Difference between revisions of "Non-root proxy"

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(Create the basic repository)
(Mod-Perl)
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NOTE: To install under Debian/Ubuntu, you will need the <code>libperl-dev</code> package installed
  
 
NOTE: Notice that there is a PREFIX defined, which matches the prefix in the CPAN configuration; that we are stating we want mod-perl as a DSO; the full path to the previously installed Apache "apxs" command; and that the configure parameters to be passed to the apache rebuild include enabling mod-perl
 
NOTE: Notice that there is a PREFIX defined, which matches the prefix in the CPAN configuration; that we are stating we want mod-perl as a DSO; the full path to the previously installed Apache "apxs" command; and that the configure parameters to be passed to the apache rebuild include enabling mod-perl

Revision as of 14:41, 21 October 2013

Task

To build Apache 2 & mod_perl 2 for ePrints 3, installed as a standard user, with no superuser-like access to core services (including Perl and mySQL). The ePrints server will run as a normal user, and be accessed through a central proxy

Webserver proxy.png

We will build the web server on a private computer called services.example.com, running on port 1234; and the public access will be eprints.example.com, on port 80

Preparation

As we are installing software as a normal user (I'll use MyUser in this example), we are not adding any additional Perl modules centrally, but into a local tree. Cleverly, the Perl people have thought of this, and simply by running the cpan command for the first time will configure the whole thing for you!


%> cpan

When asked how you are installing Perl modules, the answer is localLib

Now we can start installing software.

Apache

Install a base Apache (previously downloaded into ~/distributions):


%> cd ~/distributions/
%> tar xvf httpd-2.2.x.tar
%> cd httpd_2.2.x

If you are returning to an existing source-tree, rather than a brand new untar'd bundle, clear any previous setup:


%> make distclean

Now configure and install an initial Apache server:


%> ./configure --prefix=/home/MyUser/www --disable-userdir --disable-status
%> make
%> make install

Edit http.conf (essentially, the port the server is listening on) and start the web server. Check the error log:


%> cat ~/www/logs/error_log
[...] Apache/2.2.x (Unix) Configured -- resuming normal operations

Mod-Perl

Stop web server and install the Mod-Perl extensions (previously downloaded into ~/distributions):


%> cd ~/distributions/
%> tar xvf mod_perl-2.0-current.tar
%> cd mod_perl-2.0.x

If you are returning to an existing source-tree, rather than a brand new untar'd bundle, clear any previous setup:


%> make clean 

Now configure and install mod-perl into the Apache tree, and (re)install Apache. In this example, I am specifying a version of Perl to use:


%> /path/to/specific/perl Makefile.PL PREFIX="/home/MyUser/perl5" MP_USE_DSO=1 \
   MP_APXS="/home/MyUser/www/bin/apxs" \
   MP_AP_CONFIGURE="--prefix=/home/MyUser/www --disable-userdir \
   --disable-status --enable-module=mod-perl"
%> make
%> make install

NOTE: To install under Debian/Ubuntu, you will need the libperl-dev package installed

NOTE: Notice that there is a PREFIX defined, which matches the prefix in the CPAN configuration; that we are stating we want mod-perl as a DSO; the full path to the previously installed Apache "apxs" command; and that the configure parameters to be passed to the apache rebuild include enabling mod-perl

Editing the new apache config file

We need to enable the mod-perl module, which I do using one of the Includes:

  • In ~/www/conf/httpd.conf, add:

# Mod-Perl
Include conf/extra/httpd-perl.conf

  • Create ~/www/conf/extra/httpd-perl.conf:

#
# Load the Mod_perl DSO.
#
LoadModule perl_module modules/mod_perl.so
PerlSwitches -I/home/MyUser/perl5/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.x.y/sun4-solaris/ \
             -I/home/MyUser/perl5/lib/perl5/5.x.y/sun4-solaris \
             -I/home/MyUser/perl5/lib/perl5/5.x.y \
             -I/home/MyUser/perl5/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.x.y/sun4-solaris \
             -I/home/MyUser/perl5/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.x.y \
             -I/home/MyUser/perl5/lib/perl5/site_perl

  • NOTE: the "PerlSwitches" line tells the Apache server where to look for extra libraries, and matches the PERL5LIB environment variable set earlier.

Start the web server. Check the error log:


%> cat ~/www/logs/error_log
[...] Apache/2.2.x (Unix) Configured -- resuming normal operations
[...] caught SIGTERM, shutting down
[...] Apache/2.2.x (Unix) mod_perl/2.0.x Perl/v5.x.y configured -- resuming normal operations

Stop the web server again.


ePrints

Before you can install ePrints, you need to check the Package requirements. CGI.pm builds against the installed Mod-Perl modules, so may well be wrong. You may need to install your own version.

eg:


%> /path/to/specific/perl -MCPAN -e shell
[snip]
cpan> install CGI
[...]
cpan> quit

Now we can install the ePrints software (previously downloaded into ~/distributions):


%> cd ~/distributions/
%> tar xvf eprints-3.zzz.tar
%> cd eprints-3.zzz./

There is no option to clean a previously configured eprints tree, so keep going..


