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Posted to cvs@httpd.apache.org by rb...@locus.apache.org on 2000/12/21 02:05:16 UTC

cvs commit: httpd-2.0 INSTALL

rbb         00/12/20 17:05:16

  Added:       .        INSTALL
  Log:
  Add the INSTALL file.
  
  Revision  Changes    Path
  1.1                  httpd-2.0/INSTALL
  
  Index: INSTALL
  ===================================================================
  
    APACHE INSTALLATION
  
    Introduction
    ============
  
    Apache 2.0's configuration and installation environment has changed
    completely from Apache 1.3.  Apache 1.3 used a custom set of scripts
    to achieve easy installation.  Apache 2.0 now uses libtool and autoconf
    to create an environment that looks like many other Open Source projects.
  
  
    Installing the Apache 1.3 HTTP server with APACI
    ================================================
  
    1. Overview for the impatient
       --------------------------
  
       $ ./buildconf
       $ ./configure --prefix=PREFIX
       $ make
       $ make install
       $ PREFIX/bin/apachectl start
  
       NOTE: PREFIX is not the string "PREFIX". Instead use the Unix
             filesystem path under which Apache should be installed. For
             instance use "/usr/local/apache" for PREFIX above.
  
    2. Requirements
       ------------
  
       The following requirements exist for building Apache:
  
       o  Disk Space: 
  
          Make sure you have approximately 12 MB of temporary free disk space
          available.  After installation Apache occupies approximately 5 MB of
          disk space (the actual required disk space depends on the amount of
          compiled in third party modules, etc).
  
       o  ANSI-C Compiler: 
  
          Make sure you have an ANSI-C compiler installed. The GNU C compiler
          (GCC) from the Free Software Foundation (FSF) is recommended (version
          2.7.2 is fine). If you don't have GCC then at least make sure your
          vendors compiler is ANSI compliant. You can find the homepage of GNU
          at http://www.gnu.org/ and the GCC distribution under
          http://www.gnu.org/order/ftp.html .
  
       o  Libtool 1.3.3:
  
          Make sure that you have libtool 1.3.3 or later installed before
          trying to configure and build Apache 2.0.  Libtool can be downloaded
          from the Free Software Foundation (FSF), at 
          http://www.gnu.org/order/ftp.html.
  
       o  Autoconf 2.13:
  
          Make sure that you have autoconf 2.13 or later installed before
          trying to configure and build Apache 2.0.  Autoconf can be
          downloaded from the Free Software Foundation (FSF), at
          http://www.gnu.org/order/ftp.html.
  
       o  Perl 5 Interpreter [OPTIONAL]:
  
          For some of the support scripts like `apxs' or `dbmmanage' (which are
          written in Perl) the Perl 5 interpreter is required (versions 5.003
          and 5.004 are fine). If no such interpreter is found by APACI's
          `configure' script this is no harm.  Of course, you still can build
          and install Apache 1.3. Only those support scripts cannot be used. If
          you have multiple Perl interpreters installed (perhaps a Perl 4 from
          the vendor and a Perl 5 from your own), then it is recommended to use
          the --with-perl option (see below) to make sure the correct one is
          selected by APACI.
  
       o  Dynamic Shared Object (DSO) support [OPTIONAL]:
  
          To provide maximum flexibility Apache now is able to load modules
          under runtime via the DSO mechanism by using the pragmatic
          dlopen()/dlsym() system calls. These system calls are not available
          under all operating systems therefore you cannot use the DSO mechanism
          on all platforms. And Apache currently has only limited built-in
          knowledge on how to compile shared objects because this is heavily
          platform-dependent. The current state is this:
  
          o Out-of-the-box supported platforms are (Not all of these will
            work currently.  DSO support is currently available on most
            of these platforms however):
             - Linux     - SunOS         - UnixWare     - Darwin/Mac OS
             - FreeBSD   - Solaris       - AIX          - OpenStep/Mach
             - OpenBSD   - IRIX          - SCO          - DYNIX/ptx
             - NetBSD    - HPUX          - ReliantUNIX
             - BSDI      - Digital Unix  - DGUX
  
          o Entirely unsupported platforms are:
             - Ultrix
  
          If your system is not on these lists but has the dlopen-style
          interface, you either have to provide the appropriate compiler and
          linker flags (see CFLAGS_SHLIB, LDFLAGS_SHLIB and LDFLAGS_SHLIB_EXPORT
          below) manually or at least make sure a Perl 5 interpreter is
          installed from which Apache can guess the options.
  
