Hi all, I've been brainstorming some ideas relating to how package managers could provide more useful context to users, and one of them is that it would be nice to have some way for users to directly share tips and information on particular packages "out-of-band".
A wiki is one of the easier ways to do this, and since we already have one, I was wondering if it would make sense to re-use wiki.debian.net. This would entail: 1) Creating a namespace (probably using subpages) for per-package pages, or maybe per-source-package pages. e.g., wiki.debian.org/packages/packagename 2) Providing a way for package managers to programmatically access wiki pages so they can be conveniently displayed alongside other package information. I did only a little research and the Web/Wiki experts here might have better ideas, but it looks like there's a built-in XMLRPC interface to moinmoin -- it's not clear that it works for read/write access, but I think that for editing it's probably better to just send the user to the Wiki page directly, rather than reimplementing an editing interface in the package manager. So, since all the tools to do this are available, why am I asking here? Mostly, I want to give you a heads-up before I write code that could increase the wiki's usage. I'd hate to get yelled at by the site admins. I don't know how much usage this will get, but my impression was that the wiki gets fairly light usage right now, in which case even a small increase could be significant. Is this likely to be an issue? I'd also like to check that I'm not going to run into problems with namespacing on the wiki if I go ahead with this. This is all fairly speculative future planning right now, so we have plenty of time to avoid unpleasant surprises. No-one likes unpleasant surprises. At least I don't. :) Daniel -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-www-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/20100330142636.ga8...@emurlahn.burrows.local