Hi Tiago,

If you want self hosted why not to use Tiddlywiki on Node.js!

Another option is Portable Node.js+Tiddlywiki on a thumb drive!
See https://github.com/garethflowers/nodejs-portable/releases

Regarding Bob, Jed Carty may have the complete answer.

--Mohammad



On Friday, April 17, 2020 at 9:57:41 PM UTC+4:30, Tiago Espinha wrote:
>
> Hi!
>
> I've very recently been introduced to the amazing world of Tiddlywiki. 
> Everything's still very new to me but I'm already blown away by the model.
>
> Now, I've come to the conclusion that plain static files aren't going to 
> cut it for my use case. Even using something like Gitlab for saving, if 
> there's two of us editing things we'll inevitably end up overwriting each 
> other's tiddly at some point or another.
>
> So I started looking at self-hosted wikis. I'm quite handy with servers, 
> Docker and node, so none of that scares me.
>
> I've tried this: https://github.com/djmaze/tiddlywiki-docker
>
> But it seems like a smallish one-person project. And it doesn't appear to 
> do anything about overwrites. As far as I can tell, the issue would still 
> exist.
>
> Then I found out about Bob.
>
> My questions around Bob are:
> - Is it reliable for long term usage? Or will I be locked in once the 
> developer is tired of working on it?
> - Is there something better than Bob for this use case?
> - Bob allows multi users from the perspective that it locks tiddlies while 
> they are being edited, but as far as I can tell, it does not record a 
> username. That's kind of a dealbreaker... maybe?
>
> Do people have more mainstream alternatives to Bob? 
>

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