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Fedora + Zikula = infrastructure of freedom FTW!

Today I was inspired to send the below email to fedora-docs-list; more details following the quoted email.

On Wed, Jul 15, 2009 at 10:07:24PM -0400, David Nalley wrote:
> Simon passed me (and I just put up) the fedora specific Zikula modules:
>
> To get the source:
> git clone git://git.fedorahosted.org/git/fedora-zikula.git
>
> Included here is:
> zikula-module-fedora-fasauth
> zikula-module-fedora-theme

F! T! W!

Not to be too cheery in the middle of the field of play, but I’d like
to pause to acknowledge the innovation happening in the middle of the
Docs Team.

We are right now creating a way that other teams can use to interact
with each other to accomplish web interface objectives.  Other Fedora
sub-projects can use the new logistics list[1] for cross-team
collaboration, and follow this model for seeking an appropriate
technical solution.  Who would have thought of the idea, “Let’s give
the technical solution to whichever free software team wants to come
make their solution happen within Fedora”?  Thanks, Toshio!

As many of us have experienced, if this were an engineering
documentation team inside of a company trying to get IT, web design,
and project management to move this quickly on a new front-facing CMS
solution … well, it would either be a start-up and not have the same
enterprise quality legs that we have in the Fedora Project, or it
wouldn’t happen this quickly and gracefully.

Great, great work …

– Karsten

[1] https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/logistics

In January of this year the Fedora Docs Team made a decision to use the CMS of whichever free software CMS project was willing to install and support (configure, maintain) directly in Fedora’s infrastructure for our high profile instance of their software.   Just seven months later and we are on target for a production usage in mid-August, just in time for Fedora 12 release cycle needs.

The intervening time included the Zikula team working with Fedora Web and Infrastructure to write new Fedora account system (FAS) and theme modules, package all of Zikula and needed modules for Fedora, and handle upstream coding and licensing issues that arose during the package review process.  In this regard, the Zikula team has been very engaged and really made themselves part of the Fedora community.  The community partnership is very fruitful for both parties.  Fedora gains a great CMS, customized in a repeatable and scalable way, and a new Infrastructure team to manage it.  Zikula is over the hump for packaging in Fedora, which helps their ability to reach new audiences of users, developers, and customers; their software and experience is hopefully better for the interaction.  They should continue to gain in regard from Fedorans for how they have interacted with our contributor community.

The Fedora packaging process is especially important because Fedora Infrastructure and Fedora Documentation have the same goal as Fedora Linux:  it can be used to build itself from source contained wholly within itself; it can be deployed and used identically or derivatively save for the change in Fedora logos/themes by anyone, anywhere, anytime, for any reason (all four freedoms); all of the software used is in Fedora.  In fact, the latter is a requirement of the Infrastructure team.  I appreciate how their high standards help all of the rest of Fedora to achieve the same heights.

100% infrastructure of freedom.  Smells nice, don’t it?