TWikiInstallationGuide 63 - 27 Mar 2005 - Main.TWikiContributor
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TWiki Installation Guide | |
< < | Installation instructions for the TWiki 01-Sep-2004 production release. | > > | Installation instructions for the TWiki 4.0 production release. | | | |
< < | If you are reading this on your own TWiki installation, please get the latest installation guide (TWiki:TWiki.TWikiInstallationGuide), as this often has important updates to resolve installation issues. | > > | TWiki should be fine with any web server and OS that meet the system requirements. The following installation instructions are written for experienced system administrators; please review the AdminSkillsAssumptions before you install TWiki. If you need help, ask a question in the TWiki:Support web or on TWiki:Codev.TWikiIRC (irc.freenode.net, channel #twiki) | | | |
< < | These installation steps are based on the Apache web server on Linux. TWiki runs on other web servers and Unix systems, and should be fine with any web server and OS that meet the system requirements. Official documentation for platforms other than Linux is somewhat limited, so please check the topics listed below, they include some important tips for HP-UX, Solaris, OS/390, and many other platforms.
| > > | Hint: TWiki:TWiki.InstallingTWiki on TWiki.org has supplemental documentation that help you install TWiki on different platforms, environments and web hosting sites. | | | |
< < | Standard Installation
Download the TWiki 01-Sep-2004 distribution in Unix ZIP format from http://TWiki.org/download.html. Please review the AdminSkillsAssumptions before you install TWiki.
Step 1: Create & Configure the Directories
NOTE: If you don't have access to your Web server configuration files - for example, if you're installing on an ISP-hosted account, or you don't have administrator privileges on your intranet server - use the alternative Step 1 instead.
- Create directory
/home/httpd/twiki and unzip the TWiki distribution into this directory.
- The
twiki/bin directory of TWiki must be set as a cgi-bin directory. Add /home/httpd/twiki/bin to file httpd.conf (typcially located in /etc/httpd/ ) with only ExecCGI option.
- The
twiki/pub directory of TWiki must be set so that it is visible as a URL. Add /home/httpd/twiki to file httpd.conf with normal access options (copy from /home/httpd/html ).
- Now add
ScriptAlias for /twiki/bin and Alias for /twiki to file httpd.conf . NOTE: The ScriptAlias must come before the Alias , otherwise, Apache will fail to correctly set up /twiki/bin/ , by treating it as just another subdirectory of the /twiki/ alias.
- The
twiki/data and twiki/templates directories should be set so that they are not visible as URLs. Add them to httpd.conf with deny from all .
Example httpd.conf entries:
ScriptAlias /twiki/bin/ "/home/httpd/twiki/bin/"
Alias /twiki/ "/home/httpd/twiki/"
<Directory "/home/httpd/twiki/bin">
Options +ExecCGI
SetHandler cgi-script
Allow from all
</Directory>
<Directory "/home/httpd/twiki/pub">
Options FollowSymLinks +Includes
AllowOverride None
Allow from all
</Directory>
<Directory "/home/httpd/twiki/data">
deny from all
</Directory>
<Directory "/home/httpd/twiki/templates">
deny from all
</Directory>
- Restart Apache by
service httpd restart (or as appropriate to your flavor of UNIX or Linux).
- Test that the
twiki/bin directory is CGI-enabled by trying visiting it in your browser:
- Enter the URL for the
bin directory, http://yourdomain.com/twiki/bin/
- Your settings are OK if you get a message like
"Forbidden. You don't have permission to access /twiki/bin/ on this server" .
- Settings are NOT correct if you get something like
"Index of /twiki/bin" - recheck your httpd.conf file.
Aletrnative Step 1: Create & Configure the Directories for Non-Root Accounts
To install TWiki on a system where you don't have Unix/Linux root (administrator) privileges, for example, on a hosted Web account or an intranet server administered by someone else:
- Download and unzip TWiki on your local PC
- Using the table below, create a directory structure on your host server
- Upload the TWiki files by FTP (transfer as text except for the image files in
pub )
TWiki dir: | What it is: | Where to copy: | Example: |
twiki | start-up pages | root TWiki dir | /home/smith/twiki/ |
twiki/bin | CGI bin | CGI-enabled dir | /home/smith/twiki/bin |
twiki/lib | library files | same level as twiki/bin | /home/smith/twiki/lib |
twiki/pub | public files | htdoc enabled dir | /home/smith/twiki/pub |
twiki/data | topic data | dir secure from public access | /home/smith/twiki/data |
twiki/templates | web templates | dir secure from public access | /home/smith/twiki/templates |
Note: Don't worry if you are not able to put the twiki/lib directory at the same level as the twiki/bin directory (e.g. because CGI bin directories can't be under your home directory and you don't have root access). You can create this directory elsewhere and configure the /twiki/bin/setlib.cfg file (done in Step 3)
Step 2: Set File Permissions
- Make sure Perl 5 and the Perl CGI library are installed on your system. The default location of Perl is
/usr/bin/perl . If it's elsewhere, change the path to Perl in the first line of each script in the twiki/bin directory, or create a symbolic link from /usr/bin/perl .
- IMPORTANT:
- On ISP-hosted accounts (and some intranet servers), Perl CGI scripts may require a
.cgi extension to run. Some systems need .pl , the regular Perl extension. Rename all twiki/bin scripts if necessary.
- Alternatively, you might try creating a file
twiki/bin/.htaccess that contains the single line SetHandler cgi-script , which tells Apache to treat all files in this directory as CGI scripts.
- Set the file permission of all Perl scripts in the
twiki/bin directory as executable to -rwxr-xr-x (755).
- To be able to edit the Perl scripts and
.tmpl files it is necessary to chown and chgrp -R twiki so all the files have the owner you want.
- This Guide assumes user
nobody ownership for all files manipulated by the CGI scripts (executed by the Web server), and user twiki for all other files. You can:
- replace
nobody with another user if your server executes scripts under a different name (ex: default for Debian is www-data ).
