SilverStripe

SilverStripe
SilverStripe logo, one on white and another on dark background
SilverStripe administrator interface version 3.1
The SilverStripe administration panel
Developer(s) SilverStripe
Stable release 3.2.0[1] / October 12, 2015 (2015-10-12)
Operating system Cross-platform
Type Content management system
License BSD License
Website http://silverstripe.org/

SilverStripe is a free and open source Content Management System (CMS) and Framework for creating and maintaining websites and web applications. It provides an out of the box web-based administration panel that enables users to make modifications to parts of the website, which includes a WYSIWYG website editor. The core of the software is SilverStripe Framework, a PHP Web application framework.

SilverStripe is released under the terms of the BSD License.

Software design

SilverStripe separates the roles of content authors (who get a rich (AJAX) web-based user interface that omits technical jargon) and website designers/developers (who write code: HTML, CSS, JavaScript, and PHP). This provides a contrast to CMS products that allow technical website development tasks to be performed within a GUI, and a contrast to programming frameworks that offer no out of the box content authoring application. The SilverStripe approach is stated to remove complexity for content authors, and offer more flexibility to developers.[2]

The core of SilverStripe is named SilverStripe Framework. As with the rest of the platform, it is written in PHP (5.3), and takes advantage of its object-oriented design capabilities such as name-spacing. Sapphire provides website developers a framework to build and extend websites based on modern programming techniques including the model-view-controller (MVC like, the model doesn't include the ability to notify the view of updates) pattern and object-relational mapper.

SilverStripe generates markup using a custom template language based on W3C HTML5 that offers simple placeholders and conditional logic. SilverStripe is extensible through modules, widgets, themes and code customization.

Features

SilverStripe 3.1 Administration Panel and Simple theme
Default website theme in SilverStripe 2.3

Notable features of the SilverStripe CMS include:

Notable features of upcoming releases of SilverStripe include:

Common CMS features not currently available in SilverStripe include:

Modules, widgets, and themes

Modules extend the core functionality of SilverStripe. Some existing modules include: Blog, Advanced Workflow Management, eCommerce, Forum, LDAP/OpenID authentication. Modules are available from the SilverStripe modules repository, which as of January 2016, lists over 1400 modules.

SilverStripe Widgets are small pieces of functionality that can be drag-and-dropped into SilverStripe modules (notably the blog module). Examples of widgets include: tag clouds, Flickr photos, or word of the day, although widgets are a relatively less-used aspect of the platform. As of August 2012, there are 96 widgets.

The SilverStripe themes directory provides a number of community-contributed, freely available themes (84 as of August 2012).

Modules, widgets, and themes are all available as free downloads under the BSD license, and the majority of them are community contributed.

Software requirements

SilverStripe is a web application, requiring a compatible web server and SQL database. As of version 3.1., the requirements for SilverStripe are as follows:[3]

Documentation

SilverStripe is released under the terms of the BSD License. Documentation is available for CMS users and website developers. An online demonstration of the CMS is available as a video and as an interactive demo. Two technical reference books on SilverStripe are available in English[4] and one in German.[5]

History

The SilverStripe software is developed by SilverStripe Limited, a website development company founded in 2000.

Prior to SilverStripe 2.x, the CMS was commercially available under a proprietary license. Development of SilverStripe 2.X started in late 2005, as a complete overhaul to take advantage of object orientation and new features in PHP5.

SilverStripe was one of Creative HQ’s (a business incubator) first residents and graduated in 2006.[6]

On 3 February 2007, SilverStripe 2.0.0 was released publicly as free and open source software.[7]

In March 2007, SilverStripe was selected for the Google Summer of Code program.[8] This program resulted in the 2.2 release of SilverStripe.[9]

On 29 November 2007, SilverStripe announced they would be participating in the Google Highly Open Participation Contest.[10] This led to a proliferation of themes, translations and widgets that broadened the system.

In late 2008, SilverStripe split its main website into silverstripe.com, to act as the home for the company behind the software, and silverstripe.org, to act as the home for the software and its open source community.[11]

In May 2009, the SilverStripe company formed partner associations with other website development companies to represent the company in foreign markets.[12]

In February 2010, SilverStripe claimed the software had been downloaded 250,000 times since first released.[13]

In November 2010, Microsoft blogged that SilverStripe CMS became the world's first open source web application to attain its 'Certified for Windows' status.[14]

In June 2012, SilverStripe 3.0 CMS was released, containing significant usability and developer API changes; SilverStripe Framework was released for the first time as a stand-alone framework.[15]

In October 2013, SilverStripe 3.1 CMS was released, with more visual feedback and easier preview, composer support, YAML configuration and an improved UploadField[16]

Recognition

Awards

Reviews and articles

Version 3.0 (latest as of November 2012)

Version 2

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, February 10, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.