I've been following your posts on campsite-support and wanted to bring up
something we've been discussing for some time: Ways to make it easier to
migrate data from other CMSes into Campsite. One idea we've discussed for
some time is the creation of an XML import mechanism, where data could be
imported en masse as long as it was in an XML format Campsite could handle
(NewsML, Atom, RSS are the ones that immediately come to mind, but others,
like Open Office XML or the competing MS standard could also be created).
There have been some steps taken in this regard, but it may be worth
checking out, especially if you still haven't migrated all your data over.
Some development work would have to be done, of course, but it may be
easier for you in the short term _and_ get us one of the bigger items on
our current 'wish list.'
I figured I'd at least try to open this as a topic of discussion, both to
get your opinion on it as well as to hear if others have done any work in
this direction.
doug
=============================================
Media Development Loan Fund
=============================================
Douglas Arellanes
Head of Research and Development
Center for Advanced Media--Prague (CAMP)
Salvatorska 10, 110 00 Praha 1
Czech Republic
Tel: + 420 224 312 832, Fax: +420 224 315 419
Mobile: +420 724 073 364
Skype and Yahoo IM: dougiegyro http://www.campware.org http://www.mdlf.org
============================================= http://www.mdlf.org
=============================================
some client is using an webspace provider, and cannot setup apache
configuration, except per .htaccess file. Overwriting Options in .htaccess
was disabled, so I had to create an rewrite rule for admin access.
In my opinion, we could go for .htaccess and rid of the Options line in
vhost config file. There was already an htaccess file (filename without the
starting point), I don't know hat is was planned to use for.
I just added 2 lines, so the file now looks like the attchaed one.
Also we could go with booth, options in vhost config, and the rewrite rules
in .htaccess.
BTW, I found that direct access to /admin-files/some_dir/some_script is
possible. Even nothing will work there, shouldn't we better block it, or
redirect to /admin?
On Tue, Oct 21, 2008 at 1:53 AM, Sebastian Goebel wrote:
> BTW, I found that direct access to /admin-files/some_dir/some_script is
> possible. Even nothing will work there, shouldn't we better block it, or
> redirect to /admin?
>
> Sebastian
>
>