- HINT: Run the
testenv script from your browser: http://yourdomain.com/twiki/bin/testenv . It will show you the user name of the CGI scripts, a table listing all CGI environment variables, and a test of your twiki/lib/TWiki.cfg configuration file (you'll configure that in a minute).
- replace user
twiki with your own username
- Set permissions manually.
- Set the permission of all files below
twiki/data so that they are writable by user nobody . A simple way is to chmod them to -rw-rw-r-- (664) and to chown them to nobody .
- Set the permission of the
twiki/data directory and its subdirectories so that files in there are writable by user nobody . A simple way is to chmod them to drwxrwxr-x (775) and to chown them to nobody .
- Set the permission of the
twiki/pub directory and all its subdirectories so that files in there are writable by user nobody . A simple way is to chmod them to drwxrwxr-x (775) and to chown them to nobody .
- The
twiki/data/*/*.txt,v RCS repository files in the installation package are locked by user nobody . If your CGI scripts are not running as user nobody , it's not possible to check in files (you'll see that the revision number won't increase after saving a topic). In this case, you need to unlock all repository files (check the RCS man pages) and lock them with a different user, such as www-data , or delete them all - new files will be automatically created the first time each topic is edited. You have two options to change ownership of the RCS lock user:
- Run the
testenv script from your browser; in the Fix line you can relock all the rcs files (recommended)
- Alternatively, run this in your shell:
cd twiki/data find . -name ,v -exec perl -pi~ -e '$. <= 10 && s/nobody:/www-data:/ ' {} \; This will create ,v~ backup files which you should remove after verification: find . -name *,v~ -exec rm -f {} \;
Step 3: Edit the Configuration Files
- Edit the file
/twiki/bin/setlib.cfg
- Set
$twikiLibPath to the absolute file path of your /twiki/lib as seen by the web server.
- Attention: Do not leave it as a relative
"../lib" path or Plugins might fail to initialize properly
- You can also edit
$localPerlLibPath if you are not root and need to install additional CPAN modules, but can't update the main Perl installation files on the server. Just set this variable to the full pathname to your local lib directory, typically under your home directory.
- Attention: If you are running TWiki on Apache 2.0 on Unix you might experience cgi scripts to hang forever. This is a known Apache 2.0 bug. See details and woraround in the
setlib.cfg file.
- Edit the file
twiki/lib/TWiki.cfg , setting the variables to your needs.
- Set the file extension in the
$scriptSuffix variable to cgi or pl if required.
- RCS - revision control system to store revision of topics and attachments. You can use RCS executables or a version of RCS written in Perl, note that as the time of writing (Apr 2002) the Perl version has not been widely tested, so if you want to put up a live site the RCS executables are recommended.
- Set
$storeTopicImpl = "RcsWrap"; for the RCS executables and make sure RCS is installed. Set $rcsDir in twiki/lib/TWiki.cfg to match the location of your RCS binaries. You can check this by issuing the command rcs at the prompt, it should result in something like "rcs: no input file" .
- Check that you have GNU
diff , by typing diff -v - an error indicates you have a non-GNU diff, so install the GNU diffutils package and make sure that diff is on the PATH used by TWiki (see $safeEnvPath in the TWiki.cfg file).
- Set
$storeTopicImpl = "RcsLite"; for the Perl based RCS
- Security issue: Directories
twiki/data , twiki/templates and all their subdirectories should be set so that they are not visible through URLs. (Alternatively, move the directories to a place where they are not visible, and change the variables in twiki/lib/TWiki.cfg accordingly)
- Test your settings by running the
testenv script from your browser: http://yourdomain.com/twiki/bin/testenv . Check if your twiki/lib/TWiki.cfg configuration file settings are correct.
Step 4: Internationalisation Setup (Optional)
By default, TWiki is configured to support US ASCII letters (no accents) in WikiWords, and ISO-8859-1 (Western European) characters in page contents. If that's OK for you, skip this step.
If your Wiki will be used by non-English speakers, TWiki can be configured for Internationalisation ('I' followed by 18 letters, then 'N', or I18N). Specifically, TWiki will support suitable accented characters in WikiWords (as well as languages such as Japanese or Chinese in which WikiWords do not apply), and will support virtually any character set in the contents of pages. NOTE: TWiki does not currently support UTF-8, so you are advised not to use this - however, improved UTF-8 support is under development, see TWiki:Codev/ProposedUTF8SupportForI18N.
To configure internationalisation suppport:
- Edit the
TWiki.cfg file's Internationalisation section to set the $useLocale parameter to 1 . TWiki will now use the I18N? parameters set in the rest of this section.
- Type the Unix/Linux command
locale -a to find a suitable 'locale' for your use of TWiki. A locale that includes a dot followed by a character set is recommended, e.g. pl_PL.ISO-8859-2 for Poland. Consult your system administrator if you are not sure which locale to use.
- In
TWiki.cfg , set the $siteLocale parameter to your chosen locale, e.g. pl_PL.ISO-8859-2 for Poland.
- Check your setup using
testenv (download the latest testenv from TWiki:Support/SupportGuidelines if possible) - this provides some diagnostics for I18N? setup, and in particular checks that your locale can be used successfully.
- (For upgrade of TWiki I18N? sites only:) If you were using TWiki:Codev.TWikiRelease01Feb2003 support for I18N? , and are using Internet Explorer or Opera, you should re-configure your browser so that it sends URLs encoded with UTF-8 (supported since TWiki:Codev.TWikiRelease01Sep2004). If you are doing a new installation of TWiki, you can ignore this step - no browser reconfiguration is needed for TWiki Release 01-Sep-2004).
- Internet Explorer 5.0 or higher: in Tools | Options | Advanced, check 'always send URLs as UTF-8', then close all IE windows and restart IE.
- Opera 6.x or higher: in Preferences | Network | International Web Addresses, check 'encode all addresses with UTF-8'.
- NOTE: This does not mean that TWiki supports UTF-8 as a site character set.
