. Any settings defined in the form below will automatically be set in the WebPreferences of the new web.
Notes:
ROOTCHANGE
access to create a top-level web (one with no parent)
You can only create hierarchical webs (webs within webs) if the {EnableHierarchicalWebs}
setting in configure is enabled. Hierarchical webs are currently enabled.
Note: You might not need hierarchical webs. TWiki topics already have a parent/child relationship within a web, which is shown in the breadcrumb. Try to keep the number of webs to a minimum in order to keep search and cross-referencing simple. TWiki runs faster if hierarchical webs are disabled.
You can create hierarchical webs via the Adding a New Web form above, by using a slash- or dot-separated path name which is based on an existing web name in the Name of new web: field.
Example:
To create a sub-web named Bar
inside a web named Foo
, use Foo/Bar
or Foo.Bar
as the new web name in the form above.
The preferences of a sub-web are inherited from the parent web and overridden locally. Preferences are ultimately inherited from the TWiki.TWikiPreferences topic.
Example Preference Inheritance for Sandbox/TestWeb/SubWeb.SubWebTopic
topic:
TWiki.TWikiPreferences
site-wide preferences
Sandbox.WebPreferences
inherits from and overrides settings in TWiki.TWikiPreferences
Sandbox/TestWeb.WebPreferences
inherits from and overrides settings in Sandbox.WebPreferences
Sandbox/TestWeb/SubWeb.WebPreferences
inherits from and overrides settings in Sandbox/TestWeb.WebPreferences
Sandbox/TestWeb/SubWeb.SubWebTopic
inherits from and overrides settings in Sandbox/TestWeb/SubWeb.WebPreferences
The PatternSkin indicates sub-webs by indenting them in the sidebar relative to their level in the hierarchy. The SiteMap shows a list of webs; sub-webs are separated by dots, such as Web.SubWeb.SubSubWeb
.
Rename a web via the Tools section in each web's WebPreferences topic. You may delete a web by moving it into a Trash web.
You may only rename a web if you have the following permissions
When you rename a web TWiki will try and update all links that refer to the old web. You should note that links only get updated in topics that you are allowed to edit. If you use access rights in the TWiki installation it is generally best to let an administrator rename webs to avoid too many broken links.
If anyone is editing a topic which requires updating, or which lives in the web being renamed, a second confirmation screen will come up which will indicate which topics are still locked for edit. You may continue to hit the refresh button until an edit lease is obtained for each topic which requires updating (the "Refresh" button will change to "Submit"), or hit "Cancel", which will cancel your edit lease on all affected topics.
Although technically possible, it is strongly advised not to rename the TWiki and Main webs. It complicates upgrades, and some extensions may make assumptions on the names of those system webs. For this reason, the rename web link is disabled in the WebPreferences topic in those webs.
Suggestion: Create a web that is the entry point for your TWiki, and change the link of the upper left site logo to that web. Do that with a WIKILOGOURL setting in Main.TWikiPreferences.
If you want to rename the TWiki or Main webs anyway:
twiki/data
and twiki/pub
on the shell level.
{SystemWebName}
, {UsersWebName}
and/or {LocalSitePreferences}
settings in the configuration using the configure interface.
Related Topics: AdminDocumentationCategory, AdminToolsCategory
-- Contributors: TWiki:Main/MikeMannix, TWiki:Main/PeterThoeny
, TWiki:Main/GrantBow
Listing of CSS class names emitted from TWiki core code and standard plugins.
Most HTML elements generated by TWiki core code now have Cascading Style Sheet (CSS) tags. Skin builders and others who want to change the appearance of the default TWiki installation or any of the skins can use this document to see what styles can be created for these HTML elements.
twiki
. So: twikiAlert, twikiToc, etc. Remember that CSS class names are case sensitive - TWiki CSS uses lowercase tw
.
twiki
prefix to prevent undesired overriding effects.
A wide range of standard styles are used in the TWiki core code and topics, and more are used in plugins. The following is an exhaustive list of all styles defined by the PatternSkin. For the most part, the names are the only documentation of the purpose of the style. For more information on how these styles are used, read the code (sorry!)
.twikiAlert |
Client.pm, Form.pm, Statistics.pm |
.twikiAnchorLink |
Render.pm |
.twikiCheckBox |
Manage.pm |
.twikiCurrentTopicLink |
Render.pm |
.twikiCurrentWebHomeLink |
Render.pm |
.twikiDiffAddedHeader |
RDiff.pm |
.twikiDiffAddedMarker |
RDiff.pm |
.twikiDiffAddedText |
RDiff.pm |
.twikiDiffChangedHeader |
RDiff.pm |
.twikiDiffChangedText |
RDiff.pm |
.twikiDiffDebug |
RDiff.pm |
.twikiDiffDebugLeft |
RDiff.pm |
.twikiDiffDebugRight |
RDiff.pm |
.twikiDiffDeletedHeader |
RDiff.pm |
.twikiDiffDeletedMarker |
RDiff.pm |
.twikiDiffDeletedText |
RDiff.pm |
.twikiDiffLineNumberHeader |
RDiff.pm |
.twikiDiffTable |
RDiff.pm |
.twikiDiffUnchangedText |
RDiff.pm |
.twikiDiffUnchangedTextContents |
RDiff.pm |
.twikiEditFormCheckboxButton |
Form.pm |
.twikiEditFormCheckboxField |
Form.pm |
.twikiEditFormDateField |
Form.pm |
.twikiEditFormError |
Form.pm |
.twikiEditFormLabelField |
Form.pm |
.twikiEditFormRadioField |
Form.pm |
.twikiEditFormTextAreaField |
Form.pm |
.twikiEditFormTextField |
Form.pm |
.twikiEmulatedLink |
Preview.pm |
.twikiFirstCol |
Render.pm |
.twikiForm |
