Greenstone 3 (GSDL3) Copyright (C) 2003 New Zealand Digital Libraries, University Of Waikato Greenstone3 comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details see LICENSE.txt This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it You will need Java and Ant to run Greenstone 3. Your Java version should be 1.4 or higher. We recommend Sun Java. You need the SDK (development environment). Set the environment variable JAVA_HOME to be the root of your Java installation. Ant (Apache's Java based build tool) can be downloaded from http://ant.apache.org/bindownload.cgi. Set the environment variable ANT_HOME to be the root of your Ant installation, and make sure the Ant executables are on your PATH. You may have problems with earlier versions. This has been tested with version 1.6.2 In the greenstone3 directory, you can run 'ant' which will give you a help message. Running 'ant -projecthelp' gives a list of the targets that you can run - these do various things like compile the source code, start up the server etc. Installing Greenstone --------------------------------------------------------- Download the appropriate installer from sourceforge.net/projects/greenstone3 and run it. See 'Installing from a Source Distribution' section below for extra notes about installing from Source. See the README-CVS.txt file for extra notes about installing from CVS. Running Greenstone: --------------------------------------------------------- To start up Greenstone, select Greenstone 2 Digital Library from the Start menu (Windows), or run gs3-server.sh/bat. This launches a small server program, which starts up Tomcat and launches a browser. A small window pops up which allows you to chnage some settings for your library and restart the Tomcat server. Closing this program will stop Tomcat running. Alternatively, you can start Tomcat directly through using Ant. 'ant start', 'ant restart' and 'ant stop' starts, restarts and shuts down Tomcat, respectively. This will only start/stop a local server (one installed by Greenstone). You will need to manually start/stop an external Tomcat (see below for notes about using a version of Tomcat external to Greenstone). Once the Tomcat server is running, Greenstone will be available in a browser at "http://localhost:8080/greenstone3" (or whatever port you specified during the installation process). You can change the port number using File->Settings in the server program, or by changing the 'tomcat.port' property in build.properties, then running 'ant configure'. Building Collections: ---------------------------------------------------------- You need to have Perl installed and on your PATH. Perl is included as part of the Windows binary distribution. run 'ant gli", or cd to greenstone3/gli and run gli4gs3.sh/bat. This is a graphical tool for building collections. Once you have created and built a collection, you can see it by clicking 'Preview collection' on the Build panel. Note that GLI doesn't start up the Greenstone Tomcat server so you should run 'ant start' before previewing your collection. Greenstone Admin ------------------------------------------------------ The Greenstone admin tool is currently under development. Using SOAP: ------------------------------------------------------- Greenstone comes with Apache Axis installed as part of the Greenstone web application. However, no SOAP services are deployed by default. To deploy a SOAP server for localsite, run 'ant deploy-localsite'. You should now be able to see all localsite's collections through the gateway servlet. (http://localhost:8080/greenstone3/gateway) To set up a SOAP server on a new site, run ant soap-deploy-site This will prompt you for the sitename (the directory name), and the site uri - this should be a unique identifier for the site's web service. For a non-interactive version, run ant -Daxis.sitename=xxx -Daxis.siteuri=yyy soap-deploy-site The service is accessible at http://localhost:8080/greenstone3/services/ (or http://:/greenstone3/services/) Note: Deploying a SOAP service for any site other than localsite requires the Greenstone source code to be installed. This is not installed by default for a binary distribution. To get the source code, re-run the installer, select custom install and deselect everything except the source code. Using External Tomcat: --------------------------------------------------- If you want to use an existing Tomcat, set the path to its base directory in build.properties (tomcat.installed.path). Also set the tomcat.port property to be the port you are running Tomcat on, and change tomcat.server if the web address is not localhost. Then run 'ant configure'. You will need to modify the Tomcat setup slightly. 