- Try out your TWiki by creating pages in the Sandbox web that use international characters in WikiWords and checking that searching, WebIndex, Ref-By and other features are working OK.
Trouble with I18N? ?
If international characters in WikiWords do not seem to work, and you are on Perl 5.6 or higher, you may need to set the TWiki.cfg parameter $localeRegexes to 0 - this disables some features but enables TWiki to work even if your system has locales that do not work. Then, set the $upperNational and $lowerNational parameters to the valid upper and lower case accented letters for your locale.
- NOTE: You will need to do the above workaround for Windows based servers (whether using Cygwin or ActiveState Perl), since Perl locales are not working on Windows as of Feb 2004.
If international characters in WikiWords aren't working, and you are on Perl 5.005 with working locales, keep $useLocale set to 1 and set $localeRegexes to 0, then set $upperNational and $lowerNational - if testenv generates the lists of characters for you, your locales are working so there is no need to set $localeRegexes to 0 in this case. See the comments in TWiki.cfg for more information.
Step 5: Configure Site-Wide Email Preferences
- Edit the TWikiPreferences topic in the TWiki web (by pointing your browser to http://yourdomain.com/twiki/bin/view/TWiki/TWikiPreferences) to set the
WIKIWEBMASTER email address, and other email settings required for registration and WebChangesAlert to work:
-
WIKIWEBMASTER should be set to the email address of the TWiki administrator
-
SMTPMAILHOST is typically set on Windows or other non-Unix/Linux systems, where sendmail or similar is not available. When this is set and the Perl module Net::SMTP is installed, TWiki will connect to this SMTP server (e.g. mail.yourdomain.com ) to send email for user registration and WebChangesAlerts. If you do have a sendmail-type program, leave SMTPMAILHOST unset so that the external sendmail program is used instead (defined by $mailProgram in TWiki.cfg ).
-
SMTPSENDERHOST is optional, and set to the domain name sending the email (e.g. twiki.yourdomain.com ). For use where the SMTP server requires that you identify the TWiki server sending mail. If not set, Net::SMTP will guess it for you.
- You may want to set up other TWikiPreferences later on.
- To enable the WebChangesAlerts (email notifications) you need to read about cron in the topic TWikiSiteTools.
Step 6: Finish Up from Your Browser
- Point your Web browser at
http://yourdomain.com/twiki/bin/view and start TWiki-ing away!
- Or, point to
http://yourdomain.com/twiki/ to get the pre-TWiki index.html page, with a link to the view script. Customize this page if you want a public intro screen with a login link, instead of immediately calling up the .htaccess login dialog by going directly to view .
- Edit the WebPreferences topic in each web, if necessary: set individual
WEBCOPYRIGHT messages, and other preferences.
- Enable email notification of topic changes - TWikiSiteTools has more.
- Edit the WebNotify topic in all webs and add the users you want to notify.
- Add the TWiki:Main/PoweredByTWikiLogo to your Main.WebHome topic.
- You can add new
%VARIABLES% . Define site-level variables in the TWikiPreferences topic. See also: TWikiVariables.
That's it for the standard installation of TWiki. Read on for server-level customization options. | > > | Basic Installation | | | |
< < | Additional Server-Level Options
With your new TWiki installation up and running, you can manage most aspects of your site from the browser interface. Only a few functions require access to the server file system, via Telnet or FTP. You can make these server-level changes during installation, and at any time afterwards. | > > |
- Download the TWiki distribution from http://TWiki.org/download.html.
- Make a directory for the installation and unpack the distribution in it.
- Make sure the user that runs CGI scripts on your system can read and write all files in the distribution.
Detailed instructions on file permissions are beyond the scope of this guide, but in general:
- During installation and configuration, the CGI user needs to be able to read and write everything in the distribution,
- Once installation and configuration is complete, the CGI user needs write access to everything under the
data and pub directories and to lib/LocalSite.cfg . Everything else should be read-only.
- Everybody else should be denied access to everything, always.
- Make sure Perl 5 and the Perl CGI library are installed on your system.
The default location of Perl is /usr/bin/perl . If it's somewhere else, change the path to Perl in the first line of each script in the twiki/bin directory. Some systems require a special extension on perl scripts (e.g. .cgi or .pl ). If necessary, rename all files in twiki/bin (i.e. rename view to view.pl etc). If you do this, make sure you set the ScriptSuffix option in configure (Step 6).
- Create the file
/twiki/bin/LocalLib.cfg . There is a template for this file in /twiki/bin/LocalLib.cfg.txt . The file must contain a setting for $twikiLibPath , which must point to the absolute file path of your twiki/lib e.g. /home/httpd/twiki/lib . If you need to install additional CPAN modules, but can't update the main Perl installation files on the server, you can set $CPANBASE to point to your personal CPAN install. Don't forget that the webserver user has to be able to read those files as well.
- Configure the webserver so you can execute the
bin/configure script from your browser.
- Explicit instructions for doing this are beyond the scope of this document, though there is a lot of advice on TWiki.org covering different configurations of webserver. To help you out, there's an example Apache
httpd.conf file in twiki_httpd_conf.txt at the root of the package. This file also contains advice on securing your installation. There's also a script called tools/rewriteshebang.pl to help you in fixing up the shebang lines in your CGI scripts.
- Run the
configure script from your browser, and resolve any errors or warnings it tells you about.
You now have a basic, unauthenticated installation running. At this point you can just point your Web browser at http://yourdomain.com/twiki/bin/view and start TWiki-ing away! | | | |
< < | Enabling Authentication of Users
- If TWiki is installed on a non-authenticated server - not using SSL - and you'd like to authenticate users:
- Rename file
.htaccess.txt in the twiki/bin directory to .htaccess and change it to your needs. The comment at the top of the file explains what need to be done, basically replace !FILE_path_to_TWiki! and !URL_path_to_TWiki! with paths specific to your installation. For the details of how this file works, consult the HTTP server documentation (for Apache server: [1], [2]).