Render.pm |
.twikiGrayText |
Manage.pm |
.twikiHelp |
Changes.pm |
.twikiLink |
Render.pm |
.twikiNew |
Changes.pm, Search.pm |
.twikiNewLink |
Render.pm |
.twikiRadioButton |
Form.pm |
.twikiSummary |
Manage.pm |
.twikiToc |
TWiki.pm |
.twikiTocTitle |
TWiki.pm |
.twikiTopRow |
Manage.pm |
.twikiWebIndent |
TWiki.pm |
.twikiTable |
The table |
.twikiSortedCol |
A sorted column |
.twikiSortedAscendingCol |
Sorted column, ascending |
.twikiSortedDescendingCol |
Sorted column, descending |
.tableSortIcon |
The sort icon holder (span) |
.twikiFirstCol |
The first column |
.twikiTableEven |
Even numbered rows |
.twikiTableOdd |
Odd numbered rows |
.twikiTableCol + column number |
Unique column identifier, for instance: .twikiTableCol0 |
.twikiTableRow + type + row number |
Unique row identifier, for instance: .twikiTableRowdataBg0 |
.twikiPage |
twiki.tmpl |
.twikiMiddleContainer |
twiki.tmpl |
.twikiMain |
twiki.tmpl |
.twikiFormTable |
formtables.tmpl, form.tmpl |
.twikiFormTableHRow |
formtables.tmpl, form.tmpl |
.twikiFormTableRow |
formtables.tmpl |
.twikiFormTableFooter |
formtables.tmpl |
.twikiAttachments |
attachtables.tmpl |
.twikiEditForm |
form.tmpl |
.twikiSubmit |
Submit button |
.twikiSubmitDisabled |
Disabled submit button |
.twikiInputField |
|
.twikiInputFieldDisabled |
|
.twikiInputFieldReadOnly |
|
.twikiInputFieldFocus |
For Internet Explorer that does not recognize the :focus pseudo class selector |
.twikiInputFieldBeforeFocus |
for use with Javascript: the color of the input text when not clicked in the field |
.twikiSelect |
Select dropdown menu |
.twikiTextarea |
|
.twikiTextareaRawView |
|
.twikiButton |
|
.twikiFocus |
Behavior marker so a field can be given input focus |
.twikiLeft |
|
.twikiRight |
|
.twikiClear |
|
.twikiHidden |
|
.twikiSmall |
|
.twikiBottomRow |
|
.twikiSRAuthor |
|
.twikiSRRev |
|
.twikiPageForm |
|
.twikiSeparator |
|
.twikiAccessKey |
|
.twikiLinkLabel |
|
.twikiFormSteps |
container around a form, such as the attach form: attach.tmpl |
.twikiFormStep |
form row |
.twikiNoBreak |
no break on whitespace |
.twikiMakeVisible |
For elements that should only be visible with javascript on: default set to hidden, is made visible by javascript. Defaults to inline. |
.twikiMakeVisibleInline |
For span elements that should only be visible with javascript on: default set to hidden, is made visible by javascript. |
.twikiMakeVisibleBlock |
For div elements that should only be visible with javascript on: default set to hidden, is made visible by javascript. |
.twikiMakeHidden |
For elements that should be hidden with javascript on: no default style, is made hidden by javascript. |
.twikiFooterNote |
|
.twikiPopUp |
Behavior marker so a popup-window can be invoked |
.twikiContentHeader |
container around optional html placed before topic text |
.twikiContentFooter |
container around optional html placed after topic text |
configure
#twikiLogin |
CSS.pm |
.twikiFormSteps |
CSS.pm |
.twikiFormStep |
CSS.pm |
.twikiBroadcastMessage |
TWikiPreferences |
#twikiSearchTable |
WebSearch, WebSearchAdvanced |
#twikiLogin |
login.pattern.tmpl |
.twikiImage |
defined in PatternSkin | div creates border around enclosed image |
.twikiNotification |
defined in PatternSkin | temporary alert, lighter than broadcast message |
.twikiUnvisited |
defined in PatternSkin | link style that ignores the visited link state; useful for form links |
PatternSkin makes extensive use of CSS in its templates. Read the PatternSkin topic and PatternSkinCss to learn more about creating your own CSS-based skin.
Practical introduction to CSS: http://www.w3.org/Style/LieBos2e/enter/
Related Topics: TWikiSkins, PatternSkin, DeveloperDocumentationCategory, AdminDocumentationCategory
Use internationalised characters within WikiWords and attachment names
This topic addresses implemented UTF-8 support for URLs only. The overall plan for UTF-8 support for TWiki is described in TWiki:Codev.ProposedUTF8SupportForI18N.
To simplify use of internationalised characters within WikiWords and attachment names, TWiki now supports UTF-8 URLs, converting on-the-fly to virtually any character set, including ISO-8859-*, KOI8-R, EUC-JP, and so on.
Support for UTF-8 URL encoding avoids having to configure the browser to turn off this encoding in URLs (the default in Internet Explorer, Opera Browser and some Mozilla Browser URLs) and enables support of browsers where only this mode is supported (e.g. Opera Browser for Symbian smartphones). A non-UTF-8 site character set (e.g. ISO-8859-*) is still used within TWiki, and in fact pages are stored and viewed entirely in the site character set - the browser dynamically converts URLs from the site character set into UTF-8, and TWiki converts them back again.
System requirements are updated as follows:
The following 'non-ASCII-safe' character encodings are now excluded from use as the site character set, since they interfere with TWiki markup: ISO-2022-*, HZ-*, Shift-JIS, MS-Kanji, GB2312, GBK, GB18030, Johab and UHC. However, many multi-byte character sets work fine, e.g. EUC-JP, EUC-KR, EUC-TW, and EUC-CN. In addition, UTF-8 can already be used, with some limitations, for East Asian languages where EUC character encodings are not acceptable - see TWiki:Codev.ProposedUTF8SupportForI18N.
It's now possible to override the site character set defined in the {SiteLocale}
setting in configure - this enables you to have a slightly different spelling of the character set in the server locale (e.g. 'eucjp') and the HTTP header sent to the browser (e.g. 'euc-jp').
