Post Post Script, I just wanted to add there are two ways to Host or Serve a Wiki, one is the file/folder content, the other is to provide the HTML access to the server.
What I mean is if the servers files are shared online you can have node JS run against those files. Ie you take your server with you. Of course you can run the server node session off the cloud version but only one at a time however I think (unsure) Jed was looking at the ability for multiple node servers against the one repository. finally, I think there may be value using a VPN to access a node hosted bob, ie keep it as a LAN based solution secured inside a VPN to make it internet accessible. Regards Tony On Thursday, March 5, 2020 at 9:40:59 AM UTC+11, TonyM wrote: > > Bimlas, > > Others may have an answer. > > The key method to host online for me is php and tw-receiver but for single > file wikis only, this rest on top of a standard html server and there > numerous ways to build or host such servers. It would be great if we had a > php saver for tiddlywiki that operated like node.js ie folder based wiki. > > At present only bob on node has the multi-user multi-access solution > typically needed for an online server, although the method used by NoteSelf > may be an alternative; > > - I think a php solution would ether need this added functionality > multi-user multi-access or at a minimum the ability for a group of users > with read/write access to serialy edit, ie; lock the wiki in their name. > - I also wonder if a html put and get server and saver version could > be built. > > Of course sometimes you could package node inside something like a virtual > machine, Docker container and serve it that way instead. > > *One thing you could add to this discussion is why you want individual > tiddlers* because there are increasingly more opportunities to meet some > of the requirements that separate files satisfy but now within the wiki? Ie > what is driving your desire for a alternative server platform beyond not > node. > > PS I have a control panel hosting environment and whilst they did not > document it a technician showed me how to host a nodejs instance, I did not > continue because even bob presents security risks on the internet, although > Jed has implemented a secure version with other technology involved. > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "TiddlyWikiDev" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/tiddlywikidev/568ff7cd-d0ce-4a8b-8ed5-6c32450b4477%40googlegroups.com.
