CMSimple

Not to be confused with CMS Made Simple.
CMSimple
Developer(s) Peter Harteg
Stable release 4.5.3[1] / May 14, 2015 (2015-05-14)
Operating system Cross-platform
Type Content Management System
License GPL
Website www.cmsimple.org
CMSimple Classic & LXH
Developer(s) Preben Bjorn Biermann Madsen / Peter Harteg
Stable release 0.3 / February 4, 2015 (2015-02-04)
Operating system Cross-platform
Type Content Management System
License GPL
Website CMSimple Classic & LXH at SourceForge

CMSimple is a free content management system. It aims to be simple, small and fast. As it is written in PHP it runs on Linux/Apache servers, or on Win32 with Apache or IIS. CMSimple is licensed under the terms of the GPL3.

CMSimple does not need a database as it writes page data directly to a HTML file on the web server. This simplifies installation and backups, and also makes CMSimple a low cost option on web hosts which charge extra for database access. Configuration files and language files are also saved in txt format. Like many Content Management Systems, CMSimple offers a wide variety of plug-ins, including many made by third parties.[2]

Structure

The look and feel of a CMSimple website is stored in a template file using HTML and css. This can be designed by the installer or selected from over 500 free templates available through CMSimple. Third-party designers can be commissioned to provide a unique template. All error messages and text strings are contained in a plain text file. These are available in many languages, and can be translated by the installer to match the users dialect or language. If support is needed, the installer can make necessary changes on the user's low-spec machine or remotely.[3]

A basic site, using a default template, can be uploaded to the server, configured and populated with pre-existing text within 20 minutes. Template customization takes more time, and requires knowledge of HTML and CSS.[2] Several hundred templates are available at no cost.

Licensing

On 31 December 2009, CMSimple was released under the GPL. Previously, commercial licences were sold. When a visible link to CMSimple was kept on the website, then CMSimple was free to use, and the Affero GPL licence applied; when the link was removed a licence needed to be purchased. A community of users provide support through a forum and wiki. About 2500 licences were purchased as of December 2008.

Support

It is supported by a web forum and the former Affero version by an archived web forum, with over 1000 participants. English is the principal language of communication but there are CMSimple communities in Denmark, Germany, France, Spain and Brazil. A book has been published in Danish, Byg et website, Britt Malka, ISBN 87-7843-711-3, and another one in Dutch CMSimple voor beginners, Emile Bastings, ISBN 978-90-815802-1-2.

Forks

There exist several forks of CMSimple. License to the name has passed to Gert Ebersbach who launched CMSimple 4 and the November 2013 released 4.3. An active internationally developed fork is CMSimple_XH, version 1.6.6 was released March 15, 2015. It is an HTML5 standards compliant version. CMSimple Classic version 3.54, is backwardly compatible and maintained by Preben Bjorn Biermann Madsen.[4]

References

  1. http://www.cmsimple.org/
  2. 1 2 Smith, Tim (30 April 2007), Build a dynamic website with the minimum of fuss and requirements, retrieved January 2008
  3. Byg et website, Britt Malka, ISBN 87-7843-711-3.
  4. CMSimple WIKI

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, January 25, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.