This feature should also support use of Mozilla Browser with TWiki:Codev.TWikiOnMainframe (as long as mainframe web server can convert or pass through UTF-8 URLs) - however, this specific combination is not tested. Other browser-server combinations should not have any problems.
Please note that use of UTF-8 as the site character set is not yet supported - see Phase 2 of TWiki:Codev.ProposedUTF8SupportForI18N for plans and work to date in this area.
This feature is complete in TWiki releases newer than February 2004.
Note for skin developers: is no longer required (TWiki:Plugins.InternationalisingYourSkin).
URLs are not allowed to contain non-ASCII (8th bit set) characters:
http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/appendix/notes.html#non-ascii-chars
The overall plan for UTF-8 support for TWiki is described in two phases in TWiki:/Codev.ProposedUTF8SupportForI18N - this page addresses the first phase, in which UTF-8 is supported for URLs only.
UTF-8 URL translation to virtually any character set is supported as of TWiki Release 01 Sep 2004, but full UTF-8 support (e.g. pages in UTF-8) is not supported yet - this will be phase 2.
The code automatically detects whether a URL is UTF-8 or not, taking care to avoid over-long and illegal UTF-8 encodings that could introduce TWiki:Codev.MajorSecurityProblemWithIncludeFileProcessing (tested against a comprehensive UTF-8 test file
, which IE 5.5 fails quite dangerously, and Opera Browser passes). Any non-ASCII URLs that are not valid UTF-8 are then assumed to be directly URL-encoded as a single-byte or multi-byte character set (as now), e.g. EUC-JP.
The main point is that you can use TWiki with international characters in WikiWords without changing your browser setup from the default, and you can also still use TWiki using non-UTF-8 URLs. This works on any Perl version from 5.005_03 onwards and corresponds to Phase 1 of TWiki:Codev.ProposedUTF8SupportForI18N. You can have different users using different URL formats transparently on the same server.
UTF-8 URLs are automatically converted to the current {Site}{Charset}, using modules such as CPAN:Encode if needed.
TWiki generates the whole page in the site charset, e.g. ISO-8859-1 or EUC-JP, but the browser dynamically UTF-8 encodes the attachment's URL when it's used. Since Apache serves attachment downloads without TWiki being involved, TWiki's code can't do its UTF-8 decoding trick, so TWiki URL-encodes such URLs in ISO-8859-1 or whatever when generating the page, to bypass this URL encoding, ensuring that the URLs and filenames seen by Apache remain in the site charset.
TWiki:Codev.TWikiOnMainframe uses EBCDIC web servers that typically translate their output to ASCII, UTF-8 or ISO-8859-1 (and URLs in the other direction) since there are so few EBCDIC web browsers. Such web servers don't work with even ISO-8859-1 URLs if they are URL encoded, since the automated translation is bypassed for URL-encoded characters. For TWiki on Mainframe, TWiki assumes that the web server will automatically translate UTF-8 URLs into EBCDIC URLs, as long as URL encoding is turned off in TWiki pages.
It should work with TWiki:Codev.TWikiOnMainframe. Tested with IE 5.5, Opera 7.11 and Mozilla (Firebird 0.7).
Opera Browser on the P800 smartphone is working for page viewing but leads to corrupt page names when editing pages.
For up to date information see TWiki:Codev.EncodeURLsWithUTF8
New Features and Enhancements of TWiki Release 6.0
[[+TopicName]]
syntax
See the full list of new features and bug fixes in TWikiReleaseNotes06x00.
Hall of Fame of TWiki Release 6.0
Many people have been involved in creating TWiki 6.0. Special thanks go to the most active contributors in the following areas:
If you find an omission please fix it at TWiki:TWiki.TWikiHistory. For the full list of contributors see TWikiContributor.
See more details on the TWiki 6.0 release at TWikiReleaseNotes06x00.
New Features and Enhancements of TWiki Release 5.1
See the full list of new features and bug fixes in TWikiReleaseNotes05x01.
Hall of Fame of TWiki Release 5.1
Many people have been involved in creating TWiki 5.1. Special thanks go to the most active contributors in the following areas:
If you find an omission please fix it at TWiki:TWiki/TWikiHistory. For the full list of contributors see TWikiContributor.
See more details on the TWiki 5.1 release at TWikiReleaseNotes05x01.
New Features and Enhancements of TWiki Release 5.0
Hall of Fame of TWiki Release 5.0
Many people have been involved in creating TWiki 5.0. Special thanks go to the most active contributors in the following areas:
If you find an omission please fix it at TWiki:TWiki/TWikiHistory. For the full list of contributors see TWikiContributor.
See more details on the TWiki 5.0 release at TWikiReleaseNotes05x00.
New Features and Enhancements of TWiki Release 4.3
Hall of Fame of TWiki Release 4.3
Many people have been involved in creating TWiki 4.3. Special thanks go to the most active contributors in the following areas:
If you find an omission please fix it at TWiki:TWiki.TWikiHistory. For the full list of contributors see TWikiContributor.
See more details on the TWiki 4.3 release at TWikiReleaseNotes04x03.
New Features and Enhancements of TWiki Release 4.2
working
which per default is located in the TWiki root which contains registration_approvals, tmp, and work_areas
query
search mode supports SQL-style queries over form fields and other meta-data
templatetopic
parameter to point to custom comment template topic
Hall of Fame of TWiki Release 4.2
Many people have been involved in creating TWiki 4.2. Special thanks go to the most active contributors in the following areas:
Many thanks also to the contributors in the following areas:
If you find an omission please fix it at TWiki:TWiki.TWikiHistory. For the full list of contributors see TWikiContributor.
Note: Order of contributors under "Spec and code", "Templates and skins" and "Documentation" is based on number of SVN file changes for core and default extensions from March 2007 (svn rev:13046) to Jan 2008 (svn rev:16210). (Details at TWikibug:TWiki420SvnLog). Order of contributors under "Testing and bug fixing" is based on Bugs web statistics from 2007-03 to 2007-12. Order of contributors under "TWiki.org wiki champions" and "Customer support" is based on TWiki.org web statistics from 2007-02 to 2007-12.
