“Wikis turn knowledge sharing
into a team sport.” 1)
A wiki is a website where a group of people can easily add or update information right from their web browser. Over time, this creates a living, ever-growing collection of shared knowledge.
What makes a wiki unique?
The best-known wiki implementation is Wikipedia, built by volunteers who write and refine encyclopedia articles. But wikis are incredibly versatile, supporting everything from company documentation and collaborative collections to educational projects and beyond.
If an organization is planning to implement a wiki system, DokuWiki is a robust, open-source option backed by over 20 years of active development and a dedicated user community. It’s lightweight, easy to deploy, and well-suited for organizations of all sizes and many different use cases. eQTeam has been offering DokuWiki services as of 2009, and we have done various projects for many different organizations using this reliable and versatile tool.
On December 10, 2025, we consulted Google Gemini 3.0 to obtain an up-to-date list of the most popular wiki software. Using its Deep Think mode, it provided a well-reasoned and balanced response. Based on that input, we present the following overview 2).
Based on market share and user adoption in 2024/2025, here are the top wiki tools broken down by category.
1. The Corporate Standards (Enterprise)
| Product | Status |
|---|---|
| Confluence (by Atlassian) | The overwhelming market leader for corporate wikis. |
| SharePoint (by Microsoft) | The default choice for companies using Microsoft 365. |
| Notion | The modern challenger that has exploded in popularity. |
All 3 software require an expensive user license. Confluence and SharePoint are widely known and exist for many years now. The initial release of Notion was rather buggy. Stable Notion 2.0 appeared in March 2018.
2. The Open Source Leaders (Self-Hosted or via Hosting Provider)
| Product | Status |
|---|---|
| MediaWiki | The most famous wiki software in history (powers Wikipedia). |
| DokuWiki | The most popular “lightweight” wiki. |
| Wiki.js | The modern open-source favorite. |
All these 3 are open-source and free. MediaWiki is well known as it was developped specifically for WikiPedia in 2001 3). DokuWiki has been around since 2004 and evolved at a steady pace. The qualification “lightweight” refers to technical requirements and resources, not to functionality. The initial release of Wiki.js was on 12 September 2016, is primarily meant for developers, and is technically way more complex than the other two.
One remark that was mentioned by Google Gemini in its answer was that both MediaWiki and DokuWiki look dated when using their standard layout template or theme. For both these wiki tools, additional modern layout versions exist.
The complete Google Gemini 3.0 Deep Think answer is shown here.
DokuWiki is the smart, no-nonsense choice for a knowledge base, documentation system, or collection management system. Lightweight, user-friendly, and open source. Perfect for teams that want to work agilely without getting stuck in closed formats or scattered files.
DokuWiki features
Who is DokuWiki ideal for?
For product teams, support departments, libraries, knowledge managers, and small to medium-sized organizations that want to collaborate without complex management layers. No heavy infrastructure, but maximum control and flexibility.
In the Netherlands, we are the number one specialist in DokuWiki based solutions. If you would like to know more about DokuWiki and the services that we supply, please submit our contact form and we will respond within 24 hours.
For other questions or remarks, please click here and use this form.
The wiki name comes from the Hawaiian language and means quick. Its inventor, Ward Cunningham, was inspired when he stepped on the Wiki Wiki bus. In the Hawaiian language the word “wiki” means quick, and “wiki wiki” implies very quick.
The Wiki Wiki Shuttle is a fare-free shuttle bus system at the Honolulu International Airport. The shuttle's name inspired Cunningham to call his new website “WikiWikiWeb”. It was designed to allow visitors to the site to edit its content and do it quick. This type of website came to be known as a “wiki,” a prominent example of which is Wikipedia 4).
A wiki is a collaborative knowledge platform designed to make creating, organizing, and maintaining information easy for a group of people. While different wiki systems vary in features and complexity, most wikis share a common set of characteristics:
Together, these characteristics make wikis especially well suited for documentation, internal knowledge sharing, project notes, and community-driven information.
Many people have heard of MediaWiki, the software that powers Wikipedia. MediaWiki is famous, powerful, and capable of running the world's largest encyclopedia.
Think of DokuWiki as the MediaWiki's clever “little brother”. They share the same DNA: they store information in pages both using simple text codes for formatting, they both link information together easily, and they are both open source (written in Php). However, while the big brother MediaWiki is heavy and requires complex server management to handle millions of users, little brother DokuWiki is lightweight, agile, and easy to handle. It packs many of the same great features like revision history and collaborative editing, but in a package that is much easier for a normal team to install and use.
