1 / 42

Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

ITI-520: Web Technology Web Server Setup Meeting 2: Apache Installation and Initial Configuration. Rutgers University Internet Institute Instructor: Chris Uriarte. Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte. Apache. • The world’s leading web server software

skoog
Download Presentation

Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ITI-520: Web Technology Web Server Setup Meeting 2: Apache Installation and Initial Configuration Rutgers University Internet Institute Instructor: Chris Uriarte Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  2. Apache • The world’s leading web server software (powers 61% of all web servers in the world) • Runs on UNIX and Windows platforms. UNIX version is the most stable and most widely used. • Configuration is the same on all UNIX platforms. Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  3. How Do I Get Apache? • The Current release of Apache is version 1.3. There are many subversions released throughout the lifetime of a major version (i.e. 1.3.10) • You can download it from the Apache Website: http://www.apache.org/dist/ – Binary Versions – software that is ready-to-use for your specific operating system platform – Source Code – the computer code used to build Apache. You must use a compiler to build the code. • You can buy a Unix distribution that comes bundled with Apache pre-built (most Linux distributions include Apache by default). Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  4. Installing Apache from Source • Allows you to build the Apache binaries from scratch. • Optimizes Apache for the platform on which it will run. • Allows you to decide whether to build Apache as a static or a dynamic server. • Allows you to decide what modules you want to include. • You need a C compiler (i.e. gcc) to install source, which is included in most UNIX distributions. Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  5. Apache Modules • Apache has a modular structure. Only a core set of features exists within the main Apache executable. • Apache Modules provide additional functionality • Example Module: mod_speling: The Speling module attempts to correct misspellings of URLs that users might have entered, namely by checking capitalization or by allowing up to one misspelling (character insertion, omission, transposition, typo). Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  6. Apache: Static vs. Dynamic Servers • Static Servers – Must decide at build time what modules to include. Recompiling will be necessary to add modules later. • Dynamic Servers – Uses a module called mod_so to load modules dynamically when Apache server is started. – New modules can usually be added later without recompiling. Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  7. Static vs. Dynamic Apache • Building a static (standard) Apache distribution limits you to the modules you choose when you compile the server. • However, using Apache with dynamic modules makes apache more difficult to administer, perform slower and increases its memory requirements. • Consider building a static server, as the need to add new modules is not very common and re- compiling Apache is simple. Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  8. Installing Apache Source • Create a directory under your iti.rutgers.edu home directory called “apache” – mkdir apache • You now need to obtain the Apache source file (which you’d usually do from http://www.apache.org/dist). You can copy the source that is contained locally on the iti.rutgers.edu server: – cd apache – cp ~chrisjur/apache_1.3.12.tar.gz . • You should now have the Apache source file under your home directory in /home/itiXXXX/apache. Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  9. Unzipping and Untar’ing the Source File • You now have the Apache source distribution under your home directory in /home/itiXXXX/apache. • The source file is actually a group of tar’ed files and directories, which is then zipped using the gzip utility. • You can untar and unzip the source distribution by issuing: – tar –xvzf apache_1.3.12.tar.gz Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  10. Unzipping and Untar’ing the Source File – con’t. • Unpacking the distribution file will create another directory under /home/itiXXXX/apache called “apache_1.3.12” (/home/itiXXXX/apache/apache_1.3.12). • “cd” to the apache_1.3.12 to view the files and directories that are included in the distribution. Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  11. Sample Directory Listing from Source Distribution iti% cd apache_1.3.12 iti% ls ABOUT_APACHE LICENSE README.NT conf htdocs Announcement Makefile README.configure config.layout icons INSTALL Makefile.tmpl WARNING-NT.TXT config.status logs KEYS README cgi-bin configure src iti% ls -al total 272 drwx------ 8 chrisjur users 4096 Oct 15 20:21 . drwx------ 13 chrisjur users 4096 Oct 15 21:10 .. -rw------- 1 chrisjur users 12957 Mar 31 1999 ABOUT_APACHE -rw------- 1 chrisjur users 2922 Feb 23 2000 Announcement -rw------- 1 chrisjur users 27964 Dec 21 1999 INSTALL -rw------- 1 chrisjur users 35773 Aug 20 1999 KEYS -rw------- 1 chrisjur users 2848 Jan 1 1999 LICENSE -rw------- 1 chrisjur users 26929 Oct 15 20:20 Makefile -rw------- 1 chrisjur users 26758 Jan 11 2000 Makefile.tmpl -rw------- 1 chrisjur users 2046 Apr 1 1998 README -rw------- 1 chrisjur users 3132 Mar 19 1999 README.NT -rw------- 1 chrisjur users 11176 Dec 20 1999 README.configure -rw------- 1 chrisjur users 331 Sep 21 1998 WARNING-NT.TXT drwx------ 2 chrisjur users 4096 Feb 23 2000 cgi-bin drwx------ 2 chrisjur users 4096 Feb 23 2000 conf -rw------- 1 chrisjur users 5909 Dec 28 1999 config.layout -rwx--x--x 1 chrisjur users 312 Oct 15 20:20 config.status -rwx------ 1 chrisjur users 56062 Feb 5 2000 configure drwx------ 3 chrisjur users 4096 Feb 23 2000 htdocs drwx------ 3 chrisjur users 4096 Feb 23 2000 icons drwx------ 2 chrisjur users 4096 Feb 23 2000 logs drwx------ 11 chrisjur users 4096 Oct 15 20:21 src Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  12. Apache Installation: Step 1 • Before actually building the Apache binaries, you must run a configure utility, which inspects your system and prepares the distribution for compiling. • The configure script is located in the directory that was created when you unpacked the Apache source distribution (i.e. /home/itiXXX/apache/apache_1.3.12) • The included INSTALL file has instructions on how to configure and compile Apache. Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  13. Apache Installation: Step 1 con’t. • Run the configure script like this: ./configure --prefix=/home/itiXXX/apache • The “prefix” flag tells Apache where you actually want to install the software and configuration files. • It also builds the Apache software so it knows where to look for configuration files Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  14. Apache Installation: Step 2 • After the configure script runs successfully, you now need to compile the software code into the actual binaries. • You can start the compile by issuing the make command in the Apache distribution directory, i.e: – cd /home/itiXXX/apache/apache_1.3.12 – make • The compile process will take 2-10 minutes, depend Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  15. Apache Installation: Step 3 • When the compile is complete, you can install the software and configuration files by issuing the make install command. • This will copy the built binaries and configuration files into the /home/itiXXXX/apache directory you specified when you ran the configuration script. We will now refer to this directory as the Server Root directory. Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  16. The Server Root Directory • Examine the contents of the Server Root directory. You now have a group of directories Apache uses: – bin: the location of the actual apache program and other utilities – conf: location of the configuration files – htdocs: the directory where web pages and and associated files are kept – logs: where apache keeps log files – man: UNIX man pages for apache – cgi-bin: the directory where CGI scripts are kept Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  17. Apache and Privileged Ports • Any TCP/IP port >1024 is considered a privileged port. • Privileged Ports can only be accessed by applications started by the root user. • Therefore, since you are not the root user on this system, you must configure Apache to use a port >1024. Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  18. Quickstart: Change the Port Number your Apache Server Uses • “cd” to the Apache conf directory (/home/itiXXX/apache/conf) • Use a text editor to open the httpd.conf file, which is the main Apache configuration file. • Find the line that says “Port XX”. Your file may say “Port 8080” or some other number. Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  19. Change your Apache Port, con’t. • Replace the number next to the “Port” directive to a number that corresponds to you. • Use the numeric portion of your iti.rutgers.edu username. For example, if your username is iti2345, use port 2345 as your port number. • Exit your editor and save the file. Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  20. Getting Ready to Run Apache for the First Time… • Apache is configured to look for web documents in the htdocs directory under the server root (/home/itiXXX/apache/htdocs). • Be default, a page called “index.html” is the first page of a the website returned to clients. • Create an index.html file in your htdocs directory that contains the text “Hello World. My name is <Your Name>” Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  21. Starting Apache: The “Hard” Way • The actual Apache binary is called httpd and it resides in the Apache bin directory. • You can start Apache by simply executing the httpd command – cd apache/bin – ./httpd • Apache is now started! Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  22. Verify that Your Instance of Apache is Working • Point a web browser to http://iti.rutgers.edu:<PORT> (recall, you configured the port number in the httpd.conf file to be the numeric portion of your iti username) • You should see your default web page appear (the contents of the htdocs/index.html document we created at earlier) Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  23. Stopping Apache: The “Hard” Way • Remember, every time you execute a program on a UNIX operating system, a process is created • Apache creates a file called httpd.pid in its logs directory. This file contains the parent process ID of the Apache process. • You can kill the process by using the kill command • You can kill Apache by issuing the following commend: – kill –TERM `cat /home/itiXXXX/apache/logs/httpd.pid` Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  24. Starting and Stopping Apache: The “Easy” Way with apachectl • A script called apachectl is included in the apache/bin directory. • You can use apachectl to start, stop and restart the Apache server – very simple to use: – cd /home/itiXXXX/apache/bin/ – ./apachectl {start|stop|restart} Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  25. Apache Startup, con’t. • Common practice to start apache at boot time with rc scripts located in /etc/rc.d. Typical name and location for Apache rc script: /etc/rc.d/init.d/httpd on Linux systems. Symbolic links set for various run levels. • The commands used to start Apache are usually placed in the /etc/rc.local startup file on BSD systems • Solaris systems usually place a startup script in the /etc/rc2.d or /etc/rc3.d directories. • The root user must add Apache startup commands to the startup scripts on the system. Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  26. Apache Configuration Files • Configuration files are placed in the conf/ directory and include: – httpd.conf – master configuration file – access.conf and srm.conf – no longer used • Since version 1.3.4, all you configuration is done in the httpd.conf file – the srm.conf and access.conf files are no longer needed. • Apache needs to know location of httpd.conf file to start. If httpd.conf needs to move after initial install need to specify location with –f option when starting server. – httpd –f /path/to/httpd/.conf Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  27. httpd.conf: IP address and Port • The BindAddress and Port directives in the httpd.conf tell Apache which IP addresses and ports to listen on. Usage: Tells Apache to use the default IP address for this system: BindAddress * Tells Apache to “listen” for web requests on Port 80: Port 80 Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  28. Tell Apache to Listen To Additional Ports and IP addresses • The Listen directive in the httpd.conf tells Apache to listen to additional Ports and/or Port/IP address combinations. • Usage: Listen <Port Number> or Listen <IP>:<Port Number> • These IP/Ports are used in addition to the IP and Port specified in the BindAddress and Port directive described earlier. Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  29. httpd.conf: Basic Configuration Directives • ServerName iti.rutgers.edu – The name of this server we use to respond to web clients with. If the server does not have a real internet name, use the IP address instead. • ServerType standalone - We always set this to standalone. Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  30. httpd.conf: Basic Configuration Directives • User nobody, Group nobody - For security reasons, we usually run Apache assumes the identity of a non-root user and group on the system. A lot of times we run Apache as the nobody user/group. • ServerAdmin itiXXX@iti.rutgers.edu -A contact address to report problems – returned to the web client when an error occurs. Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  31. httpd.conf: Basic Configuration • ServerRoot /home/itiXXXX/apache - Where Apache keeps all its essential files. • DocumentRoot /usr/local/apache/htdocs - Where the actual Web pages reside. • ErrorLog /home/itiXXXX/apache/logs/error_log – The location of the Apache error log • PidFile /home/itiXXXX/apache/logs/httpd.pid - Process id for the Apache parent process. Used with the kill command to stop Apache. Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  32. httpd.conf: Virtual Directories • Sometime you want to create a Virtual Directory, where a document directory may not exist under your htdocs directory, but you want web clients to have access to it. • This is configured using the Alias directive in the httpd.conf, usage: Alias <virtualdirectory> <real directory> Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  33. Virtual Directories, con’t. • For example, if your Document Root is the default htdocs directory and you want web client to access a directory that contains Icons (/home/itiXXXX/apache/icons), you can create a Virtual Virtual Directory called myicons like this: Alias /myicons /home/itiXXXX/apache/icons • Now web clients can access this virtual directory by going to http://iti.rutgers.edu:XXXX/myicons to view the files in the icons directory. Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  34. httpd.conf: Redirects • The Redirect directive allows web clients to access a URL on your system and be re-directed to a remote URL somewhere else. • Usage: Redirect /localpath http://remote-url • Example: Redirect /photos http://members.yahoo.com/user/photos Redirects all request to http://yoursite.com/photos to http://members.yahoo.com/user/photos • Useful when you move portions of a webpage Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  35. Giving Web Access to Users on the System • Individual users on your system may wan the ability to post web content. • The UserDir Apache directive, allows each user on the system to create an special directory used to contain web content. • Usage: UserDir public_html • Now system users can place all of their web documents in a directory called public_html under their home directory. These documents can be accessed via the URL http://systemname/~username. Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  36. Access Control Files • Per directory configuration files can be used to supplement or override settings set on the server level. Most commonly used to password-protect a directory. • Allows for “on-the-fly” changes. No need to restart the server. • Generally referred to as .htaccess files even though the actual name of the file can be set in httpd.conf: AccessFileName .htaccess Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  37. Access Control Files, con’t. • Level of overrides allowed should also be set in httpd.conf: • AllowOverride None|All|Options|Indexes| FileInfo|AuthConfig|Limit • Default is “All”. • Access control file is placed in root of directory for which configuration is being modified. Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  38. Access Restrictions by Location • Access to directory contents can be granted or denied by IP address, network, hostname or name. <Directory /home/apache/apache/htdocs/restricted> order deny,allow deny from all allow from 165.230.30.68 .rutgers.edu internet.rutgers.edu </Directory> • Best to control access by IP address rather than hostname to avoid require DNS lookups for every attempted connection. • You can place these blocks access control blocks in the httpd.conf file or in an .htaccess file. Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  39. The Index File • When a web browser points to a directory, rather than a particular file (e.g. http://www.internet.rutgers.edu/II/ITI520 vs. http://www.internet.rutgers.edu/II/ITI520/index.html),Apache looks for an index file, which is the default web page for a particular directory. • You can specify the name of acceptable index files by using the DirectoryIndex directive in the httpd.conf file. • Usage: DirectoryIndex filename filename… • Apache will look for the index file names specified when a request is made to a directory. Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  40. Indexing • What happens if you type a URL into a browser that points to a directory rather than a specific file? – Will load the index file if directory includes any of the files specified with DirectoryIndex in httpd.conf: DirectoryIndex index.html index.htm • If no index file exists and indexing has been enabled, will get a directory listing. • If no index file exists and indexing has been disabled, will get an error message. • Advisable to leave indexing disabled for security reasons unless there is a specific need for it. Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  41. Indexing, con’t. • To enable indexing in httpd.conf: Options Indexes • Fancy indexing generates listing that includes representative icon, name, last modified, size, and description: IndexOptions FancyIndexing • Indexing requires module mod_autoindex, which is installed by default. Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

  42. Downloading a Binary Distribution • The Apache Foundation has pre-built binary distributions that are built for specific operating systems (no need to compile them). • You can download binary distributions at http://www.apache.org/dist/binaries/. – Look for the folder that contains your operating system – Download the current version. The file has a name similar to this: apache_1.3.12-i686-whatever- linux2.tar.gz Web Technology – Web Server Setup : Chris Uriarte

More Related