- NOTE: If you had to add a
.cgi or .pl file extension to the bin scripts, make sure to do the same for edit , view , preview , and all the other script names in .htaccess .
- The browser should ask for login name and password when you click on the Edit link. In case
.htaccess does not have the desired effect, you need to enable it: Add "AllowOverride All" to the Directory [3] section of access.conf for your twiki/bin directory.
- This applies only if you have root access: on hosted accounts, you shouldn't have this problem - otherwise, email tech support.
- NOTE: In the TWiki distribution package, the
twiki/data/.htpasswd.txt file contains several TWiki core team user accounts and a guest user account. You probably want to remove those accounts by deleting the entries in .htpasswd . Do not remove the guest user if you want to allow guest logins.
- TWiki now supports several Password file format/encoding methods for Apache. Once you know what method is used by your Appache server, you can configure TWiki to create compatible .htpasswd entries by editing the
$htpasswdFormatFamily , $htpasswdEncoding and $htpasswdFilename in the TWiki.cfg file. The supported options are htpasswd:plain, htpasswd:crypt, htpasswd:sha1, htdigest:md5
- Copy the TWikiRegistrationPub? topic to TWikiRegistration, overwriting old version of TWikiRegistration. Do that by either editing the topics in theTWiki web, or by renaming the
.txt and .txt,v files in the twiki/data/TWiki directory.
- Customization:
- You can customize the registration form by deleting or adding input tags. The
name="" parameter of the input tags must start with: "Twk0..." (if this is an optional entry), or "Twk1..." (if this is a required entry). This ensures that the fields are carried over into the user home page correctly.
- You can customize the default user home page in NewUserTemplate. The same variables get expanded as in the template topics
- Register yourself in the TWikiRegistration topic.
- NOTE: When a user registers, a new line with the username and encrypted password is added to the
data/.htpasswd file. The .htpasswd file that comes with the TWiki installation includes user accounts for TWiki core team members that are used for testing on TWiki.org. You can edit the file and delete those lines.
- Create a new topic to check if authentication works.
- Edit the TWikiAdminGroup topic in the TWiki:Main web to include users with system administrator status.
- Edit the TWikiPreferences topic in the TWiki:TWiki web to set access privileges.
- Edit the WebPreferences topic in each web, if necessary: set access priviliges.
WYSIWYG Editor
At this time, TWiki does not ship with an "what you see is what you get" editor. TWiki:Codev/IntegrateHtmlAreaEditor describes how to integrate an HTML editor.
NOTE: User home topics are located in the TWiki.Main web - don't try to move them or create them in other webs. From any other web, user signatures have to point to TWiki.Main web, using a Main.UserName or %MAINWEB%.UserName format. (The %MAINWEB% variable is an advantage if you ever change the Main web name, but the standard Main.UserName is easier for users to enter, which is the bottom line!)
TWiki File System Info
See Appendix A: TWiki File System? for an installed system snapshot and descriptions of all files in the TWiki 01-Sep-2004 distribution. | > > | Next Steps
Once you have your TWiki running, you can move on to customise it for your users.
Troubleshooting
- The first step is to re-run the
configure script and make sure you have resolved all errors, and are happy that you understand any warnings.
- TWiki:TWiki.InstallingTWiki on TWiki.org has supplemental documentation that help you install TWiki on different platforms, environments and web hosting sites.
- If you need help, ask a question in the TWiki:Support web or on TWiki:Codev.TWikiIRC (irc.freenode.net, channel #twiki)
| | | |
< < | -- TWiki:Main/PeterThoeny - 29 Aug 2004
-- TWiki:Main/MikeMannix - 16 May 2002 | | | |
< < |
META TOPICMOVED | by="MikeMannix" date="999319650" from="TWiki.TWikiInstallationNotes" to="TWiki.TWikiInstallationGuide" |
| > > | Related Topics: AdminDocumentationCategory, TWiki:TWiki.InstallingTWiki |
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TWikiInstallationGuide 62 - 31 Aug 2004 - Main.PeterThoeny
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|
TWiki Installation Guide | |
- Restart Apache by
service httpd restart (or as appropriate to your flavor of UNIX or Linux).
- Test that the
twiki/bin directory is CGI-enabled by trying visiting it in your browser:
| |
< < |
-
- Enter the URL for the
bin directory, http://yourdomain.com/twiki/bin/ .
| > > |
-
- Enter the URL for the
bin directory, http://yourdomain.com/twiki/bin/
| |
-
- Your settings are OK if you get a message like
"Forbidden. You don't have permission to access /twiki/bin/ on this server" .
- Settings are NOT correct if you get something like
"Index of /twiki/bin" - recheck your httpd.conf file.
| | At this time, TWiki does not ship with an "what you see is what you get" editor. TWiki:Codev/IntegrateHtmlAreaEditor describes how to integrate an HTML editor. | |
< < | NOTE: User home topics are located in the TWiki.Main web - don't try to move them or create them in other webs. From any other web, user signatures have to point to TWiki.Main web, using a Main.UserName or %MAINWEB%.UserName format. (The %MAINWEB% variable is an advantage if you ever change the Main web name, but the standard Main.UserName is easier for users to enter, which is the bottom line! | > > | NOTE: User home topics are located in the TWiki.Main web - don't try to move them or create them in other webs. From any other web, user signatures have to point to TWiki.Main web, using a Main.UserName or %MAINWEB%.UserName format. (The %MAINWEB% variable is an advantage if you ever change the Main web name, but the standard Main.UserName is easier for users to enter, which is the bottom line!) | | TWiki File System Info |
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TWikiInstallationGuide 61 - 29 Aug 2004 - Main.PeterThoeny
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|
TWiki Installation Guide | |
| |
< < | Step 1 for Non-Root Accounts | > > | Aletrnative Step 1: Create & Configure the Directories for Non-Root Accounts | | To install TWiki on a system where you don't have Unix/Linux root (administrator) privileges, for example, on a hosted Web account or an intranet server administered by someone else: | |
-
- Set the permission of the
twiki/data directory and its subdirectories so that files in there are writable by user nobody . A simple way is to chmod them to drwxrwxr-x (775) and to chown them to nobody .