See more details on the TWiki 4.2 release at TWikiReleaseNotes04x02.
New Features and Enhancements of TWiki Release 4.1
Eng.ajax
into the Jump box... Here we go, the third link is the AjaxCookbook I was looking for."
redirectto
parameter to redirect to a topic or a URL; for security, redirect to URL needs to be enabled with a {AllowRedirectUrl}
configure flag.
redirectto
parameter to redirect to a URL or link to TWiki topic after submitting comment.
topic
URL parameter also respects the {AllowRedirectUrl}
configure flag so redirects to URLs can be disabled which could be abused for phishing attacks.
section
URL parameter to view just a named section within a topic. Useful for simple AJAX type applications.
$nop
, $quot
, $percnt
, $dollar
.
$LISTRAND()
, $LISTSHUFFLE()
, $LISTTRUNCATE()
.
cellborder
.
Hall of Fame of TWiki Release 4.1
Although many more people have been involved in creating TWiki-4.1, special thanks go to the most active contributors in the following areas:
If you find an omission please fix it at TWiki:TWiki.TWikiHistory. For the full list of contributors see TWikiContributor.
Note: Sequence of contributors under "Spec, code, testing", "Templates and skins" and "Documentation" is based on number of SVN check-ins for core and default extensions from 2006-02 to 2006-12. Sequence of contributors under "TWiki.org wiki champions" and "Customer support" is based on TWiki.org web statistics from 2006-02 to 2006-12.
See more details on the TWiki 4.1 release at TWikiReleaseNotes04x01.
Major New Features
Many, many people worked on TWiki-4.0.0. The credits in the table below only list the people who worked on individual enhancements. If you find an omission please fix it at TWiki:TWiki.TWikiHistory. There were many other contributors; for a full list, visit TWikiContributor.
Most of the redesign, refactoring and new documentation work in Dakar release was done by Crawford Currie. Michael Sparks
provided ideas and proof of concept for several improvements. Other people who gave large amounts of their time and patience to less sexy aspects of the work, such as testing, infrastructure and documentation, are AntonAylward
, KennethLavrsen
, LynnwoodBrown
, MichaelDaum
, Peter Thoeny
, SteffenPoulsen
, Sven Dowideit
, WillNorris
.
Installation & configuration | Contributor |
---|---|
Much simpler install and configuration | Crawford Currie![]() ![]() ![]() |
mod_perl safe code for better performance |
Crawford Currie![]() |
Security | |
Security sandbox blocking exploits for remote command execution on the server | Florian Weimer![]() ![]() ![]() |
Reworked access permission model | Crawford Currie![]() |
Internationalization & localization | |
User Interface Internationalisation![]() |
AntonioTerceiro![]() |
Chinese translation | CheDong![]() |
Danish translation | SteffenPoulsen![]() |
Dutch translation | ArthurClemens![]() |
French translation | BenVoui![]() |
German translation | AndreUlrich![]() |
Italian translation | MassimoMancini![]() |
Polish translation | ZbigniewKulesza![]() |
Portuguese translation | AntonioTerceiro![]() ![]() |
Spanish translation | WillNorris![]() ![]() |
Swedish translation | Erik Åman![]() |
New features for users | |
Edit conflict resolution with automatic merge | Crawford Currie![]() |
Fine grained change notification on page level and parent/child relationship | Crawford Currie![]() |
WYSIWYG editor | Crawford Currie![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Integrated session support | GregAbbas![]() ![]() |
Webserver-independent login/logout | Crawford Currie![]() |
Registration process with e-mail confirmation![]() |
MartinCleaver![]() |
Tip of the Day box in TWiki Home![]() |
PaulineCheung![]() ![]() ![]() |
ATOM feeds | Peter Thoeny![]() |
"Force New Revision" check box for topic save![]() |
WillNorris![]() |
New features for TWiki administrators and wiki application developers | |
Improved preferences handling | ThomasWeigert![]() ![]() |
Named include sections | RafaelAlvarez![]() |
Create topic names with consecutive numbers![]() |
Sven Dowideit![]() |
Parameterized includes![]() |
Crawford Currie![]() |
Dynamic form option definitions![]() |
MartinCleaver![]() |
SEARCH enhancements with new parameters excludeweb , newline , noempty , nofinalnewline , nonoise , recurse , zeroresults |
Crawford Currie![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
FormattedSearch enhancements with $changes , $count , $formfield(name, 30, ...) , $summary(expandvar) , $summary(noheaders) , $summary(showvarnames) |
ColasNahaboo![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
New TWikiVariables ACTIVATEDPLUGINS, ALLVARIABLES, AUTHREALM, EMAILS, FAILEDPLUGINS, HTTP, HTTPS, ICONURL, ICONURLPATH, IF, LANGUAGES, LOCALSITEPREFS, LOGIN, LOGOUT, MAKETEXT, META, PLUGINDESCRIPTIONS, QUERYSTRING, STARTSECTION/ENDSECTION, SESSION_VARIABLE, SESSIONID, SESSIONVAR, SPACEOUT, USERLANGUAGE, WIKIHOMEURL | ArthurClemens![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
TWiki form with hidden type![]() |
LynnwoodBrown![]() ![]() |
Support topic-specific templates![]() |
ThomasWeigert![]() |
Direct save feature for one-click template-based topic creation | LynnwoodBrown![]() ![]() ![]() |
Automatic Attachments![]() |
MartinCleaver![]() |
Rename, move or delete webs | PeterNixon![]() |
Hierarchical subwebs (beta) | PeterNixon![]() |
New features for Plugin developers | |
REST (representational state transfer) interface for Plugins | RafaelAlvarez![]() ![]() ![]() |
New and improved Plugins APIs | Crawford Currie![]() ![]() |
Improvements in the TWiki engine room | |
Major OO redesign and refactoring of codebase | Crawford Currie![]() |
Automatic build system | Crawford Currie![]() |
Extensive test suite, unit tests and testcases | Crawford Currie![]() |
TWiki:Codev.DevelopBranch![]() ![]() |
Sven Dowideit![]() |
Documentation, logo artwork, skins: | |
Documentation | Crawford Currie![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Design of TWikiLogos with big "T" in a speech bubble | ArthurClemens![]() ![]() |
Improved templates and PatternSkin | ArthurClemens![]() |
See more details at TWikiReleaseNotes04x00
Major New Features
Details of New Features and Enhancements of 01-Sep-2004 Release | Developer, Sponsor |
---|---|
Install: Ship with an automatic upgrade script to facilitate TWiki upgrades. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.MartinGregory![]() ![]() |
Install: New testenv function to change the locks in the TWiki database to the web server user id (automates installation step). Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.MattWilkie![]() ![]() |
Install: The shipped .htaccess.txt now needs to be edited before it is valid, to help reduce chances of error. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.CrawfordCurrie![]() ![]() |
Install: Configurable password file handling for different types of encryption. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PavelGoran![]() ![]() |
Install: Remove office locations from registration. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Install: Changes to support shorter URLs with Apache Rewrite rules. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.AntonioBellezza![]() ![]() |
Install: Remove the Know web from the distribution. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Internationalization: Support use of UTF-8 URLs for I18N characters in TWiki page and attachment names. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.RichardDonkin![]() |
Authentication: Authenticate users when creating new topic in view restricted web. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.JonathanGraehl![]() ![]() |
