On Wed, Nov 14, 2012 at 11:51 AM, Ross Gardler
<[email protected]> wrote:
> Christian, the method off maintaining an ASF website you describe below is 
> still available but use of the ASF CMS is much more efficient these days.

Well, at Logging we use the Apache CMS to include our mvn generated
sites. It is very useful like that (extref or so it is called).
In addition, the CMS can build "things" on its own, as long as there
are perl bindings avail.

> Before we go into that though we need to understand what the team want from 
> their apache.org website.

+1

Here is some more information on the CMS, if people want to take a look at it:
http://apache.org/dev/#web

Cheers

>
> Ross
>
>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Christian Grobmeier [mailto:[email protected]]
>> Sent: 12 November 2012 09:58
>> To: [email protected]
>> Subject: Website
>>
>> Hello all,
>>
>> one last thing for today. :-)
>>
>> How has Ripple created its website before?
>>
>> At Apache, we use svn pubsub. It means, the website will be pushed into
>> SVN and infra does make an svn up into the websites directory.
>> Unfortunately it does require to use SVN, even when you have your project
>> on GIT.
>>
>> Some people use the Apache CMS for their websites. Some use Maven or
>> whatever to generate it. The generated content will the be pushed into SVN.
>>
>> So, before we discuss further, maybe lets look at what you have done
>> before.
>>
>> Here is some more information on websites for podlings:
>> http://incubator.apache.org/guides/sites.html
>>
>> Cheers
>> Christian
>>
>>
>> --
>> http://www.grobmeier.de
>> https://www.timeandbill.de
>



--
http://www.grobmeier.de
https://www.timeandbill.de

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