- Set the permission of the
twiki/pub directory and all its subdirectories so that files in there are writable by user nobody . A simple way is to chmod them to drwxrwxr-x (775) and to chown them to nobody .
- The
twiki/data/*/*.txt,v RCS repository files in the installation package are locked by user nobody . If your CGI scripts are not running as user nobody , it's not possible to check in files (you'll see that the revision number won't increase after saving a topic). In this case, you need to unlock all repository files (check the RCS man pages) and lock them with a different user, such as www-data , or delete them all - new files will be automatically created the first time each topic is edited. You have two options to change ownership of the RCS lock user:
| |
< < |
-
-
- Run the
testenv script from your browser; in the Fix line you can relock all the rcs files
| > > |
-
-
- Run the
testenv script from your browser; in the Fix line you can relock all the rcs files (recommended)
| |
-
-
- Alternatively, run this in your shell:
cd twiki/data
| |
< < | find . -name *.v~ -exec perl -pi~ -e '$. <= 10 && s/nobody:/www-data:/ ' {} ; | > > | find . -name *,v -exec perl -pi~ -e '$. <= 10 && s/nobody:/www-data:/ ' {} \;
This will create *,v~ backup files which you should remove after verification:
find . -name *,v~ -exec rm -f {} \; | |
Step 3: Edit the Configuration Files | | Enabling Authentication of Users
- If TWiki is installed on a non-authenticated server - not using SSL - and you'd like to authenticate users:
| |
< < |
-
- Rename file
.htaccess.txt in the twiki/bin directory to .htaccess and change it to your needs. For details, consult the HTTP server documentation (for Apache server: [1], [2]). In particular, the following red part needs to be configured correctly: Redirect /urlpathto/twiki/index.html http://yourdomain.com/urlpathto/twiki/bin/view AuthUserFile /filepathto/twiki/data/.htpasswd ErrorDocument 401 /urlpathto/twiki/bin/oops/TWiki/TWikiRegistration?template=oopsauth
| > > |
-
- Rename file
.htaccess.txt in the twiki/bin directory to .htaccess and change it to your needs. The comment at the top of the file explains what need to be done, basically replace !FILE_path_to_TWiki! and !URL_path_to_TWiki! with paths specific to your installation. For the details of how this file works, consult the HTTP server documentation (for Apache server: [1], [2]).
| |
-
-
- NOTE: If you had to add a
.cgi or .pl file extension to the bin scripts, make sure to do the same for edit , view , preview , and all the other script names in .htaccess .
- The browser should ask for login name and password when you click on the Edit link. In case
.htaccess does not have the desired effect, you need to enable it: Add "AllowOverride All" to the Directory [3] section of access.conf for your twiki/bin directory.
- This applies only if you have root access: on hosted accounts, you shouldn't have this problem - otherwise, email tech support.
| | See Appendix A: TWiki File System? for an installed system snapshot and descriptions of all files in the TWiki 01-Sep-2004 distribution. | |
< < | -- TWiki:Main/PeterThoeny - 15 Aug 2004
| > > | -- TWiki:Main/PeterThoeny - 29 Aug 2004
| | -- TWiki:Main/MikeMannix - 16 May 2002 |
|
TWikiInstallationGuide 60 - 17 Aug 2004 - Main.PeterThoeny
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|
TWiki Installation Guide | | By default, TWiki is configured to support US ASCII letters (no accents) in WikiWords, and ISO-8859-1 (Western European) characters in page contents. If that's OK for you, skip this step. | |
< < | If your Wiki will be used by non-English speakers, TWiki can be configured for Internationalisation ('I' followed by 18 letters, then 'N', or I18N). Specifically, TWiki will support suitable accented characters in WikiWords (as well as languages such as Japanese or Chinese in which WikiWords do not apply), and to support virtually any character set in the contents of pages. NOTE: TWiki does not currently support UTF-8, so you are advised not to use this - however, improved UTF-8 support is under development. | > > | If your Wiki will be used by non-English speakers, TWiki can be configured for Internationalisation ('I' followed by 18 letters, then 'N', or I18N). Specifically, TWiki will support suitable accented characters in WikiWords (as well as languages such as Japanese or Chinese in which WikiWords do not apply), and will support virtually any character set in the contents of pages. NOTE: TWiki does not currently support UTF-8, so you are advised not to use this - however, improved UTF-8 support is under development, see TWiki:Codev/ProposedUTF8SupportForI18N. | | To configure internationalisation suppport:
- Edit the
TWiki.cfg file's Internationalisation section to set the $useLocale parameter to 1 . TWiki will now use the I18N? parameters set in the rest of this section.
- Type the Unix/Linux command
locale -a to find a suitable 'locale' for your use of TWiki. A locale that includes a dot followed by a character set is recommended, e.g. pl_PL.ISO-8859-2 for Poland. Consult your system administrator if you are not sure which locale to use.
- In
TWiki.cfg , set the $siteLocale parameter to your chosen locale, e.g. pl_PL.ISO-8859-2 for Poland.
- Check your setup using
testenv (download the latest testenv from TWiki:Support/SupportGuidelines if possible) - this provides some diagnostics for I18N? setup, and in particular checks that your locale can be used successfully.
| |
< < |
- If you are using Internet Explorer or Opera, configure your browser to not send URLs encoded with UTF-8
- Internet Explorer 5.0 or higher: in Tools | Options | Advanced, uncheck 'always send URLs as UTF-8', then close all IE windows and restart IE.
- Opera 6.x or higher: in Preferences | Network | International Web Addresses, uncheck 'encode all addresses with UTF-8'.
