GovCMS is an open-source Drupal distribution developed specifically for Australian government agencies. It is built on top of the Drupal content management system, providing a range of features and functionalities that are tailored to the unique needs of government websites.
Key features of GovCMS include:
- Accessibility compliance: GovCMS is designed to comply with the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1 Level AA, making it easier for government agencies to ensure that their websites are accessible to all users.
- Content moderation: GovCMS includes a range of content moderation workflows, making it easy for government agencies to manage content and ensure that only approved content is published on their websites.
- Security: GovCMS is built with security in mind, with regular security updates and patches provided by the Drupal and GovCMS Ops team.
GovCMS Slack channel:
https://govcmschat.slack.com/archives/C01BD9B3V5W
To get started with GovCMS, you need to have the following prerequisites:
- A web server like Apache or Nginx
- PHP version 8.3 or above
- MySQL or PostgresSQL database
More documents can be found in:
If you're encountering some oddities, here's a list of resolutions to some of the problems you may be experiencing.
All contributions to GovCMS are welcome. Issues and pull requests may be submitted against the relevant GovCMS project on github where they will be addressed by the GovCMS team.
Because GovCMS is a Drupal distribution, modules and configurations are not added directly to the codebase. Rather, they are referenced within the composer.json file.
Any alterations to Drupal core or contributed modules must have an associated drupal.org issue filed against the project in question. Modifications should be made directly to the project in question and patched into GovCMS rather than made directly against GovCMS.
It is a requirement for any patches to GovCMS to pass all automated testing prior to manual review. The automated testing checks for PHP syntax, coding standards, build completion and runs behavioural tests. It is also desirable that additions to the codebase add behat tests to ensure no regressions occur once committed.
To submit a patch, the GovCMS project should be forked and changes applied to a branch on the forked repository. Once all changes are applied, a pull request between GovCMS and the branch of the fork may be created.
GovCMS is released under the GNU General Public License v2.0. See the LICENSE file in the root of the repository for more information.