Preferences: TWiki Preferences need to be secured properly. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Preferences: Use TWiki Forms to set user preferences. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.JohnTalintyre![]() |
Skins: New pre-installed skins PatternSkin and DragonSkin. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.ArthurClemens![]() ![]() |
Skins: New skin browser to choose from installed skins. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Skins: Documented set of CSS classes that are used in standard skins. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.ArthurClemens![]() ![]() |
Skins: Added CSS class names to Diff output. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.SvenDowideit![]() |
Skins: Templates can now be read from user topics, as well as from files in the templates diretcory. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.CrawfordCurrie![]() ![]() |
Skins: Ensure that the default template gets overridden by a template passed in. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.MartinCleaver![]() ![]() |
Skin: Convey an important broadcast message to all users, e.g. scheduled server downtime. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Skin: Balanced pastel colors for TWiki webs. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.ArthurClemens![]() |
Rendering: Use exclamation point prefix to escape TWiki markup rendering. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.ArthurClemens![]() |
Rendering: Ordered lists with uppercase & lowercase letters, uppercase & lowercase Roman numerals. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.DanBoitnott![]() ![]() |
Rendering: Allow custom styles for the "?" of uncreated topics. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.SvenDowideit![]() |
Rendering: Render IRC and NNTP as a URL. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Rendering: Make acronym linking more strict by requiring a trailing boundary, e.g. excluding TLAfoobar. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.CrawfordCurrie![]() ![]() |
Rendering: TWiki Form with Label type. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Rendering: Web names can now be WikiWords. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Rendering: New syntax for definition list with dollar sign and colon. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.AdamTheo![]() ![]() |
Rendering: Table with multi-span rows, functionality provided by Table Plugin. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.WalterMundt![]() |
Variables: New title parameter for TOC variable. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() ![]() |
Variables: New REVINFO variable in templates supports flexible display of revision information. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() ![]() |
Variables: Set times to be displayed as gmtime or servertime. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.SueBlake![]() ![]() |
Variables: Properly encode parameters for form fields with ENCODE variable. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Variables: Expand USERNAME and WIKINAME in Template Topics. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Variables: Expand same variables in new user template as in template topics. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Variables: Optionally warn when included topic does not exist; with the option to create the included topic. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Variables: In topic text show file-types of attached files as icons. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Variables: New variable FORMFIELD returns the value of a field in the form attached to a topic.. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.DavidSachitano![]() ![]() |
Variables: Meta data rendering for form fields with META{"formfield"}. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Variables: New PLUGINVERSION variable. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Variables: URLPARAM now has a default="..." argument, for when no value has been given. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Variables: URLPARAM variable with newline parameter. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Variables: URLPARAM variable with new multiple=on parameter. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PaulineCheung![]() ![]() |
Search: New switch for search to perform an AND NOT search. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Search: Keyword search to search with implicit AND. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Search: Multiple searches in same topic with new multiple="on" paramter. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Search: Remove limitation on number of topics to search in a web. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Search: Exclude topics from search with an excludetopic parameter. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Search: Expand Variables on Formatted Search with expandvariables Flag. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Search: Formatted Search with Web Form variable to retrieve the name of the form attached to a topic. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.FrankSmith![]() ![]() |
Search: Formatted Search with Conditional Output. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Search: Formatted Search with $parent token to get the parent topic. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Search: New separator parameter to SEARCH supports better SEARCH embedding. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Search: Improved search performance when sorting result by topic name. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Search: New scope=all search parameter to search in topic name and topic text at the same time. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Search: New topic parameter for AND search on topic text and topic name. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Search modules uses Perl-style keyword parameters (code cleanup). Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Search: New $wikiname variable in format parameter of formatted search. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.ArthurClemens![]() |
Search: Sort search by topic creation date. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Search: Topic creation date and user in Formatted Search. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.CoreyFruitman![]() ![]() |
Search: Increase levels of nested search from 2 to 16. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Plugins: New pre-installed Plugins CommentPlugin, EditTablePlugin, RenderListPlugin, SlideShowPlugin, SmiliesPlugin, SpreadSheetPlugin, TablePlugin. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Plugins: New callback afterSaveHandler , called after a topic is saved. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.WalterMundt![]() |
Plugins: New callbacks beforeAttachmentSaveHandler and afterAttachmentSaveHandler , used to intervene on attachment save event. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.MartinCleaver![]() ![]() |
Plugins: New callbacks beforeCommonTagsHandler and afterCommonTagsHandler . Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Plugins: New callback renderFormFieldForEditHandler to render form field for edit. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.JohnTalintyre![]() |
Plugins: New callback renderWikiWordHandler to custom render links. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.MartinCleaver![]() ![]() |
Plugins: New function TWiki::Func::formatTime to format time into a string. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.SvenDowideit![]() |