    3. Configuring the source tree
       ---------------------------
  
       Setup:
   
       The first step in compiling Apache 2.0 is to setup the source tree so
       that it can be built.  This is done by running:
   
       ./buildconf
  
       This script ensures that all required programs are installed on the
       currently machine, and creates the ./configure script.  If you are
       using a package downloaded from apache.org then this step is not 
       necessary.
  
       Introduction:
  
       The next step is to configure the Apache source tree for your particular
       platform and personal requirements. The most important setup here is the
       location prefix where Apache is to be installed later, because Apache has
       to be configured for this location to work correctly. But there are a lot
       of other options available for your pleasure.
  
       For a short impression of what possibilities you have, here is a typical
       example which compiles Apache for the installation tree /sw/pkg/apache
       with a particular compiler and flags plus the two additional modules
       mod_rewrite and mod_speling for later loading through the DSO mechanism: 
  
       $ CC="pgcc" OPTIM="-O2" \
         ./configure --prefix=/sw/pkg/apache \
                     --enable-rewrite=shared \
                     --enable-speling=shared
  
       The easiest way to find all of the configuration flags for Apache 2.0
       is to run ./configure --help.  What follows is a brief description of
       most of the arguments.
  
       Reference:
  
       $ [CC=...]        [CFLAGS_SHLIB=...]           [TARGET=...]
         [OPTIM=...]     [LD_SHLIB=...]
         [CFLAGS=...]    [LDFLAGS_SHLIB=...]        
         [INCLUDES=...]  [LDFLAGS_SHLIB_EXPORT=...] 
         [LDFLAGS=...]   [RANLIB=...]  
         [LIBS=...]      [DEPS=...]
         ./configure
             [--quiet]         [--prefix=DIR]            [--enable-NAME=(shared)]
             [--verbose]       [--exec-prefix=PREFIX]    [--disable-NAME]
             [--shadow[=DIR]]  [--bindir=EPREFIX]        [--with-mpm=NAME]
             [--show-layout]   [--sbindir=DIR]           
             [--help]          [--libexecdir=DIR]        
                               [--mandir=DIR]            
                               [--sysconfdir=DIR]        
                               [--datadir=DIR]           
                               [--includedir=DIR]        
                               [--localstatedir=DIR]
                               [--runtimedir=DIR]        [--enable-suexec]
                               [--logfiledir=DIR]        [--suexec-caller=UID]
                               [--proxycachedir=DIR]     [--suexec-docroot=DIR]
                               [--with-layout=[FILE:]ID] [--suexec-logfile=FILE]
                                                         [--suexec-userdir=DIR]
                               [--with-perl=FILE]        [--suexec-uidmin=UID]
                               [--without-support]       [--suexec-gidmin=GID]
                               [--without-confadjust]    [--suexec-safepath=PATH]
                               [--without-execstrip]
  			     [--server-uid=UID]        [--with-maintainter-mode]
  			     [--server-gid=GID]
  
       Use the CC, OPTIM, CFLAGS, INCLUDES, LDFLAGS, LIBS, CFLAGS_SHLIB,
       LD_SHLIB, LDFLAGS_SHLIB, LDFLAGS_SHLIB_EXPORT, RANLIB, DEPS and TARGET
       environment variables to override the corresponding default entries in
       the src/Configuration.tmpl file (see there for more information about
       their usage).
  
       Use the --prefix=PREFIX and --exec-prefix=EPREFIX options to configure
       Apache to use a particular installation prefix. The default is
       PREFIX=/usr/local/apache and EPREFIX=PREFIX.
  