Wikipedia proved that a seemingly impossible problem could be solved: building a massive, reliable library using only volunteers. And it grew into an extremely successful source of knowledge.
It relies on a few key factors:
| Crowdsourcing vs. Experts | Traditional encyclopedias used a few hundred experts. Wikipedia uses millions of volunteers. This allows it to scale infinitely and update within minutes of world events, offering a depth no paid team could match. |
| Strict Governance, Not Anarchy | It is not a free-for-all. Strict policies like Neutral Point of View and Required Citations ensure facts are backed by sources, not opinions. |
| Self-Healing Accuracy | Because so many people read it, errors are spotted immediately. This concept is known as Given enough eyeballs, all bugs are shallow 5). Vandalism is usually fixed in seconds by the community or bots. |
| Trust and Reach | As a non-profit with no ads, it avoids corporate bias, earning reader trust. Furthermore, its text-heavy structure makes it perfectly optimized for search engines like Google, ensuring it is nearly always the first result you see. |
Just like many of our customers' websites, this one is built with DokuWiki as well. Apart from its core functionality, much is added through some great plugins. The layout is based on the Readthedokus template which was extended and improved by us.
| Plugin | Function |
|---|---|
| Add New Page | Adds a “new page form” to any wiki page. |
| Backlinks | Displays backlinks to a given page. |
| Blockquote | Write quotations in a semantically correct way |
| Blog | Use DokuWiki as blogging tool. |
| Bootstrap | Bootstrap Wrapper for DokuWiki |
| Bureaucracy | Create forms and generate pages or emails from them |
| Changes | List the most recent changes of the wiki |
| Cloud | Displays the most used words in a word cloud. |
| Comment | Add comments/notes to your wiki source that won't be shown on the page. |
| DataTables | Add DataTables support to DokuWiki |
| Diagrams | Embed diagrams.net editor (formerly draw.io) |
| Discussion | Provides discussion funtionality for wiki pages |
| Dw2Pdf | DokuWiki to PDF converter |
| Filelisting | List files in currently viewed namespaces |
| Folded | Foldable page sections |
| Gallery | Creates a gallery of images from a namespace or RSS/ATOM feed |
| Htmlok | Allows embed HTML and PHP |
| Icons | Embed icons in Dokuwiki |
| Imagebox | Syntax for display an image with a caption, like Wikipedia.org |
| include | Functions to include another page in a wiki page |
| Indexmenu | Show a customizable and sortable index for a namespace |
| Info | Displays information about various DokuWiki internals |
| Mermaid | JavaScript based diagramming and charting tool that renders Markdown-inspired text definitions to create and modify diagrams dynamically. |
| Navigation | Build a navigation menu from a list |
| Nspages | Presents a toc of the selected namespace using <nspages> |
| OpenLayers map | Provides a syntax for rendering OpenLayers based maps in wiki pages. |
| Orphanswanted | Display Orphans, Wanteds and Valid link tables |
| Pagebreak | Inserts <br style="page-break-after:always;"> into the html of the document for every it encounters |
| Pagelist | Lists pages in a nice formatted way |
| Page Navigation | Displays links to the next or previous alphabetically ordered page |
| PDF.js | Show pdf files using PDF.js |
| PHP Wikify | Allows one the possibility of having output of PHP scripts parsed |
| PopUpViewer | Takes a Page to be diplayed in an overlay pop-out |
| Randompage2 | Select dokuwiki page at random using special link |
| Slider | Add a slider element to any DokuWiki page |
| Snippets | Provides toolbar button+popup for template insertion; can track and insert sinppet updates |
| Tabbox | Insert a tabbed box in a page |
| Table Width | Allows to specify width of table columns. |
| Tag | tag wiki pages |
| Top | show the top ten most visited pages |
| Translation | Supports the easy setup of a multi-language wiki. |
| Video Sharing Site | Easily embed videos from various Video Sharing sites. Example: {{youtube>XXXXXX}} |
| Wrap | Universal plugin which combines functionalities of many other s. Wrap wiki text inside containers (divs or spans) and give them a class (choose from a variety of preset classes), a width and/or a language with its associated text direction. |