Plugins: New function TWiki::Func::getRegularExpression to get predefined regular expressions. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.RichardDonkin![]() |
Plugins: New functions TWiki::Func::getPluginPreferences* to get Plugin preferences. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.WalterMundt![]() |
Plugins: New function TWiki::Func::extractParameters to extract all parameters from a variable string. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Plugins: New function TWiki::Func::checkDependencies to check for module dependency. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.CrawfordCurrie![]() ![]() |
Plugins: A recommendation for where a Plugin can store its data. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
UI: Show tool-tip topic info on WikiWord links. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
UI: Save topic and continue edit feature. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.ColasNahaboo![]() |
UI: Change topic with direct save (without edit/preview/save cycle) and checkpoint save. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.MattWilkie![]() ![]() |
UI: In attachment table, change 'action' to 'manage'. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() ![]() |
UI: Smaller usability enhancements on the file attachment table. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() ![]() |
UI: Removes anchor links from header content and places them before the text to fix 'header becomes link'. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.ArthurClemens![]() |
UI: Improved functionality of the More screen. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() ![]() |
UI: Quick reference chart of most used markup is now listed on the edit screen. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.ArthurClemens![]() |
UI: Flag for edit script to avoid overwrite of existing topic text and form data. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.NielsKoldso![]() ![]() |
UI: Disable Escape key in IE textarea to prevent it cancelling work. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.CrawfordCurrie![]() ![]() |
UI: Improved warning message on unsaved topic. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.MartinGregory![]() ![]() |
UI: Reverse order of words in page title for better multi-window/tab navigation. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.ArthurClemens![]() |
UI: Provides a framework to create and modify a topic without going through edit->preview->save sequence. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.AndreUlrich![]() ![]() |
UI: Set the topic parent to none in More screen, e.g. remove the current topic parent. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
UI: Use templates to define how file attachments are displayed. Was previously hard-coded. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.CrawfordCurrie![]() ![]() |
UI: Topic diff shows unified diff with unchanged context. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.SvenDowideit![]() |
UI: Diff feature shows TWiki form changes in nice tables. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.SvenDowideit![]() |
Code refactoring: The log entry for a save now has a dontNotify flag in the extra field if the user checked the minor changes flag. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Code refactoring: Server-side include of attachments accelerates INCLUDE. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.CrawfordCurrie![]() ![]() |
Code refactoring: Move functionality out of bin scripts and into included modules. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.CrawfordCurrie![]() ![]() |
Code refactoring: Move bin script functionality into TWiki::UI modules. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.CrawfordCurrie![]() ![]() |
Code refactoring: Optimize preferences handling for better performance. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PavelGoran![]() ![]() |
Code refactoring: Refactor variable expansion for edit and register. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.CrawfordCurrie![]() ![]() |
Code refactoring: Move savemulti script into TWiki::UI::Save. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.MattWilkie![]() ![]() |
Code refactoring: Topic search is done natively in Perl, it does not depend anymore on system calls with pipes. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Code refactoring: Fix logical error in upload script which prevented MIME filename from being used. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.WalterMundt![]() |
Bug Fixes of 01-Sep-2004 Release | Developer, Sponsor |
---|---|
Fix: Consistently create headings with empty anchor tags. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Fix: TOC does not work for headings containing & without spaces surrounding it. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Fix: Backslash line break breaks TWiki form definitions. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.CrawfordCurrie![]() ![]() |
Fix: Rename fixes unrelated topic references. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.RichardDonkin![]() |
Fix: Bug with infinite recursion in search. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Fix: Can't send mail with full 'From' address. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Fix: All scripts change to $bin before execute (for mod_perl2). Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Fix: Several RSS readers do not show all entries seen in the WebChanges list; repeated updates to the same topics get lost. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.ArthurClemens![]() |
Fix: TWiki::Access::checkAccessPermission function improperly handles Main and TWiki webs. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.SvenDowideit![]() |
Fix: Topic save returns error CI Date precedes date in revision. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Fix: Double quotes got replaced by " in TWiki forms. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.MichaelSparks![]() ![]() |
Fix: Duplicated Wiki name in .htpasswd entry for sha1 encoding. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Fix: When viewing a previous version of a topic, the view script substitutes only one occurrence of the variable EDITTOPIC. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Fix: Form default values are not working for text fields. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.ThomasWeigert![]() ![]() |
Fix: Formatted searches using a $pattern which unbalanced parenthesis crash TWiki. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Fix: Formatted Search uses title but should use name for formfield parameter. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Fix: GMTIME variable returns unwanted GMT text. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.SvenDowideit![]() |
Fix: Include from other Web links ACRONYMS. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Fix: Including an HTML file is very slow. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.JohnTalintyre![]() |
Fix: includeUrl() mess up absolute URLs. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.SvenDowideit![]() |
Fix: Filter out fixed font rendering in TOC to avoid unrendered = equal signs in TOC. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Fix: The initializeUserHandler is broken for session Plugins. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.JohnTalintyre![]() |
Fix: SEARCH fails with very large webs. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Fix: Security alert: User could gain view access rights of another user. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.KimCovil![]() ![]() |
