Software and hardware

The software that originally ran Wikipedia was UseModWiki, written by Clifford Adams ("Phase I"). At first it required CamelCase for links; soon it was also possible to use the current linking method with double brackets. In January 2002, Wikipedia began running on a PHP wiki engine, which used an underlying MySQL database, added many features (and abolished the behaviour of CamelCase words automatically becoming links), and was specifically written for the Wikipedia project by Magnus Manske ("Phase II"). After a while, the site started to slow down to such an extent that editing became almost impossible. Several rounds of modifications to the software provided only temporary relief. Then Lee Daniel Crocker rewrote the software from scratch. The new version, a major improvement, has been running since July 2002. This "Phase III" software is now called MediaWiki, and is used by many other wiki projects. Brion Vibber has since taken the lead in fixing bugs and tuning the database for performance.
In late 2003, server outages began to seriously diminish the productivity of Wikipedia contributors. Many reported difficulty editing articles as a result of time-outs and severe slowness. This was due to congestion on the single server that was running all the Wikipedias at the time.
As of June 2004, the project runs on nine dedicated servers, located in Florida. This new configuration includes a single database server and four web servers, all running Redhat Linux. The web servers serve pages as requested, performing page rendering for all the Wikipedias. To increase speed further, rendered pages for anonymous users are cached in a filesystem until invalidated, allowing page rendering to be skipped entirely for most common page accesses. Cached requests are served by two Squid servers; the new servers are linked via two file system NFS servers (one primary and one backup — the primary NFS server is currently also the email server).
Sister projects
Wikipedia has the following sister projects:
- Wiktionary, a free dictionary project
- Wikibooks, a free textbook project
- Wikiquote, a free encyclopedia of quotations
- Wikisource, a repository of source texts in any language which are either in the public domain or are released under the GFDL
Downloading the database
Anyone who wishes to use Wikipedia's open content for something that cannot best be done on Wikipedia may at any time download a nearly-current version of the entire article database to use for any purpose, within the terms of the GFDL. [1]
A number of sites, such as "4reference.net" and "nationmaster" have used this to mirror or fork Wikipedia's content.
Awards and nominations
2004
External links
Related sites
Essays
Reviews, endorsements, and discussion of Wikipedia
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