A document has been updated: http://cocoon.zones.apache.org/daisy/documentation/705.html
Document ID: 705 Branch: main Language: default Name: Live Sites - 2.1.8 (unchanged) Document Type: Cocoon Document (unchanged) Updated on: 5/29/08 9:56:42 AM Updated by: Andrew Savory A new version has been created, state: draft Parts ===== Content ------- This part has been updated. Mime type: text/xml (unchanged) File name: (unchanged) Size: 5613 bytes (previous version: 2503 bytes) Content diff: (15 equal lines skipped) <h1>Cocoon 2.1.8</h1> +++ <h2>Encyclopedia of Life Sciences - Wiley InterScience</h2> +++ +++ <p><em>Date added: 2006-07-24</em><br/> +++ <strong>URL:</strong> +++ <a href="http://www.mrw.interscience.wiley.com/emrw/047001590X/home">http://www.mrw.interscience.wiley.com/emrw/047001590X/home</a> +++ <br/> +++ <strong>Contact:</strong> epritcha [AT] wiley.co.uk</p> +++ +++ <p><em>Cocoon version used:</em> 2.1.8 (with AJAX module and some patches from +++ 2.1.9)<br/> +++ <em>Short summary:</em> Major Reference work in Wiley InterScience, first of +++ many to be published using Cocoon-based architecture.<br/> +++ <em>How can we verify this site is actually built with Cocoon? </em>Check out +++ the X-Cocoon-Version header...</p> +++ +++ <p><em>How much time did it take to build the site from design to +++ publication?</em><br/> +++ Original IA Specification in October 2005, specs for source XML took +++ approximately 2 months, actual build 3 months; 3 Cocoon-based engineers, 1 +++ focusing on search, 1 on XHTML/CSS, and one on the rest of the site. We also had +++ some hard-working Content people working on pre-rendering of XML blobs and +++ MathML images, and a whole bunch of people in India marking up the XML content +++ documents.</p> +++ +++ <p><em>How much traffic does the site handle?</em><br/> +++ 20000 hits on launch day (24 July 2006).</p> +++ +++ <p><em>What made you choose Cocoon to build the site?</em><br/> +++ 6 month review of available technologies, Cocoon stood out on handling of XML, +++ Caching, Component re-use and the Sitemap. We also love Views and the concept of +++ Flows.</p> +++ +++ <p><em>What other information do you want to disclose (e.g. how does it work, +++ how did you build it, what parts of Cocoon did you use)?</em></p> +++ +++ <p>We've actually got some other parts of the site already implemented using +++ Cocoon, namely ForwardLinking (Citation-Tracking link on Journal Abstract pages: +++ Crossref web-service based), Author Services (production process tracking for +++ authors: uses web-services and FlowScript), plus our (yet to be launched) RSS +++ and OPML feeds, and will be moving forward with the rest of InterScience +++ along-side a back-end re-architecture.</p> +++ +++ <p>We've been able to re-use a number of components from the other Cocoon +++ projects already, and the bulk of Cocoon work for this site has been XSL and +++ Sitemap wrangling, rather than application-specific Java code.</p> +++ +++ <p>We wrote our own Generators and Transformers for DB access and Search +++ integration (we use back-end CORBA repositories and custom DOA for DB access, +++ and a legacy Verity engine for search), plus some generic transformers for SAX +++ manipulation, e.g. pulling single nodes for our AJAX based topic-tree out of a +++ huge source document. However, the bulk of the functionality is XSLT based, +++ using a file-system store (i.e. exactly the kind of thing Cocoon was designed +++ for), preferring Inclusion to Aggregation in most cases.</p> +++ +++ <p>Access control is not implemented using Cocoon simply due to an existing +++ available web-server plugin, although we use a Cocoon-based 'Action' for access +++ control in other parts of the site.</p> +++ +++ <p>Cocoon has vastly improved our abilty to deliver feature-rich sites on-time +++ and on-cost, plus, its fun!</p> +++ <h2>Computer Science Department 2 Erlangen University</h2> <p><em>Date added: 2006-06-29</em></p> (59 equal lines skipped)