- NOTE: If this configuration change is not acceptable, consider installing a TWiki beta release (19 Jan 2004 or later), which fully supports UTF-8 URLs.
| > > |
- (For upgrade of TWiki I18N? sites only:) If you were using TWiki:Codev.TWikiRelease01Feb2003 support for I18N? , and are using Internet Explorer or Opera, you should re-configure your browser so that it sends URLs encoded with UTF-8 (supported since TWiki:Codev.TWikiRelease01Sep2004). If you are doing a new installation of TWiki, you can ignore this step - no browser reconfiguration is needed for TWiki Release 01-Sep-2004).
- Internet Explorer 5.0 or higher: in Tools | Options | Advanced, check 'always send URLs as UTF-8', then close all IE windows and restart IE.
- Opera 6.x or higher: in Preferences | Network | International Web Addresses, check 'encode all addresses with UTF-8'.
- NOTE: This does not mean that TWiki supports UTF-8 as a site character set.
| |
- Try out your TWiki by creating pages in the Sandbox web that use international characters in WikiWords and checking that searching, WebIndex, Ref-By and other features are working OK.
| |
> > | Trouble with I18N? ? | | If international characters in WikiWords do not seem to work, and you are on Perl 5.6 or higher, you may need to set the TWiki.cfg parameter $localeRegexes to 0 - this disables some features but enables TWiki to work even if your system has locales that do not work. Then, set the $upperNational and $lowerNational parameters to the valid upper and lower case accented letters for your locale. | |
< < |
- NOTE: You will need to do the above workaround for Windows based servers (whether using Cygwin or ActiveState Perl), since Perl locales are not working on Windows as of Feb 2004.
| > > |
- NOTE: You will need to do the above workaround for Windows based servers (whether using Cygwin or ActiveState Perl), since Perl locales are not working on Windows as of Feb 2004.
| | If international characters in WikiWords aren't working, and you are on Perl 5.005 with working locales, keep $useLocale set to 1 and set $localeRegexes to 0, then set $upperNational and $lowerNational - if testenv generates the lists of characters for you, your locales are working so there is no need to set $localeRegexes to 0 in this case. See the comments in TWiki.cfg for more information. |
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TWikiInstallationGuide 59 - 16 Aug 2004 - Main.PeterThoeny
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|
TWiki Installation Guide | |
< < | Installation instructions for the TWiki 01-Feb-2003 production release. | > > | Installation instructions for the TWiki 01-Sep-2004 production release. | | If you are reading this on your own TWiki installation, please get the latest installation guide (TWiki:TWiki.TWikiInstallationGuide), as this often has important updates to resolve installation issues. | | | |
< < | | > > | | |
Standard Installation | |
< < | Request and download the TWiki 01-Feb-2003 distribution in Unix ZIP format from http://TWiki.org/download.html. Please review the AdminSkillsAssumptions before you install TWiki. | > > | Download the TWiki 01-Sep-2004 distribution in Unix ZIP format from http://TWiki.org/download.html. Please review the AdminSkillsAssumptions before you install TWiki. | | Step 1: Create & Configure the Directories | | </Directory>
| |
< < |
- Restart Apache by
/etc/rc.d/rc5.d/S85httpd restart .
| > > |
- Restart Apache by
service httpd restart (or as appropriate to your flavor of UNIX or Linux).
| |
- Test that the
twiki/bin directory is CGI-enabled by trying visiting it in your browser:
- Enter the URL for the
bin directory, http://yourdomain.com/twiki/bin/ .
- Your settings are OK if you get a message like
"Forbidden. You don't have permission to access /twiki/bin/ on this server" .
| |
twiki/templates | web templates | dir secure from public access | /home/smith/twiki/templates |
| |
< < | If you are not able to create the twiki/lib directory at the same level as the twiki/bin directory (e.g. because CGI bin directories can't be under your home directory and you don't have root access), you can create this directory elsewhere and edit the setlib.cfg file in the bin directory:
# -------------- Change these settings if required
$twikiLibPath = '/some/other/path/lib'; # Path to lib directory containing TWiki.pm
You can also edit $localPerlLibPath in the setlib.cfg file if you are not root and need to install additional CPAN modules, but can't update the main Perl installation files on the server. Just set this variable to the full pathname to your local lib directory, typically under your home directory. | > > | Note: Don't worry if you are not able to put the twiki/lib directory at the same level as the twiki/bin directory (e.g. because CGI bin directories can't be under your home directory and you don't have root access). You can create this directory elsewhere and configure the /twiki/bin/setlib.cfg file (done in Step 3) | |
Step 2: Set File Permissions
- Make sure Perl 5 and the Perl CGI library are installed on your system. The default location of Perl is
/usr/bin/perl . If it's elsewhere, change the path to Perl in the first line of each script in the twiki/bin directory, or create a symbolic link from /usr/bin/perl .
| |
< < |
-
- IMPORTANT: On ISP-hosted accounts (and some intranet servers), Perl CGI scripts may require a
.cgi extension to run. Some systems need .pl , the regular Perl extension. Rename all twiki/bin scripts if necessary.
| > > |
-
- IMPORTANT:
- On ISP-hosted accounts (and some intranet servers), Perl CGI scripts may require a
.cgi extension to run. Some systems need .pl , the regular Perl extension. Rename all twiki/bin scripts if necessary.
- Alternatively, you might try creating a file
twiki/bin/.htaccess that contains the single line SetHandler cgi-script , which tells Apache to treat all files in this directory as CGI scripts.
| |
- Set the file permission of all Perl scripts in the
twiki/bin directory as executable to -rwxr-xr-x (755).
- To be able to edit the Perl scripts and
.tmpl files it is necessary to chown and chgrp -R twiki so all the files have the owner you want.
- This Guide assumes user
nobody ownership for all files manipulated by the CGI scripts (executed by the Web server), and user twiki for all other files. You can:
- replace
nobody with another user if your server executes scripts under a different name (ex: default for Debian is www-data ).
- HINT: Run the
testenv script from your browser: http://yourdomain.com/twiki/bin/testenv . It will show you the user name of the CGI scripts, a table listing all CGI environment variables, and a test of your twiki/lib/TWiki.cfg configuration file (you'll configure that in a minute).
