![nexus mods morrowind nexus mods morrowind](https://staticdelivery.nexusmods.com/images/100/790772-1514790025.png)
We’ve set up a status page at /status, thanks to UptimeRobot, to monitor all of our services and to get notified in case one of them goes down. It also allowed us to make use of aggressive caching which significantly improves its performances and makes it way less taxing resource-wise. Switching our old wiki to read-only allowed us to disable a ton of features. So we made our wiki read-only and available at and moved the content to GitLab’s wiki, reducing the maintenance cost of our MediaWiki.
![nexus mods morrowind nexus mods morrowind](https://staticdelivery.nexusmods.com/images/100/14997819-1516973287.png)
Now that OpenMW is slowly reaching feature parity with Morrowind’s original engine, most of the information on the wiki is no longer being updated.
#NEXUS MODS MORROWIND SOFTWARE#
We’ve long been using MediaWiki (the same wiki software used by Wikipedia itself!) to document everything, along with a plugin to bridge accounts between the forum and the wiki. Moreover, we stepped up our anti-spam game: the forum should be kept tidy now with less human intervention necessary, and we’re now reporting spammers to Stop Forum Spam. We also switched to MySQL for the search engine which reduces the database table and makes the search not only better but also faster. So not a lot has changed on this side except that we upgraded it to the latest available major version, granting us a minor performance boost and improved security. We’ve been using phpBB for the forums even before we had our blog, and it’s been working great. Any help to make this happen is more than welcome! Forum Our plan for the future is to move away from WordPress to take advantage of GitLab Pages to run a static website instead.
![nexus mods morrowind nexus mods morrowind](https://staticdelivery.nexusmods.com/images/110/14784219-1449787614.jpg)
On the backend side, we cleaned the database up by removing comments (which had been turned off years ago), post revisions, unnecessary users, and much more, reducing the size of our database by 60%.Īll those small changes lead to a significant improvement of loading times: from around 9 seconds to 1 second! Speaking of tracking: we also removed Google Analytics, which we weren’t using anyway. If you have a look at the sidebar, you’ll notice a handful of badges: GitHub, GitLab, Discord, matrix, Twitter, Reddit – all without a single line of JavaScript, as in, no tracking. Moreover, since more and more people are browsing the web via their phones, we are more than happy that vtastek took the time to make the blog responsive, so that it looks great on mobile as well!