Fix: 'print to closed file handle' error of log files are not writable. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.MartinGregory![]() ![]() |
Fix: Meta data handler can't process CR-LF line endings. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Fix: METAFIELD meta data is not shown in view raw=on mode. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Fix: Minor XHTML non-compliance in templates and code. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Fix: Getting pages from virtual hosts fails. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.JohnTalintyre![]() |
Fix: Create new web fails if RCS files do not exist. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.ClausBrunzema![]() ![]() |
Fix: Metacharacters can be passed through to the shell in File Attach. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Fix: Ability to delete non-WikiWord topics without confirmation. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Fix: + symbol in password reset fails. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Fix: Pathinfo cleanup for hosted sites. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.MikeSalisbury![]() ![]() |
Fix: Software error in SEARCH if regular expression pattern has unmached parenthesis. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Fix: Pipe chars in the comment field of the attachment table are not escaped. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Fix: Link escaping in preview fails for not quoted hrefs. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.TedPavlic![]() ![]() |
Fix: Preview expands variables twice. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Fix: Using a proxy with TWiki fails; no proxy-HTTP request, minimal request not HTTP 1.0, requests marked 1.1 are at best 1.0. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.MichaelSparks![]() ![]() |
Fix: Runaway view processes with TWiki::Sore::RcsLite. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.SvenDowideit![]() |
Fix: Regex Error in WebTopicList with topics that have meta characters in the name. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Fix: Rename script misses some ref-by topics. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.JohnTalintyre![]() |
Fix: Links to self within the page being renamed are not changed. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.SvenDowideit![]() |
Fix: Rename topic does 'Main.Main.UserName' for attachments. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Fix: Revision date is set to Jan 1970 when using RCS Lite. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.SvenDowideit![]() |
Fix: The new dynamically-created SiteMap is very nice, but somewhat slow. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Fix: The makeAnchorName function did not produce the same results if called iteratively, resulting in problems trying to link to headers.. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.WalterMundt![]() |
Fix: Statistics page does not provide links to non-wikiword topics. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Fix: Make TOC link URI references relative. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.MartinGregory![]() ![]() |
Fix: TWiki hangs when used on Apache 2.0. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.SvenDowideit![]() |
Fix: TOC incorrectly strips out links in headers. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Fix: The HTML tags that are generated by TOC do not close properly. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Fix: TOC on INCLUDEd topic ignores STOPINCLUDE. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.WillNorris![]() ![]() |
Fix: Quotes in tooltip message can break a TWiki form. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Fix: Better error message if the file attachment directory is not writable. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.CrawfordCurrie![]() ![]() |
Fix: Image size of PNG files. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.ArthurClemens![]() |
Fix: The testenv script distinguishes between real user ID and effective user ID. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.RichardDonkin![]() |
Fix: Variables in square bracket links dont work in form fields. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.SvenDowideit![]() |
Fix: Variable with Parameters in Form Fields Disappear. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Fix: Verbatim tag should escape HTML entities. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Fix: Field names of TWiki Forms can be WikiWords, this is used to link to a help topic. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny![]() |
Fix: Clean up the WebRssBase INCLUDES to use VARIABLES set in TWikiPreferences. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.SvenDowideit![]() |
Fix: Resolving variables in included topics. Details![]() |
TWiki:Main.OliverKrueger![]() ![]() |
/bin/view/Web.TopicName
topic view URL (besides the default /bin/view/Web/TopicName
URL); useful for InterwikiPlugin links like TWiki:Codev.ReadmeFirstreadTopicText
, saveTopicText
, setTopicEditLock
, checkTopicEditLock
%NOAUTOLINK%
setting in the TWikiPreferences to disable the auto-linking of WikiWords
registrationHandler
, beforeEditHandler
, afterEditHandler
, beforeSaveHandler
, writeHeaderHandler
, redirectCgiQueryHandler
, getSessionValueHandler
, setSessionValueHandler
%INCLUDE{ "OtherTopic" rev="1.2" }%
%NOP{}%
variable in TWikiTemplates topic gets removed at topic creation time; useful to write protect template topics
%URLPARAM{}%
variable in TWikiTemplates topic gets expanded at topic creation time; useful for dynamic content creation
$logDir
introduced in TWiki.cfg to set the log directory
setlib.cfg
file in the bin directory to set the TWiki library path
%PROXYHOST
and %PROXYPORT%
settings in the TWikiPreferences
%WIKILOGOIMG%
, %TWIKILOGOURL%
and %WIKILOGOALT%
variables in TWikiPreferences; replacing $wikiHomeUrl
in TWiki.cfg
%WIKITOOLNAME%
variable in TWikiPreferences; replacing $wikiToolName
in TWiki.cfg
%EDITBOXSTYLE%
preferences variable which sets the edit box width automatically to the window width
%URLENCODE{}%
variable to encodes a string for using in a URL parameter, e.g. %URLENCODE{"spaced name"}%
returns spaced%20name
/twiki/templates/register.tmpl
template file
%TOC%
table of content, e.g. ---+!! This heading
is not shown in a TOC
%SEARCH{}%
variable, FormattedSearch and WebSearch
<verbatim>
tags are no longer expanded
%SEARCH{}%
variable for database like reporting.
TWiki.cfg
notedited.tmpl
, notext.tmpl
and notwiki.tmpl
templates. More in TWikiTemplates.
%TOPICLIST{"format"}%
and %WEBLIST{"format"}%
variables to get a formatted topic index and web index, respectively. More in TWikiVariables.
%URLPARAM{"name"}%
variable to query URL parameters. More in TWikiVariables.
| *bold* |
cells as table headers, (ii) render space padded cells | center aligned |
and | right aligned |
, (iii) span multiple columns using | empty cells |||
. More in TextFormattingRules.
.htaccess
files that are attached to a topic get a .txt
suffix appended to the file name. See also TWiki:Codev/FileAttachmentFilterSecurityAlert---++ My Title
; and new %TOC%
variable to build a table of content from headings in a topic. More in TWikiVariables.
[[http://TWki.org][TWiki]]
) and internal links (i.e [[WikiSyntax][syntax]]
). More in TWikiVariables.
#MyAnchor
at the beginning of a line, and link to it with [[#MyAnchor]]
. More in TWikiVariables.
Net::SMTP
module instead of sendmail
if installed.
<verbatim>
... </verbatim>
tags to show source code "as is". Unlike the <pre>
... </pre>
tags, it also shows <
, >
, &
characters "as is".
