# Welcome to Smeagol! Smeagol is a simple Wiki engine inspired by [Gollum](https://github.com/gollum/gollum/wiki). Gollum is a Wiki engine written in Ruby, which uses a number of simple text formats including [Markdown](http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/), which uses [Git](http://git-scm.com/) to provide versioning and backup. I needed a new Wiki for a project and thought Gollum would be ideal - but unfortunately it doesn't provide user authentication, which I needed, and it was simpler for me to reimplement the bits I did need in Clojure than to modify Gollum. So at this stage Smeagol is a Wiki engine written in Clojure which uses Markdown as its text format, which does have user authentication, and which uses Git as its versioning and backup system. ## Markup syntax Smeagol uses the Markdown format as provided by [markdown-clj](https://github.com/yogthos/markdown-clj), with the addition that anything enclosed in double square brackets, \[\[like this\]\], will be treated as a link into the wiki. ## Security and authentication Currently security is very weak. There is currently a file called *passwd* in the *resources/public* directory, which contains a clojure map of which maps username to maps with plain-text passwords and emails thus: {:admin {:password "admin" :email "admin@localhost"} :adam {:password "secret" :email "adam@localhost"}} that is to say, the username is a keyword and the corresponding password is a string. Obviously, this is a temporary solution while in development which I will fix later. ## Todo * Image (and other media) upload; * Improved editor. The editor is at present very primitive - right back from the beginnings of the Web. It would be nice to have a rich embedded editor like [Hallo](https://github.com/bergie/hallo) or [Aloha](http://aloha-editor.org/Content.Node/index.html) but I havenven't (yet) had time to integrate them! * Improved security. Having the passwords in plain text rather than encrypted is just basically poor; having the passwd file in *public* space is also poor (although I believe it cannot be accessed via HTTP). Essentially, authentication mechanisms should be pluggable, and at present they aren't; * Mechanism to add users through the user interface; * Mechanism to change passwords through the user interface; ## License Copyright © 2014 Simon Brooke. Licensed under the GNU General Public License, version 2.0 or (at your option) any later version. ## Editing the framing content You can edit the [[\_left-bar]], the [[\_edit-left-bar]], and the [[\_header]].