       Use the --bindir=DIR, --sbindir=DIR, --libexecdir=DIR, --mandir=DIR,
       --sysconfdir=DIR, --datadir=DIR, --includedir=DIR, --localstatedir=DIR,
       --runtimedir=DIR, --logfiledir=DIR and proxycachedir=DIR option to change
       the paths for particular subdirectories of the installation tree.
       Defaults are bindir=EPREFIX/bin, sbindir=EPREFIX/sbin,
       libexecdir=EPREFIX/libexec, mandir=PREFIX/man, sysconfdir=PREFIX/etc,
       datadir=PREFIX/share, includedir=PREFIX/include,
       localstatedir=PREFIX/var, runtimedir=PREFIX/var/run,
       logfiledir=PREFIX/var/log and proxycachedir=PREFIX/var/proxy.
  
           Note: To reduce the pollution of shared installation locations
                 (like /usr/local/ or /etc) with Apache files to a minimum the
                 string ``/apache'' is automatically appended to 'libexecdir',
                 'sysconfdir', 'datadir', 'localstatedir' and 'includedir' if
                 (and only if) the following points apply for each path
                 individually:
  
                     1. the path doesn't already contain the word ``apache''
                     2. the path was not directly customized by the user
  
                 Keep in mind that per default these paths are derived from
                 'prefix' and 'exec-prefix', so usually its only a matter
                 whether these paths contain ``apache'' or not. Although the
                 defaults were defined with experience in mind you always should
                 make sure the paths fit your situation by checking the finally
                 chosen paths via the --layout option.
  
       Use the --with-layout=[F:]ID option to select a particular installation
       path base-layout. You always _HAVE_ to select a base-layout. There are
       currently two layouts pre-defined in the file config.layout: `Apache' for
       the classical Apache path layout and `GNU' for a path layout conforming
       to the GNU `standards' document. When you want to use your own custom
       layout FOO, either add a corresponding "<Layout FOO>...</Layout>" section
       to config.layout and use --with-layout=FOO or place it into your own
       file, say config.mypaths, and use --with-layout=config.mypaths:FOO.
   
       Use the --show-layout option to check the final installation path layout
       while fiddling with the options above.
   
       Use the --enable-rule=NAME and --disable-rule=NAME options to enable or
       disable a particular Rule from the Apache src/Configuration.tmpl file. The
       defaults (yes=enabled, no=disabled) can either be seen when running
       `./configure --help' or manually looked up in the src/Configuration.tmpl
       file.
   
       Use the --enable-NAME=(shared) and --disable-NAME options to enable
       or disable a particular already distributed module from the Apache
       package.
  
       Use the --with-mpm=NAME option to determine which MPM should be built
       for your server.
       _________________________________________________________________________
       LIST OF AVAILABLE MODULES
  