==Bold Fixed==
to get Bold Fixed
.
%GMTIME{"..."}%
and %SERVERTIME{"..."}%
variables. Format is now "$hour:$min"
instead of "hour:min"
. More in TWikiVariables. Attention: Check your existing topics when you upgrade TWiki!
%STARTINCLUDE%
and %STOPINCLUDE%
variables to control what gets included of a topic. More in TWikiVariables.
print
skin for a printable view of a topic. More in TWikiSkins and TWiki:Codev/TWikiSkins%BASEWEB%
, %INCLUDINGWEB%
, %BASETOPIC%
and %INCLUDINGTOPIC%
to have more control over include handling. More in TWikiVariables and TWiki:Codev/IncludeHandlingImprovementsnoheader="on"
switch in %SEARCH{...}%
to suppress table header. More in TWikiVariables.
$doHidePasswdInRegistration
in wikicfg.pm
to hide plain text password in registration e-mail.
%VAR{"NAME" web="Web"}%
to get web-specific preferences. More in TWikiVariables.
view
"knows" the user once authenticated in edit
. More in TWikiUserAuthentication.
png
image support.
%INCLUDE{"%SYSTEMWEB%.SiteMap"}%
. More in TWiki:Codev/BetterTWikiTagTemplateProcessingmailnotify
to suppress all normal output.
[[text formatting FAQ]]
to get the link text formatting FAQ that points to topic TextFormattingFAQ.
%HTTP_EQUIV_ON_VIEW%
, %HTTP_EQUIV_ON_EDIT%
and %HTTP_EQUIV_ON_PREVIEW%
that define the <meta http-equiv="...">
meta tags for the TWiki templates. This can be used for example to set a document expiration time.
%GMTIME{"..."}%
and %SERVERTIME{"..."}%
. More in TWikiVariables.
%INCLUDE{"Web/TopicName.txt"}%
to %INCLUDE{"Web.TopicName"}%
. Legacy syntax still supported.
*bold*, italic, __bold italic__
and fixed
, where it is not necessary anymore to have a trailing space before .,;:?!
characters.
%INCLUDE%
of arbitrary files.
%GMTIME%
variable that shows the current GM time.
%HTTP_HOST%
, %REMOTE_ADDR%
, %REMOTE_PORT%
and %REMOTE_USER%
.
%ATTACHLINKBOX%
controls the default state of the link check box in the attach file page.
Perl -T
option )
%EDITBOXWIDTH%
and %EDITBOXHEIGHT%
to specify the edit box size.
wikiwebs.inc
, wikiwebtable.inc
, weblist.inc
, webcopyright.inc
and webcolors.inc
files.
%SCRIPTSUFFIX%
/ $scriptSuffix containing an optional file extension of the TWiki Perl script. Templates have been changed to use this variable. This allows you to rename the Perl script files to have a file extension like for example ".cgi".
%SCRIPTURLPATH%
/ $scriptUrlPath containing the script URL without the domain name. Templates have been changed to use this variable instead of %SCRIPTURL%
. This is for performance reasons.
%INCLUDE:"filename.ext"%
to %INCLUDE{"filename.ext"}%
. (Previous syntax still supported. Change was done because of inline search syntax)
%SEARCH{"str" ...}%
to show a search result embedded in a topic text. TWikiVariables has more on the syntax. Inline search combined with the category table feature can be used for example to create a simple bug tracking system.
initialize
in wiki.pm
did not handle $thePathInfo
correctly.
$doLogTopic*
in wikicfg.pm to selectively log topic view, edit, save, rdiff, attach, search and changes to monthly log file.
$doRemovePortNumber
in wikicfg.pm to optionally remove the port number from the TWiki URL. Example www.some.domain:1234/twiki
gets www.some.domain/twiki
.
%INCLUDE:"file.inc"%
variable. Search first in the current web, then in parent data directory. Useful to overload default include text in the data directory by web-specific text, like for example webcopyright.inc
text.
TestVersion
/ TestVersions
, TestPolicy
/ TestPolicies
, TestAddress
/ TestAddresses
, TestBox
/ TestBoxes
.
webcopyright.inc
file. This is to easily customize the copyright text.
%WIKIHOMEURL%
(link when pressing the icon on the upper left corner) and %WIKITOOLNAME%
(the name of the wiki tool TWiki
).
%PUBURL%
(Public directory URL) and %ATTACHURL%
(URL of topic file attachment).
fixed font text
. Words get showns in fixed font
by enclosing them in "=" equal signs. Example Writing =fixed font= will show up as fixed font
.
Diffs
link at the bottom of each topic, e.g. Topic TWikiHistory . { Edit Ref-By Diffs r1.3 > r1.2 > r1.1 }
Revision r1.3 1998/11/10 01:34 by PeterThoeny
data/logYYYYMM.txt
, where YYYYMM
the year and month in numeric format is. Intended for auditing only, not accessible from the web.
r1.3
) and differences thereof (e.g. >
) at the bottom Topic TWikiHistory . { Edit Ref-By r1.3 > r1.2 > r1.1 }
Revision r1.3 1998/11/10 01:34 by TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny
Topic TWikiHistory . { Edit Ref-By r1.3 r1.2 r1.1 }
Revision r1.3 1998/10/26 01:34:00 by TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny
AaA
sequence, e.g. AaA1
is a valid TWikiTopics name, but not Aa1
.
%INCLUDE:"filename.ext"%
%TOPIC%
(Topic name), %WEB%
(web name), %SCRIPTURL%
(script URL), %DATE%
(current date), %WIKIWEBMASTER%
(Wiki webmaster address), %WIKIVERSION%
(Wiki version), %USERNAME%
(user name), %WIKIUSERNAME%
(Wiki user name).
PeterThoeny
instead of thoeny
in case the Wiki username exists. Implementation Automatic lookup of Wiki username in topic TWikiUsers.
Know.WebSeach
.
The typical TWiki development flow...
Related Topics: DeveloperDocumentationCategory