1. Tell Tomcat about the Greenstone web app. There are two ways to do this. A. Copy the file greenstone3/resources/tomcat/greenstone3.xml into Tomcat's conf/Catalina/localhost directory. You'll need to edit the file and replace @gsdl3webhome@ with the full path to the web directory of your greenstone 3 installation. Any path separator is fine here ('/', '\\', '\'). B. Alternatively, you can move (and rename) the greenstone3/web directory to tomcat/webapps/greenstone3 (i.e. the resulting directories will be like tomcat/webapps/greenstone3/WEB-INF, no web directory). This should be done after running the initial 'ant install'. You will need to set the web.home property in the build.properties file i.e. web.home=${tomcat.installed.path}/webapps/greenstone3 And then run 'ant configure' to reset gsdl3home. 2. Set up the JNI libraries and Java wrappers. JNI libraries and their Java wrappers cannot go into the web app. The libraries need to be loaded by the same class loader as their wrappers. The libraries need to be in java.library.path, and I think get loaded by the system class loader. The wrappers need to be loaded by this too. These JNI bits are located by default in the lib/jni directory. There are two ways to get them into Tomcat: A: Keep all the Greenstone stuff inside the greenstone3 directory, and just modify the environment that Tomcat runs in Set LD_LIBRARY_PATH (GNU/Linux), DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH (Mac OS X) or PATH/Path (windows) to include the greenstone3/lib/jni directory. Add all the jar files in greenstone3/lib/jni directory to the CLASSPATH, then edit tomcats setclasspath.sh/bat to use the system CLASSPATH. (in setclasspath.bat, change set CLASSPATH=%JAVA_HOME%\lib\tools.jar to set CLASSPATH=%JAVA_HOME%\lib\tools.jar;%CLASSPATH% in setclasspath.sh, change # Set standard CLASSPATH if [ "$1" = "debug" -o "$1" = "javac" ] ; then CLASSPATH="$JAVA_HOME"/lib/tools.jar fi to # Set standard CLASSPATH if [ "$1" = "debug" -o "$1" = "javac" ] ; then CLASSPATH="$JAVA_HOME"/lib/tools.jar:"$CLASSPATH" fi B: Copy the files into Tomcat installation: Move the greenstone3/lib/jni jar files into tomcat's shared/lib directory. Move the greenstone3/lib/jni library files (.so for GNU/Linux, .jnilib for Mac OS X .dll for Windows) into shared/classes, and set LD_LIBARARY_PATH (GNU/Linux), DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH (Mac OS X) or PATH/Path (Windows) to include this directory. This has the advantage that you can use this for other webapps without modifying the Tomcat environment. Once all these changes have been made, you will need to restart the Tomcat server for them to take effect. Notes for Mac OS ------------------------------------------------ Set JAVA_HOME to be /Library/Java/Home Notes for Windows ----------------------------------------------- You can set environment variables by going to Control Panel->System->Advanced->Environment Variables. Installing from a Source Distribution ---------------------------------------------- Download the greenstone-3.xx-src.tar.gz package from sourceforge.net/projects/greenstone3, and unpack it. In the greenstone3 directory, edit the build.properties file and run ant prepare install Tomcat will be installed as part of the prepare process. To stop this set the tomcat.installed.path to be the root of an existing Tomcat installation. * Solaris notes: ** Make sure /usr/local/bin is in your PATH ahead of /usr/bin etc. ** Add /usr/local/lib to LD_LIBARY_PATH ** The gdbm database files (gs2mgdemo and gs2mgppdemo collections) were generated on a Mac, and don't seem to be compatible with Solaris. A text version of the file (database.txt) is included in the index/text directory. After installing Greenstone, and before running it, you'll need to: in greenstone3/gs2build directory: run 'source setup.bash' (Or if you have greenstone 2 already installed, run 'source setup.bash' in your greenstone 2 installation) in greenstone3/web/sites/localsite/collect/gs2mgdemo/index/text directories, run 'txt2db gs2mgdemo.bdb < database.txt' in greenstone3/web/sites/localsite/collect/gs2mgppdemo/index/text