Piwigo

Piwigo is photo gallery software for the web, built by an active community of users and developers. Freely available extensions make Piwigo easily customizable. It is notable as a system with many features.[1]

Piwigo
Piwigo screens
Developer(s)Pierrick Le Gall and the Piwigo Team
Stable release
2.10.1 / 14 October 2019
Repository
Written inPHP
Available inMultilingual 85 languages
TypeOnline Gallery
LicenseGPL
Websitepiwigo.org

Piwigo is a web-based system that is free and open-source, unlike Flickr or Picasa.[2] This approach is reinforced repeatedly.[3] It is licensed under the GPL. It is written in PHP and requires a MySQL database. It can be installed on your own server.[4]

Main features

Piwigo is designed to be fast, free, and flexible. It's frequently updated by a passionate community of developers and users who swear by it.[5]

Add photos
Photos can be added via a web form, with FTP client software, with digiKam,[6] Picasa, Shotwell, Lightroom,[7] iPhoto (Mac users), Aperture (Mac users) or mobile applications for iPhone/iPad, Android and Windows Phone
Multiple size
each photo is available in 9 sizes, from XXS to XXL, for improved compatibility with various screen resolutions (from smartphones to HDTVs)
Watermark
Piwigo can automatically add a watermark on all photos, to protect photos against unwanted copying.
Albums
Each image is bound to one or more albums. Albums are hierarchical and there is no limit in depth.
Tags
An administrator describes photos with tags, then visitors can browse photos by tags or multiple related tags, for example "night + Paris + John".
Calendar
Extracted from Exif metadata, Piwigo knows the date of each photo and is able to display photos for a given day, month or year.
Themes
The appearance of the photo gallery is defined by the theme. There are various themes provided by the project community.
Plugins
Plugins expand capabilities of Piwigo. Example of plugins: YouTube, Vimeo, Dailymotion, Google Maps or displaying photos in a Lightbox.
Access control
Access control is handled by the user manager, restricting and granting varying levels of access to photos and albums.
Notification system
Users can be alerted of changes and updates through RSS feeds, E-mail or sharing on social networks Twitter, Facebook or Google+.
Videos
With the use of freely available extensions, Piwigo may also be used to handle videos.[8]

Other features are listed on the features page of the Piwigo website.

Deployment

Piwigo can be deployed using various methods in a hosting environment. Users download the current version of Piwigo from Piwigo.org. Either they download the full archive and upload the source code to their hosting environment or they download the NetInstall (a single PHP file), upload it to their hosting environment and let it download the full archive automatically.

Piwigo is installable on GNU/Linux distributions such as Debian/Ubuntu via the APT packages system where Piwigo is available.

Many shared web hosting services also offer automated Piwigo installation through their control panel: For example, Piwigo is available in SimpleScripts and Softaculous.[9]

Hosting services such as Piwigo.com offer users an easy way to deploy a Piwigo gallery on-line without having to install Piwigo on their own web server.

History

Piwigo (originally named PhpWebGallery) was written by Pierrick Le Gall as a personal project in 2001. Inspired by the opensource web forum phpBB that he installed for his university website, he chose the GNU General Public License to distribute Piwigo and start a community around the project. The first version of Piwigo was released in April 2002.[10]

In 2002, Piwigo became multilingual. In 2004, a bugtracker was installed in order to enable co-operative working as a team. In 2005 an online extension manager made contributions easier to share. In 2006, themes made customization possible. In 2007 plugins were introduced to extend Piwigo features. In 2009 PhpWebGallery was renamed Piwigo and pLoader (Piwigo Uploader) made photo uploading easier for Windows, Mac and Linux users. In 2010, digiKam, Shotwell, Lightroom made it possible to upload photos to any Piwigo gallery, an enhanced web uploader was provided in Piwigo 2.1 and Piwigo.com was launched (dedicated hosting for Piwigo). As of 2013, there were 10 members in the Piwigo team, 100 translators, a website available in 12 languages and a thriving community. In June 2014 version 2.6.3 has been released.

gollark: This is in fact something HTML is capable of.
gollark: I mean, webapps are a thing which exists, but a lot of sites... aren't that, and just need to render some text and images.
gollark: (always)
gollark: Also, I have a perfectly good solution for much of the modern internet: just don't use JS and switch to plain CSS/HTML. You do not actually need it.
gollark: If I were designing it *from scratch*, I think I would mostly just put in an existing programming language (Lua!) with coherent design, design the APIs more coherently and asynchronously, fix the cross-origin security model from the start, that sort of thing.

See also

Notes and references

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