- replace user
twiki with your own username
| |
< < |
- Set the permission of all files below
twiki/data so that they are writable by user nobody . A simple way is to chmod them to -rw-rw-r-- (664) and to chown them to nobody .
- Set the permission of the
twiki/data directory and its subdirectories so that files in there are writable by user nobody . A simple way is to chmod them to drwxrwxr-x (775) and to chown them to nobody .
| > > |
- Set permissions manually.
- Set the permission of all files below
twiki/data so that they are writable by user nobody . A simple way is to chmod them to -rw-rw-r-- (664) and to chown them to nobody .
- Set the permission of the
twiki/data directory and its subdirectories so that files in there are writable by user nobody . A simple way is to chmod them to drwxrwxr-x (775) and to chown them to nobody .
| |
- Set the permission of the
twiki/pub directory and all its subdirectories so that files in there are writable by user nobody . A simple way is to chmod them to drwxrwxr-x (775) and to chown them to nobody .
| |
< < |
- The
twiki/data/*/*.txt,v RCS repository files in the installation package are locked by user nobody . If your CGI scripts are not running as user nobody , it's not possible to check in files (you'll see that the revision number won't increase after saving a topic). In this case, you need to unlock all repository files (check the RCS man pages) and lock them with a different user, such as www-data , or delete them all - new files will be automatically created the first time each topic is edited. A simple way to change ownership is with a search-and-replace in all files; for example, using Perl (type this carefully!):
cd twiki/data
perl -pi~ -e 'NR <= 10 && s/nobody:/www-data:/ ' */*,v
| > > |
-
- The
twiki/data/*/*.txt,v RCS repository files in the installation package are locked by user nobody . If your CGI scripts are not running as user nobody , it's not possible to check in files (you'll see that the revision number won't increase after saving a topic). In this case, you need to unlock all repository files (check the RCS man pages) and lock them with a different user, such as www-data , or delete them all - new files will be automatically created the first time each topic is edited. You have two options to change ownership of the RCS lock user:
- Run the
testenv script from your browser; in the Fix line you can relock all the rcs files
- Alternatively, run this in your shell:
cd twiki/data find . -name *.v~ -exec perl -pi~ -e '$. <= 10 && s/nobody:/www-data:/ ' {} ;
| | | |
< < | Step 3: Set the Main Configuration File | | | |
> > | Step 3: Edit the Configuration Files
- Edit the file
/twiki/bin/setlib.cfg
- Set
$twikiLibPath to the absolute file path of your /twiki/lib as seen by the web server.
- Attention: Do not leave it as a relative
"../lib" path or Plugins might fail to initialize properly
- You can also edit
$localPerlLibPath if you are not root and need to install additional CPAN modules, but can't update the main Perl installation files on the server. Just set this variable to the full pathname to your local lib directory, typically under your home directory.
- Attention: If you are running TWiki on Apache 2.0 on Unix you might experience cgi scripts to hang forever. This is a known Apache 2.0 bug. See details and woraround in the
setlib.cfg file.
| |
- Edit the file
twiki/lib/TWiki.cfg , setting the variables to your needs.
- Set the file extension in the
$scriptSuffix variable to cgi or pl if required.
- RCS - revision control system to store revision of topics and attachments. You can use RCS executables or a version of RCS written in Perl, note that as the time of writing (Apr 2002) the Perl version has not been widely tested, so if you want to put up a live site the RCS executables are recommended.
| |
- Test your settings by running the
testenv script from your browser: http://yourdomain.com/twiki/bin/testenv . Check if your twiki/lib/TWiki.cfg configuration file settings are correct.
| |
< < | Step 4: Configure Site-Wide Email Preferences | > > | Step 4: Internationalisation Setup (Optional)
By default, TWiki is configured to support US ASCII letters (no accents) in WikiWords, and ISO-8859-1 (Western European) characters in page contents. If that's OK for you, skip this step.
If your Wiki will be used by non-English speakers, TWiki can be configured for Internationalisation ('I' followed by 18 letters, then 'N', or I18N). Specifically, TWiki will support suitable accented characters in WikiWords (as well as languages such as Japanese or Chinese in which WikiWords do not apply), and to support virtually any character set in the contents of pages. NOTE: TWiki does not currently support UTF-8, so you are advised not to use this - however, improved UTF-8 support is under development.
To configure internationalisation suppport:
- Edit the
TWiki.cfg file's Internationalisation section to set the $useLocale parameter to 1 . TWiki will now use the I18N? parameters set in the rest of this section.
- Type the Unix/Linux command
locale -a to find a suitable 'locale' for your use of TWiki. A locale that includes a dot followed by a character set is recommended, e.g. pl_PL.ISO-8859-2 for Poland. Consult your system administrator if you are not sure which locale to use.
- In
TWiki.cfg , set the $siteLocale parameter to your chosen locale, e.g. pl_PL.ISO-8859-2 for Poland.
- Check your setup using
testenv (download the latest testenv from TWiki:Support/SupportGuidelines if possible) - this provides some diagnostics for I18N? setup, and in particular checks that your locale can be used successfully.
- If you are using Internet Explorer or Opera, configure your browser to not send URLs encoded with UTF-8
- Internet Explorer 5.0 or higher: in Tools | Options | Advanced, uncheck 'always send URLs as UTF-8', then close all IE windows and restart IE.
- Opera 6.x or higher: in Preferences | Network | International Web Addresses, uncheck 'encode all addresses with UTF-8'.
- NOTE: If this configuration change is not acceptable, consider installing a TWiki beta release (19 Jan 2004 or later), which fully supports UTF-8 URLs.
- Try out your TWiki by creating pages in the Sandbox web that use international characters in WikiWords and checking that searching, WebIndex, Ref-By and other features are working OK.
If international characters in WikiWords do not seem to work, and you are on Perl 5.6 or higher, you may need to set the TWiki.cfg parameter $localeRegexes to 0 - this disables some features but enables TWiki to work even if your system has locales that do not work. Then, set the $upperNational and $lowerNational parameters to the valid upper and lower case accented letters for your locale.
