vote up 3 vote down star
5

We need to add a wiki to an already existing website, however we want only logged in users to be able to edit the wiki and we would prefer to use our own method of authentication.

Has anyone got any experiences with something similar or any suggestions of a good wiki engine for the job?

UPDATE: Thanks everyone, the general seems to be consensus is that ScrewTurn is one of the best Wiki's, however does anyone have any experience of integrating it into your own website?

Imagine you have the website with the basic layout done and you have an authentication system already.

How can you bring the engine into the middle of that so that your layout and menus surround the wiki and it uses your own authentication system?

flag

79% accept rate

3 Answers

vote up 4 vote down check

I did a bit of evaluation of ASP.NET wikis recently, and the best one in my opinion is ScrewTurn Wiki.

You could try comparing some on WikiMatrix if you want to see alternatives.

link|flag
I have been adding Providers to the wiki and I think it will enable me to add it to the website seamlessly which is brilliant. – John_ Feb 23 at 12:11
vote up 0 vote down

I was pleasantly surprised at how good the Sharepoint wiki is (using Windows Sharepoint Services - WSS 3.0), though I dont know if this option would work for you. Worth looking at though... Sharepoint of course also supports custom authentication, strong authorization framework, etc.

UPDATE: To clarify, while I don't think that Sharepoint Wiki is the best of breed out there when it comes to wikis, my intent was that it integrates very nicely into the sharepoint model - and it is definitely "good enough".

link|flag
You can't be serious. I dispise the Sharepoint Wiki, one of Sharepoint's its weakest features IMHO. – Chris Ballance Feb 19 at 21:47
Well, I admit I have yet to drink much "wiki koolaid", and I still think like sharepoint... However, as sharepoint's wiki blends wonderfully within the sharepoint framework, and sharepoint is so versatile - it fit my needs wonderfully. That said, I admit that its not the best choice for everyone... – AviD Feb 19 at 23:27
The Sharepoint wiki is absolutely awful, it's the reason I was evaluating ASP.NET wikis in the first place - to find something actually usable for the developers at my company. – Chad Birch Feb 19 at 23:40
The only benefit to the Sharepoint wiki is that is lives in Sharepoint. – Chris Ballance Feb 20 at 21:25
@Chris, well yes, thats kind of what I was saying - as I am Sharepoint centric, and was looking for something to integrate with that - it's exactly what I needed :). – AviD Feb 21 at 19:01
show 1 more comment
vote up 3 vote down

Screwturn Wiki is what Chuck Norris would use if he needed a Wiki

link|flag
ScrewTurn rocks – Mcbeev Feb 19 at 21:54
Why does it rock ? – mP Feb 20 at 20:49

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.