MonoCMS is a web content management system, just like wordpress, blogger, joomla, etc.
The difference of Mónocms to the above is that it belongs to the category of non database databases. Data processing is done with PHP and stored in XML.
So it uses the server's file system to store data, which makes it extremely simple, small in size and very fast.
Its capabilities may seem less, but its speed and ease of use will soon make you feel that it is a very powerful tool το οποίο οι χρήστες μπορούν να αξιοποιήσουν για να δημιουργήσουν και να συντηρήσουν την ιστοσελίδα or their blog.
MonoCMS in Greek…
MonoCMS is made by a Greek web developer who lives in Athens (Panagiotis or Pano z), so at the same time with English he acquired his Greek version.
The first syllable of the system name itself derives from the Greek word "only".
Today, as announced by Panayotis (developer of the project), the new 2.3 version was released.
Monocms 2.3 changes
The version was #. The third number has been removed for the sake of simplicity.
- Brings a new ability to add themes along with a theme changer in the settings.
- The "Edit" page became "Editor".
The menu structure of this page uses 8 patterns, but they are now separated for different uses.
Minimum requirements
PHP> = 5.5 on an Apache server.
We tested Panos' MonoCMS and found it quite fast. THE platform it still needs work, and it looks like it can promise better performance and more security.
Promising
Positive we can mention her speed of the page, the minimal and responsive design, the temporary storage in the memory of the session during the recording of a new publication, but also the security measures that the Greek developer has taken to date. Let's mention its characteristic user blocking.
Of course a positive in itself is the involvement and creation of a fully functional CMS by a Greek coder… Hopefully others will follow, and why not get involved in the development and evolution of MonoCMS that we particularly liked.
Panayiotis, after our question, clarified that:
“The command I use for the encryption is password_hash(), which ALWAYS returns salt, whether we pass it as a parameter or not. I don't have my own function that gives me salt, because the command can write the salt by itself. So the codes are always salted.”
But let's look at a test we did on GTMetrix. As you will see below the page loads in 0.1 second, has a "weight" of 14 KB and currently only 2 requests. Note that PageSpeedScore is very easy to build by adding 2-3 lines of code to .htaccess.