- NOTE: You will need to do the above workaround for Windows based servers (whether using Cygwin or ActiveState Perl), since Perl locales are not working on Windows as of Feb 2004.
If international characters in WikiWords aren't working, and you are on Perl 5.005 with working locales, keep $useLocale set to 1 and set $localeRegexes to 0, then set $upperNational and $lowerNational - if testenv generates the lists of characters for you, your locales are working so there is no need to set $localeRegexes to 0 in this case. See the comments in TWiki.cfg for more information.
Step 5: Configure Site-Wide Email Preferences | |
- Edit the TWikiPreferences topic in the TWiki web (by pointing your browser to http://yourdomain.com/twiki/bin/view/TWiki/TWikiPreferences) to set the
WIKIWEBMASTER email address, and other email settings required for registration and WebChangesAlert to work:
-
WIKIWEBMASTER should be set to the email address of the TWiki administrator
| | | |
< < | Step 5: Finish Up from Your Browser | > > | Step 6: Finish Up from Your Browser | |
- Point your Web browser at
http://yourdomain.com/twiki/bin/view and start TWiki-ing away!
- Or, point to
http://yourdomain.com/twiki/ to get the pre-TWiki index.html page, with a link to the view script. Customize this page if you want a public intro screen with a login link, instead of immediately calling up the .htaccess login dialog by going directly to view .
- Edit the WebPreferences topic in each web, if necessary: set individual
WEBCOPYRIGHT messages, and other preferences.
| |
< < | | > > | | | | |
< < | That's it for the standard virgin installation of TWiki. Read on for server-level customization options. | > > | That's it for the standard installation of TWiki. Read on for server-level customization options. | | Additional Server-Level Options | |
-
-
- The browser should ask for login name and password when you click on the Edit link. In case
.htaccess does not have the desired effect, you need to enable it: Add "AllowOverride All" to the Directory [3] section of access.conf for your twiki/bin directory.
- This applies only if you have root access: on hosted accounts, you shouldn't have this problem - otherwise, email tech support.
- NOTE: In the TWiki distribution package, the
twiki/data/.htpasswd.txt file contains several TWiki core team user accounts and a guest user account. You probably want to remove those accounts by deleting the entries in .htpasswd . Do not remove the guest user if you want to allow guest logins.
| |
> > |
-
- TWiki now supports several Password file format/encoding methods for Apache. Once you know what method is used by your Appache server, you can configure TWiki to create compatible .htpasswd entries by editing the
$htpasswdFormatFamily , $htpasswdEncoding and $htpasswdFilename in the TWiki.cfg file. The supported options are htpasswd:plain, htpasswd:crypt, htpasswd:sha1, htdigest:md5
| |
-
- Copy the TWikiRegistrationPub? topic to TWikiRegistration, overwriting old version of TWikiRegistration. Do that by either editing the topics in theTWiki web, or by renaming the
.txt and .txt,v files in the twiki/data/TWiki directory.
- Customization:
- You can customize the registration form by deleting or adding input tags. The
name="" parameter of the input tags must start with: "Twk0..." (if this is an optional entry), or "Twk1..." (if this is a required entry). This ensures that the fields are carried over into the user home page correctly.
| |
< < | | > > | | |
- Register yourself in the TWikiRegistration topic.
- NOTE: When a user registers, a new line with the username and encrypted password is added to the
data/.htpasswd file. The .htpasswd file that comes with the TWiki installation includes user accounts for TWiki core team members that are used for testing on TWiki.org. You can edit the file and delete those lines.
- Create a new topic to check if authentication works.
| | | |
< < | That's it for a basic new web set-up! | > > | WYSIWYG Editor | | | |
< < | Optionally, you can also:
- Create custom web-specific templates in a new
twiki/templates/Someweb directory (otherwise, templates are inherited from twiki/templates ).
- Add TWikiForms for form-based page input that's stored separately from the main free-form topic text.
| > > | At this time, TWiki does not ship with an "what you see is what you get" editor. TWiki:Codev/IntegrateHtmlAreaEditor describes how to integrate an HTML editor. | | NOTE: User home topics are located in the TWiki.Main web - don't try to move them or create them in other webs. From any other web, user signatures have to point to TWiki.Main web, using a Main.UserName or %MAINWEB%.UserName format. (The %MAINWEB% variable is an advantage if you ever change the Main web name, but the standard Main.UserName is easier for users to enter, which is the bottom line!
TWiki File System Info | |
< < | See Appendix A: TWiki File System? for an installed system snapshot and descriptions of all files in the TWiki 01-Sep-2001 distribution. | > > | See Appendix A: TWiki File System? for an installed system snapshot and descriptions of all files in the TWiki 01-Sep-2004 distribution. | | | |
< < | -- PeterThoeny - 03 Jun 2003
-- MikeMannix? - 16 May 2002 | > > | -- TWiki:Main/PeterThoeny - 15 Aug 2004
-- TWiki:Main/MikeMannix - 16 May 2002 | | | |
> > | | |
META TOPICMOVED | by="MikeMannix" date="999319650" from="TWiki.TWikiInstallationNotes" to="TWiki.TWikiInstallationGuide" |
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Revision 63 | r63 - 27 Mar 2005 - 13:14:15 - TWikiContributor |
Revision 62 | r62 - 31 Aug 2004 - 15:49:34 - PeterThoeny? |
Revision 61 | r61 - 29 Aug 2004 - 20:09:04 - PeterThoeny? |
Revision 60 | r60 - 17 Aug 2004 - 05:21:06 - PeterThoeny? |
Revision 59 | r59 - 16 Aug 2004 - 04:57:45 - PeterThoeny? |
Revision 58 | r58 - 12 Dec 2003 - 06:57:00 - PeterThoeny? |
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This site is powered by the TWiki collaboration platform. All material on this collaboration platform is the property of the contributing authors. All material marked as authored by Eben Moglen is available under the license terms CC-BY-SA version 4.
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