Is it... 1) Export all of those confluence pages to some reasonable HTML form 2) Commit and link to the HTML files 3) Delete wikis?
If 1) is easy, then the whole thing is easy. We have a tool that makes 1) easy? On Thu, Apr 7, 2011 at 4:24 PM, Robin Anil <[email protected]> wrote: > Is this discussion on the infra list. > > sent from handheld device excuse typos > On Apr 7, 2011 8:51 PM, "Benson Margulies" <[email protected]> wrote: > > You should really read all of JoeS's writing on this topic, but, in > short: > > > > Infrastructure draws a sharp distinction between 'the web site' and > > 'the wiki' for a project. They want 'the web site' to be published, > > via svn, as static HTML. No Confluence, no PHP, no nothing. > > > > To that end, Joe built a new CMS from scratch. Its uses markdown to > > ease the markup process, and it operates on files stored in svn. There > > are apparently javascript scriptlets to give you some level of > > convenience in editing in it. I haven't use it yet, myself. > > > > The original position of infra was that all use of confluence for 'the > > web site' would cease at Apache. Confluence would remain in use only > > for 'the wiki'. > > > > Dan Kulp of CXF and other projects really, really, didn't want to give > > up the convenience and expressive range of Confluence as a CMS for > > 'the web site'. So, he built a brand new static export tool for > > confluence that meets the stated requirements of the infrastructure > > team, and deployed it for CXF. > > > > Infrastructure will insist that Mahout achieve static publication > > *somehow*. The simplest thing we can do is adopt Dan's technology to > > render the confluence content into static HTML. >