%> ./configure --prefix=/home/MyUser/ePrints --with-perl=/path/to/specific/perl --with-user=MyUser \
    --with-group=MyUserGroup -with-toolpath=/path/to/tools --disable-diskfree \
    --with-smtp-server=your.mail.server

Note: the same version of perl is being defined again, and the /path/to/tools is a directory to find various external tools (tar, wget, (g)unzip, pdftotext, lynx, etc)

... and install:


%> ./install.pl

As we do not have root access to the MySQL database, you will need to get the database administrator to add a user to provide access the MySQL database. Note: Assuming your user is not given GRANT ALL (its a big security risk) you will need CREATE TEMPORARY TABLES as well as CREATE privilages.

Create the basic repository

The trick here is to install a basic eprint repository to match the web server (installed above), and then alter the core configuration to reflect the proxy settings.


%> cd /home/MyUser/ePrints

We also know that the service is going to run as a local user, so the file and directory permissions need to be altered

These are all defined in the file perl_lib/EPrints/SystemSettings.pm:

$EPrints::SystemSettings::conf = {
                                       // snip //
                                    'file_perms' => 0640,
                                       // snip //
                                    'dir_perms' => 0775

In EPrints 3, all the configuration is done using the bin/epadmin.

  • Initial configuration

NOTE: EPrints assumes a MySql backend, and the configuration routines assume it. This means that you need to have the mysql libraries available to the perl routines during this process. You may setup a Postgres, Oracle, or "Cloud" storage system once the basic configuration is in place, but you need mysql to kick-start the process.

NOTE In my install, all the bin/ files are installed with /usr/bin/perl, not whatever's defined in the .configure statement - you may need to edit them!

The command to create the basic framework for a repository is:

bin/epadmin create
  • When asked Configure vital settings? [yes] ?, say "Yes" and fill in the details
    • Hostname? is the actual address of the web server created above, not the public address (we fix that later) - so services.example.com
    • Webserver Port [80] ? is the actual address of the web server created above, not the port for the web server (we fix that later) - so 1234
    • Archive Name [Test Repository] ? is the name that the EPrints.org system will use when it dynamically supplies the archive name (using the <epc:pin /> coding)
  • When asked Configure database? [yes] ?, say "Yes" and fill in the details
    • Database Name is the name of the database created for you by the database admin people
    • MySQL Host is the hostname for the server
    • MySQL Port MySQL Socket can probably be left blank, but check with the database admin people
    • Database User Database Password is as per agreed with the database admin people
  • Create database "Deposit" NO - you can't, as we don't have that level of access to the database.

Now we need to do the rest of the building-work manually:

When using a database that's not mysql, then you need to tell EPrints what driver to use.

  • Edit
     archives/<ARCHIVEID>/cfg/cfg.d/database.pl 
    and add
     $c->{dbdriver} = "xxxx"; 
    where xxx is the appropriate Perl DBD package (eg Pg for postgreSQL)
  • Create the database tables:
     bin/epadmin create_tables <ARCHIVEID> 
  • Create users (I suggest an admin user and a normal user):
     bin/epadmin create_user <ARCHIVEID> 
  • Build the subject tables:
     bin/import_subjects <ARCHIVEID> <path/to/subject/file>
    Either use lib/defaultcfg/subjects for the shipped Library Of Congress tree, or download a subject tree from files.eprints.org
  • Create the static web pages for a basic web site:
     bin/generate_static <ARCHIVEID> 
  • Create pages of abstracts:
     bin/generate_abstracts <ARCHIVEID> 
    (should do nothing, as there are no abstracts in the system)
  • Create the browse pages:
     bin/generate_views <ARCHIVEID> 

Configuring the repository:

EPrints has a global Apache configuration file, and then separate config files for each <ARCHIVEID> archive running under the web server

To be sure of the correct config files for your particular install (we are discovering that they seem to move around depending on version), do the following command:

 cd /home/MyUser/ePrints
 find ./ -name *.conf -print

Generate the apache configuration files.

 cd /home/MyUser/ePrints
 bin/generate_apacheconf 

Edit httpd.conf

  • Remove the document root and cgi-bin stuff from the httpd.conf file (the name and the <directory> section) - these are set on a per-repository basis
  • Include the generated apache.conf:

# EPrints
Include /home/MyUser/ePrints/cfg/apache.conf



EPrints produces absolute URLs for everything (http://web.host.name/), so we need to ensure that the repository uses the correct address. Edit archives/ARCHIVEID/cfg/cfg.d/10_core.pl

$c->{host} = 'eprints.example.com';
$c->{port} = '80';

Fix a bug-ette

There is a problem that has been found on a number of systems where the system goes into a loop of reporting

 [warn] (128)Network is unreachable: connect to listener on [::]:<PORTNO>

The solution is to alter the "Listen" directive to include an IP number. Either use the IP number for the host, or cheat:

  Listen: 0.0.0.0:<PORTNO>

Start web server. Check the error log:


%> cat ~/www/logs/error_log
[...] Apache/2.2.0 (Unix) Configured -- resuming normal operations
[...] caught SIGTERM, shutting down
[...] Apache/2.2.0 (Unix) mod_perl/2.0.2 Perl/v5.8.0 configured -- resuming normal operations
[...] [notice] caught SIGTERM, shutting down
EPrints archives loaded: <ARCHIVEID>
EPrints archives loaded: <ARCHIVEID>
[...] Apache/2.2.0 (Unix) mod_perl/2.0.2 Perl/v5.8.0 configured -- resuming normal operations

GLORY IN YOUR NEW EPRINTS SYSTEM!!!!

To modify the general layout of the page, edit ePrints/archives/<ARCHIVEID>/cfg/template-en.xml and then re-run .../bin/generate_static <ARCHIVEID>