       Environment creation
        (+) mod_env .......... Set environment variables for CGI/SSI scripts
        (+) mod_setenvif ..... Set environment variables based on HTTP headers
        (-) mod_unique_id .... Generate unique identifiers for request
       Content type decisions
        (+) mod_mime ......... Content type/encoding determination (configured)
        (-) mod_mime_magic ... Content type/encoding determination (automatic)
        (+) mod_negotiation .. Content selection based on the HTTP Accept* headers
       URL mapping
        (+) mod_alias ........ Simple   URL translation and redirection
        (-) mod_rewrite ...... Advanced URL translation and redirection
        (+) mod_userdir ...... Selection of resource directories by username
        (-) mod_speling ...... Correction of misspelled URLs
       Directory Handling
        (+) mod_dir .......... Directory and directory default file handling
        (+) mod_autoindex .... Automated directory index file generation
       Access Control
        (+) mod_access ....... Access Control (user, host, network)
        (+) mod_auth ......... HTTP Basic Authentication (user, passwd)
        (-) mod_auth_dbm ..... HTTP Basic Authentication via Unix NDBM files
        (-) mod_auth_db ...... HTTP Basic Authentication via Berkeley-DB files
        (-) mod_auth_anon .... HTTP Basic Authentication for Anonymous-style users
        (-) mod_digest ....... HTTP Digest Authentication
       HTTP response
        (-) mod_headers ...... Arbitrary HTTP response headers (configured)
        (-) mod_cern_meta .... Arbitrary HTTP response headers (CERN-style files)
        (-) mod_expires ...... Expires HTTP responses 
        (+) mod_asis ......... Raw HTTP responses 
       Scripting
        (+) mod_include ...... Server Side Includes (SSI) support
        (+) mod_cgi .......... Common Gateway Interface (CGI) support
        (+) mod_cgid ......... Common Gateway Interface (CGI) support for 
                               multi-threaded MPMs
        (+) mod_actions ...... Map CGI scripts to act as internal `handlers'
       Internal Content Handlers
        (+) mod_status ....... Content handler for server run-time status
        (-) mod_info ......... Content handler for server configuration summary
       Request Logging
        (+) mod_log_config ... Customizable logging of requests
        (-) mod_log_agent .... Specialized HTTP User-Agent logging (deprecated)
        (-) mod_log_referer .. Specialized HTTP Referrer logging   (deprecated)
        (-) mod_usertrack .... Logging of user click-trails via HTTP Cookies
       Miscellaneous
        (+) mod_imap ......... Server-side Image Map support
        (-) mod_proxy ........ Caching Proxy Module (HTTP, HTTPS, FTP)
        (-) mod_so ........... Dynamic Shared Object (DSO) bootstrapping
       Experimental
        (-) mod_mmap_static .. Caching of frequently served pages via mmap()
       Development
        (-) mod_example ...... Apache API demonstration (developers only)
  
       MPMs
            mpmt_pthread ..... Mutli-process(dynamic) Multi-threaded(static) 
                               Unix MPM
            prefork .......... Preforking Unix MPM
            dexter ........... Multi-process(static) Multi-threaded(dynamic)
                               Unix MPM
            perchild ......... Multi-process(static) Multi-threaded(dynamic)
                               Unix MPM, that allows a User per child process
  
            winnt ............ Multi-process(1) Multi-threaded Windows MPM
  
            mpmt_beos ........ Multi-process Multi-threaded Beos MPM
            beos ............. Multi-process Multi-threaded Beos MPM
  
            spmt_os2 ......... Single-process Multi-threaded OS/2 MPM
       _________________________________________________________________________
                      (+) = enabled  per default [disable with --disable-module]
                      (-) = disabled per default [enable  with --enable-module ]
  
       Use the --enable-suexec option to enable the suEXEC feature by building
       and installing the "suexec" support program. Use --suexec-caller=UID to
       set the allowed caller user id, --suexec-userdir=DIR to set the user
       subdirectory, --suexec-docroot=DIR to set the suexec root directory,
       --suexec-uidmin=UID/--suexec-gidmin=GID to set the minimal allowed
       UID/GID, --suexec-logfile=FILE to set the logfile and
       --suexec-safepath=PATH to set the safe shell PATH for the suEXEC
       feature. At least one --suexec-xxxxx option has to be provided together
       with the --enable-suexec option to let APACI accept your request for
       using the suEXEC feature.
  
       CAUTION: FOR DETAILS ABOUT THE SUEXEC FEATURE WE HIGHLY RECOMMEND YOU TO
                FIRST READ THE DOCUMENT htdocs/manual/suexec.html BEFORE USING
                THE ABOVE OPTIONS.
       
                USING THE SUEXEC FEATURE PROPERLY CAN REDUCE CONSIDERABLY THE
                SECURITY RISKS INVOLVED WITH ALLOWING USERS TO DEVELOP AND RUN
                PRIVATE CGI OR SSI PROGRAMS. HOWEVER, IF SUEXEC IS IMPROPERLY
                CONFIGURED, IT CAN CAUSE ANY NUMBER OF PROBLEMS AND POSSIBLY
                CREATE NEW HOLES IN YOUR COMPUTER'S SECURITY.  IF YOU AREN'T
                FAMILIAR WITH MANAGING SETUID ROOT PROGRAMS AND THE SECURITY
                ISSUES THEY PRESENT, WE HIGHLY RECOMMEND THAT YOU NOT CONSIDER
                USING SUEXEC AND KEEP AWAY FROM THESE OPTIONS!
  
