Yamdwe is made up of two Python programs to export an existing Mediawiki install to a Dokuwiki install.
yamde needs a new maintainer - I've gotten busy with other responsibilities and I'm not giving yamdwe the attention it deserves. It's mostly mature software, the only issue is occasionally content in some wikis that doesn't convert properly. Yamdwe has automated tests and continuous integration so it's not too painful to add bugfixes, the usual slow point is investigating behaviour of mediawiki installs that aren't publically available. If you're interested in helping out then please get in touch, or just browse the Issues list and maybe send some PRs! Any active maintainer will be gladly credited and/or I'll transfer the repo to you if you'd like that. -- Angus
- Exports and recreates full revision history of all pages, including author information for correct attribution.
- Exports images and maintains modification dates (but not past revisions of an image.)
- Can optionally export user accounts to the default dokuiwiki "basicauth" format (see below.)
- Parses MediaWiki syntax using the mwlib library (as used by Wikipedia), so can convert most pages very cleanly - minimal manual cleanup.
- Syntax support includes: tables, image embeds, code blocks.
- Uses the MediaWiki API to export pages and images, so a MediaWiki install can be exported remotely and without admin privileges (NB: Yamdwe does hit the API quite hard, so please do not export other people's wikis for fun. Or, at minimum, please read their Terms of Service first and comply by them.)
- Supports logging in to Mediawiki to export, and also HTTP Basic Auth.
- Dokuwiki 2014-09-29a "Hrun", but should work on any recent version. Exporting users only works on 2014-09-29a or newer (see below).
- MediaWiki 1.13 or newer (ie any recent version, 1.13 is from 2008!)
Yamdwe has now been used successfully on many wikis of various sizes. If you've used it on a particularly large or unusual wiki, please let me know!
- Python 2.7 or newer (Python 3 not supported by all dependencies at time of writing.)
- requests module
- simplemediawiki module
- mwlib module
Note: It's strongly recommended to use a virtualenv environment to keep yamdwe's libraries isolated from the rest of your system. yamdwe has over 20 package dependencies including some very specific versions to support mwlib. Good introductory posts about virtualenv can be found here and also here. You may want to check out virtualenvwrapper, which provides handy shortcuts for common virtualenv operations.
Once the virtualenv is made and activated:
pip install -r requirements.txt
Installing everything via pip as shown above means compiling some common packages from source. Here's an alternative set of commands to set up a virtualenv on Debian/Ubuntu, but with some common packages installed into the main system:
sudo apt-get install python-mysqldb python-pip python-lxml python-requests python-dev python-virtualenv
virtualenv --system-site-packages -p python2.7 env
source env/bin/activate
pip install simplemediawiki==1.2.0b2
pip install -i http://pypi.pediapress.com/simple/ mwlib
(Once done working with yamdwe, run deactivate
to leave the virtualenv, source env/bin/activate
again to re-enter it).
If you're creating a new DokuWiki then set up your DokuWiki installation and perform the initial installation steps (name the wiki, set up an admin user, etc.) You can also use yamdwe with an existing wiki, but any existing content with the same name will be overwritten.
To start an export, you will need the URL of the mediawiki API (usually http://mywiki/wiki/api.php or similar) and the local path to the Dokuwiki installation.
yamdwe.py MEDIAWIKI_API_URL DOKUWIKI_ROOT_PATH
If you need to log in to to your Mediawiki install (either with a Mediawiki username and if you are in a domain with the domain-name, or via HTTP Basic Auth) then run yamdwe.py -h
to view the command line options for authentication.
Domain functionality is added through the "develop" branch of this simplemediawiki fork and can be used through.
yamdwe.py --wiki_domain WIKI_DOMAIN MEDIAWIKI_API_URL DOKUWIKI_ROOT_PATH
If installation goes well it should print the names of pages and images as it is exporting, and finally print "Done". This process can be slow, and can load up the Mediawiki server for large wikis.
Yamdwe may warn you at the end that it is unable to set correct permissions for the Dokuwiki data directories and files - regardless, you should check and correct these manually.
Inevitably some content will not import cleanly, so a manual check/edit/cleanup pass is almost certainly necessary.
Yamdwe supports some features in Mediawiki that aren't supported by a base Dokuwiki installaton. To display these elements Dokuwiki plugins are required:
<blockquote>
tags in Mediawiki can use the blockquote plugin in Dokuwiki.<math>
tags in Mediawiki can use the MathJax plugin (or similar) in Dokuwiki.
You only need the plugins for any features that you are using in your Mediawiki and want to keep using as-is.
This step is optional, but it's nice as it matches the user names in the imported revision history with actual users in dokuwiki.
For this step you need access to the MySQL database backing the mediawiki install, and local access to the dokuwiki root directory.
An example usage looks like this:
./yamdwe_users.py -u mediawiki --prefix wiki_ /srv/www/dokuwiki/
Run yamdwe_users.py with "-h" to see all options:
Any settings you're unsure about (like --prefix
for table prefix)
can be found in the LocalSettings.php file of your Mediawiki
installation.
yamdwe_users exports mediawiki password hashes to a dokuwiki "basicauth" text file. These imported passwords require Dokuwiki version 2014-09-29 "Hrun" or newer. On older Dokuwiki installs the password file format is not compatible and it will break user auth. The best thing to do is to update to 2014-09-29 or newer before running yamdwe_users.py
.
-
After the export please check for correct permissions on the dokuwiki
data/conf/users.auth.php
file and other data/conf files. -
The search index needs to be manually rebuilt with the contents of the new pages. The searchindex plugin can do this.
-
Page naming and namespaces will probably need some rearranging/renaming to seem "natural" in Dokuwiki. The move Plugin makes this straightforward.
-
Some uncommon URL schemes, such as
file://
, are not detected by Dokuwiki as links unless you add a scheme.local.conf file as described here
Please check the Issues list on github to see what's going on.
If you do find a bug or have trouble exporting a wiki then please open an issue there and I (or other yamdwe users) can try and help you out.
If the bug is with some Mediawiki markup that doesn't provide the expected Dokuwiki markup, for a good bug report please include:
- Excerpt of the Mediawiki markup causing the problem.
- Desired Dokuwiki markup output.
- Actual (problematic) Dokuwiki output from yamdwe.
Want to put a huge smile on my face and get a massive karma dose by submitting an even better bug report? Are you comfortable using git & github?
- Fork the yamdwe repository on github.
- Add a test case directory under tests/ and place the problematic Mediawiki markup into a file
mediawiki.txt
, and the desired correct Dokuwiki output intodokuwiki.txt
. - Run
wikicontent_tests.py
to verify that the incorrect output you expected is printed as part of the test failure. - Add a commmit which adds the new test case directory.
- Submit a Pull Request for the test failure. Use the Pull Request description field to explain the problem.
If you want to outclass even that bug report, your commit could also add a fix for the conversion problem in yamdwe, so all tests pass including the new one you added! A+++ would accept Pull Request again!
Don't worry if you don't want to perform any extra steps though, any (polite) bug report is always welcome!