User:Mainframe98/Wiki Family

Manual:Wiki family is quite confusing, and most likely out of date. That it is possible is proven by the many farms out here, some even using configurations similar to Wikimedia. It is my attempt to make things worse create (yet another) guide on creating a Wiki family. This example is based on the approach by Wikimedia. Why? For the glory of MediaWiki of course Because it is the most interesting way, and as mentioned in Manual:Wiki family "...it can give really good, clean results." Disclaimer: I don't know what I'm doing. I'm woefully inexperienced with Unix-like operating systems and probably shouldn't touch them without a 10-foot pole. You are advised to be cautious and verify before following any steps below.

Used Environment

 * Raspbian Jessie Light
 * PHP 5.6 default package
 * MariaDB/MySQL
 * Apache2

Installation
I have a GitHub repository where an installer that uses this configuration is kept.

Configuration Template
I have a GitHub repository where an example configuration is kept. You can use this as a template.

CommonSettings.php
This file contains all the shared wiki settings. General groups that every wiki should have (such as a rollback group), things like an emergency email address etc. Here, you can also add a listing for extensions, such as the example below. Additionally, you may include this in a separate file, such as LocalExtensions.php, or equivalent.

InitialiseSettings.php
Here, the $wgConf gets created and filled.

LocalSettings.php
You'll need several modifications to LocalSettings.php:

Database name determiner
This part figures out which database to obtain. This becomes important later on when $wgConf needs a database name to get the site specific settings.

Loading local databases
There are multiple ways to do this. In this example, the list of available databases (all known databases to the wiki family, closed or not) is loaded from a database list, all.dblist. In most cases, this file also contains the language of the wiki and the name of the wiki.

all.dblist example
metawiki|Meta Wiki|en enwiki|English Wiki|en nlwiki|Nederlandse Wiki|nl

Other things to do
Configuring MediaWiki is one step, but to successfully setup a wiki family, you also need to configure the environment to work like intended.

DNS
Basically, there are two things you can do:
 * Shell out the money and grab yourself a fancy domain name with unlimited subdomains and point this to your web server.
 * Setup a personal DNS server, dnsmasq for example, and have it redirect all requests to your requested domain to your web server. This will only work if your device(s) are configured to use your web server as a DNS server. This is great for testing and keeping your domain private for the time being.

Other notes
Try to keep this organized.

$wgConf
A tag is a label that can be applied to a wiki. It is also referred to as a set. A tag represents a group with a specific property, such as having an extension installed. This is not mentioned in the documentation or in the comments of siteConfiguration.php though... Usually, a tag is applied by placing the name of the database in a specific database list. Basically, anything in $wgConf is a set, with database names being a set consisting only of that wiki, and default being the only exception.

Wikimedia deployment specific

 * Heterogeneous deployment

MediaWiki.org

 * Manual:Wiki family
 * Manual:$wgConf
 * Manual:CommonSettings.php
 * Manual:InitialiseSettings.php

Bundled MediaWiki documentation

 * SiteConfiguration.php (on doc.wikimedia.org)

Actual examples

 * Miraheze's Github Repository - A setup incredibly similar to the one used by Wikimedia, running the latest stable version with CentralAuth. Production configuration is available in their mw-config repository

Wikimedia

 * Wikimedia's CommonSettings.php
 * Wikimedia's InitialiseSettings.php
 * Wikimedia's wgConf.php
 * MediaWiki-Configuration Repo (Github mirror)

Talks
Wiki Farms]] by Cindy.cicalese on Semantic-MediaWiki.org
 * [[semantic-mw:SMWCon Spring 2015/The Why and How of Wiki Farms|The Why and How of