Extension:MobileFrontend

The MobileFrontend extension provides a mobile-friendly view. This page is designed for end users who want to install it on their development instance. If you are keen to help us build it and improve it we encourage you to get involved.

Prerequisites

 * Although MediaWiki doesn't require it, PHP must have mbstring support for this extension to work.
 * Release for MediaWiki ≤ 1.24 of MobileFrontend requires the extension Mantle.

Configuration settings
The following variables can be defined in LocalSettings.php after calling. Note that for a simple site adding  might be all you need to make it Just Work™.

Configuring mobile browser auto detection
See /Configuring browser auto-detection

Configuring the main page
By default, the Main Page on the mobile site is the same page as on desktop. To show an optimized version of your Main page to your mobile users you can disable the desktop Main page simply by following these two rules to add mobile specific content: For example:
 * A selector that is prefixed with mf- will be added to the mobile main page for any project. Any title attributes set on these elements will be promoted into a heading before the section. A title attribute is optional.
 * Any element with the class 'nomobile' will not show on mobile.

Hello

would create a section named Wikimedia Blog with the text 'Hello'. After you saved your Main page, on mobile devices you will see only the sections you added following these rules.

Install Nearby
MobileFrontend provides the Special:Nearby page with a little configuration. To get this to work a few optional steps are required: Alternatively you can use an alien MediaWiki instance for Nearby with the following 2 lines in your LocalSettings. The nearby endpoint will be used to find related content to a given location.
 * Install GeoData
 * Run update.php
 * in LocalSettings.php add $wgMFNearby = true
 * Add data to your articles to one or more pages   see the documentation for GeoData for syntax details

Additional tweaks
Get the most out of MobileFrontend by adding these other optional dependencies:
 * Extension:Geodata - get Special:Nearby and geotag your articles
 * Extension:PageImages - adds images to search and nearby results
 * Extension:VisualEditor - add Visual editing to your mobile experience.

CSS Styling
To apply CSS to your mobile theme, edit MediaWiki:Mobile.css, the counterpart of MediaWiki:Common.css.

More information
If you would like to test the mobile extension on a desktop browser or your device doesn't render the mobile version, you can append the following key-value pair to the query string: ?useformat=mobile e.g., https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chuck_Schuldiner?useformat=mobile

If you would like to see the wap version of the mobile extension, use ?useformat=mobile-wap instead.

If you would like to view a page in the beta without enabling it across the entire site you can append to the query string of any page

If you would like to force your wiki to always display in mobile view, add the following to your LocalSettings.php:

Extended action=parse
action=parse accepts extra parameters:
 * mobileformat=: Return rendered page HTML in a mobile format . Prior to MediaWiki 1.23, you could specify mobileformat=html to output HTML for modern phones or mobileformat=wml to output WML for dumb phones (see mailing list messagefor details).
 * noimages: Disable images in mobile output.
 * mainpage: Apply mobile main page transformations.

Example:

action=mobileview
Delivers content optimized for mobile devices for use by mobile apps and dynamic section views. Almost like a restricted-functionality action=parse</tt>, but more flexible and returns separate sections that are always obtained from full-page parse.

Parameters:
 * page</tt>: Title of page to process.
 * sections</tt>: Pipe-separated list of section numbers for which to return text or all</tt> for all sections.
 * redirect</tt>: Whether redirects should be followed, yes</tt> (default) or no</tt>. This parameter is intentionally made similar to the one to index.php.
 * prop</tt>: Which information to get:
 * text</tt>: HTML of selected section(s)
 * sections</tt>: Information about all sections on page
 * normalizedtitle</tt>: Normalized page title, will be returned only if it differs from the specified one.
 * sectionprop</tt>: What information about sections to get: pipe-separated list of value types defined by parser. It's the same as in action=parse: toclevel, level, line, number, index, fromtitle, anchor. "byteoffset" has been excluded as it makes no sense for this action.
 * noimages</tt>: Return HTML without images.
 * noheadings</tt>: Return HTML without headings.

Returned section information also includes the id</tt> for every section - its zero-based number; and for sections that contains references added by Cite, there's also references</tt> data member.

Examples:

Same request for XML:

[//www.mediawiki.org/w/api.php?action=mobileview&page=Extension:MobileFrontend/Example&sections=0&prop=text|sections&format=xmlfm api.php?action=mobileview&page=Extension:MobileFrontend/Example&sections=0&prop=text|sections&format=xml]

prop=extracts
Migrated to TextExtracts

WMF sites
On Wikimedia Foundation-run sites, we use Varnish caching servers to check the user agent of your device. If your user agent appears to be coming from a mobile device, the Varnish servers will set an appropriate 'X-Device' header for your request, and you will be redirected to the MobileFrontend version of an article. Alternatively, you can click 'Mobile view' in the footer of an article or append "useformat=mobile" to the query string to view an article in the mobile view. Example:

Varnish server vcl config for X-Device

If you are viewing the mobile version of article but wish to see the desktop-version of that article, you can click 'View this article on regular <SITENAME>' to switch back.

If you want to permanently disable the mobile view for your web browser, you can click 'Permanently disable mobile site', which will set a cookie instructing the WMF servers to always display the desktop version of the site.

Non-WMF sites
For non-WMF sites, you can either set up your configuration to mimic how things are done at the WMF (doing device detection at the proxy layer and setting specific X-Device headers), or you can simply use "?useformat=mobile" to switch an article to use the mobile view.

For Extension Developers
By default resource modules in extensions will not be loaded in mobile view. Should a module need to be loaded while in mobile view this guide on writing MobileFrontend friendly modules will be of help.