directories, run 'txt2db gs2mgppdemo.bdb < database.txt' ** GLI shell scripts may not work like "./gli4gs3.sh". In this case, run "bash ./gli4gs3.sh" etc. You will need to compile GLI by hand (run "bash ./makegli.sh" in greenstone3/gli directory). ** Set CC=gcc environment variable if you don't have cc, before running ant install. * Windows notes: ** You need to have Visual Studio installed to compile the C/C++ code. Set the path to the setup file in build.properties (compile.windows.c++.setup). Configuring your installation: -------------------------------------------------------- The file build.properties contains various parameters that can be set by the user. Please check these settings before running the install. Note, either forward slash '/' or double backslash '\\' can be used as path separators in the build.properties file, but not single backslash '\'. Greenstone 3 comes with Tomcat bundled in. If you already have Tomcat running, you can set the 'tomcat.installed.path' property (in build.properties) to the base directory of your Tomcat installation, and Greenstone will not use its own Tomcat. (You can delete the packages/tomcat directory if you like.) Please read the section "Using External Tomcat" for details about how to configure Tomcat for Greenstone. Mac OS X: You need to have GDBM installed (http://www.gnu.org/software/gdbm/gdbm.html). Please set the gdbm.installed.path property (in build.properties) to the root of your gdbm installation if it is not installed in a default place. If you run GLI or GS2 collection building from the command line, you will need to set the DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable to include /lib. The install target will ask you if you accept the properties before starting. To suppress this prompt, use the -Dproperties.accepted=yes flag. E.g. ant -Dproperties.accepted=yes install To log the output in build.log, run ant -Dproperties.accepted=yes -logfile build.log install Recompiling ------------------------------------------------------- To recompile your Greenstone3 installation, in the top level greenstone3 directory, run: ant configure ant configure-c++ ant clean ant compile The compile target does Java and C/C++ compilation. On Windows, you need to set the compile.windows.c++.setup property to be your Visual Studio setup batch file. Any sub targets can be run by themselves. Run 'ant -projecthelp' for a list of public targets, otherwise you can look at the build.xml file to see which targets depend on other ones. Notes on Versions of Third Party packages ----------------------------------------------- Tomcat: apache-tomcat-5.5.12.zip: latest production quality release as of October, 2005. apache-tomcat-5.5.12-compat.zip: Tomcat 5 requires Java 1.5. If using Java 1.4, need to use this compatibility module. website: http://tomcat.apache.org/ download: http://tomcat.apache.org/download-55.cgi Axis: Apache Web Services Project, SOAP implementation. Axis is a follow on project to Apache SOAP axis-bin-1_2_1.zip: latest stable release as of October, 2005 website: http://ws.apache.org/axis/ download: http://www.apache.org/dyn/closer.cgi/ws/axis/1_2_1 All available from www.greenstone.org/gs3files if not available at their respective websites. Other Notes: ------------------------------------------------- See greenstone3/docs/manual/manual.pdf for more details about the software and installation etc. Output is logged to web/logs. usage.log is a usage log, while greenstone.log is the error/message log. To change the level of logging, edit the web/WEB-INF/classes/log4j.properties file, and change the log4j.disable property. Valid values are TRACE, DEBUG, INFO, WARN, ERROR and FATAL. To prevent Tomcat showing directory listings, edit Tomcat's conf/web.xml file and set the value of the "listings" servlet parameter to false. To enable symlinks to files outside the webapp root directory, edit Tomcat's conf/Catalina/localhost/greenstone3.xml file, and set the allowLinking attribute in the Context element to true. (Note from Tomcat website: This flag MUST NOT be set to true on the Windows platform (or any other OS which does not have a case sensitive filesystem), as it will disable case sensitivity checks, allowing JSP source code disclosure, among other security problems.) The file web/WEB-INF/classes/global.properties is generated on install and contains some properties for the run time system.