WikipediaFS
Virtual filesystem
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
WikipediaFS is a virtual filesystem which allows users to view and edit the articles of any MediaWiki-based site as if they were real files on a local disk drive. This enables a user to edit articles directly with any text editor.[2] WikipediaFS is developed primarily by Mathieu Blondel on SourceForge.net.[3]
| WikipediaFS | |
|---|---|
| Developer | Mathieu Blondel |
| Initial release | 11 June 2006 |
| Stable release | 0.4
/ 2 August 2010 |
| Preview release | |
| Written in | Python |
| Operating system | Mac OS X, Linux, FreeBSD |
| Type | Filesystem |
| License | GNU GPL |
| Website | wikipediafs |
| Repository | |
WikipediaFS is implemented in Python and uses the FUSE kernel module. The file system works by lazily downloading and uploading article sourcetexts — only sending HTTP requests to the selected site when a file is accessed. (Reading a file corresponds to a GET HTTP request, writing to a POST HTTP request.)
Advantages
- Editing a long Wikipedia article can sometimes turn out to be painful and time-consuming due to web-forms limitations. Instead, when WikipediaFS is mounted on a directory, articles become like real files in that directory: it is thus possible to use a text-editor to edit files. Text-editors are generally more stable and less sluggish than browsers and have useful features such as spell checking and wiki syntax highlighting.
- It is possible to write programs or bots transparently as if they dealt with simple files because WikipediaFS takes care of the HTTP layer. For example, WikipediaFS could be used to perform a massive content migration from one MediaWiki site to another.
Disadvantages
- The project is no longer maintained as of 2007; the software has since been deprecated.
- It is difficult to go from-page-to-page; users must know the exact name of a page in order to edit it, as WikipediaFS has no local knowledge of what pages exist and which don't.