       Use the --shadow option to let APACI create a shadow source tree of the
       sources for building. This is useful when you want to build for different
       platforms in parallel (usually through a NFS, AFS or DFS mounted
       filesystem).  You may specify a directory to the --shadow option into
       which the shadow tree will be created.
   
       Use the --quiet option to disable all configuration verbose messages.
   
       Use the --verbose option to enable additional verbose messages.
       
       Use the --server-uid option to specify the user ID you want the server to run
       as. If not specified the server will run as user nobody.  If the user ID
       specified is different than the ID of the user starting the server, you need to
       start the server as root.
  
       Use the --server-gid option to specify the group ID you want the server user ID to
       be a member of.  If not specified, the group ID will be #-1.
  
    4. Building the package
       --------------------
       
       Now you can build the various parts which form the Apache package by
       simply running the command
   
          $ make 
   
       Please be patient here, this takes approximately 2 minutes to complete
       under a Pentium-166/FreeBSD-2.2 system, dependend on the amount of
       modules you have enabled. 
   
    5. Installing the package
       ----------------------
       
       Now its time to install the package under the configured installation
       PREFIX (see --prefix option above) by running:
   
          $ make install
   
       For the paranoid hackers under us: The above command really installs under
       prefix _only_, i.e. no other stuff from your system is touched. Even if
       you upgrade an existing installation your configuration files in
       PREFIX/etc/ are preserved.
  
    6. Testing the package
       -------------------
   
       Now you can fire up your Apache HTTP server by immediately running
   
          $ PREFIX/bin/apachectl start
   
       and then you should be able to request your first document via URL
       http://localhost/ (when you built and installed Apache as root or at
       least used the --without-confadjust option) or http://localhost:8080/
       (when you built and installed Apache as a regular user). Then stop the
       server again by running: 
  
          $ PREFIX/bin/apachectl stop
   
    7. Customizing the package
       -----------------------
   
       Finally you can customize your Apache HTTP server by editing the
       configuration files under PREFIX/etc/.
   
          $ vi PREFIX/etc/httpd.conf
          $ vi PREFIX/etc/access.conf
          $ vi PREFIX/etc/srm.conf
   
       Have a look at the Apache manual under htdocs/manual/ or
       http://www.apache.org/docs/ for a complete reference of available
       configuration directives.
  
    8. Preparing the system
       --------------------
  
       Proper operation of a public HTTP server requires at least the following:
  
       1. A correctly working TCP/IP layer, since HTTP is implemented on top of
          TCP/IP. Although modern Unix platforms have good networking layers,
          always make sure you have all official vendor patches referring to the
          network layer applied.
  
       2. Accurate time keeping, since elements of the HTTP protocol are
          expressed as the time of day.  So, it's time to investigate setting
          some time synchronization facility on your system. Usually the ntpdate
          or xntpd programs are used for this purpose which are based on the
          Network Time Protocol (NTP). See the Usenet newsgroup
          comp.protocols.time.ntp and the NTP homepage at
          http://www.eecis.udel.edu/~ntp/ for more details about NTP software
          and public time servers.
  
    9. Contacts
       --------
  
       o If you want to be informed about new code releases, bug fixes, 
         security fixes, general news and information about the Apache server
         subscribe to the apache-announce mailing list as described under
         http://www.apache.org/announcelist.html
  
       o If you want freely available support for running Apache please join the
         Apache user community by subscribing at least to the following USENET
         newsgroup:
         comp.infosystems.www.servers.unix
  
       o If you want commercial support for running Apache please contact
         one of the companies and contractors which are listed at
         http://www.apache.org/info/support.cgi
  
       o If you have a concrete bug report for Apache please go to the
         Apache Group Bug Database and submit your report:
         http://www.apache.org/bug_report.html
  
       o If you want to participate in actively developing Apache please
         subscribe to the `new-httpd' mailing list as described at
         http://dev.apache.org/mailing-lists
  
       Thanks for running Apache.
                                            The Apache Group
                                            http://www.apache.org/