System.InstallationGuide
(the InstallationGuide topic in the System web).
For information on upgrades, please also refer to Foswiki:System.UpgradeGuide. A static HTML version of this document, UpgradeGuide.html
, is included in the root of your Foswiki distribution.
UpgradeGuide.html
, is included in the root of your Foswiki distribution.
Verify that your server meets the Foswiki system requirements, including having the minimum required Perl version and all required Perl modules installed. If you need to install any Perl libraries from CPAN for use by Foswiki, see Foswiki:Support.HowToInstallCpanModules for more information.
/path/to/foswiki
. foswiki
directory tree.
Note: for more information on the appropriate permissions to ensure security for your Foswiki data, see Foswiki:Support.SecuringYourSite.
The default file and directory access permissions as set by the distribution define a reasonable security level that will work for many types of installations, including shared hosting. Nonetheless, you should verify that the web server user has read access to all files and directories beneath the foswiki
directory, and execute access for all directories. Also verify that the data
and pub
directories and all the subdirectories and files beneath them allow write access for the web server user. chmod -R 770 foswiki
. Providing execute access to all files is potentially dangerous. This is a common mistake made by Foswiki installers. See Foswiki:Support.SettingFileAccessRightsLinuxUnix for a sample set of Unix commands to set the file and directory permissions.
foswiki
directory tree to the web server user, using the command chown -R user:group /path/to/foswiki
. The web server username varies in different installations; here are some sample commands for various Linux distributions: chown -R apache:apache /path/to/foswiki
chown -R www-data:www-data /path/to/foswiki
chown -R wwwrun:www /path/to/foswiki
/usr/bin/perl
then this step is not required. This step is required on Windows installations.
The easiest way to fix up the bin scripts is to run the tools/rewriteshebang.pl
script. If the Perl interpreter is in the default execution path, follow these steps:
cd /path/to/foswiki/tools perl -I ../lib rewriteshebang.plor for Windows users:
cd C:\path\to\foswiki\tools perl -I ..\lib rewriteshebang.plThe script will determine the location of the Perl interpreter and will prompt to update both the bin and tools scripts in a single step. The changed files will be reported, and it is safe to rerun the script. If the
perl
command does not work from the command line, then you need to find the location of your system's Perl interpreter. Insert the path to Perl in the first line of the rewriteshebang
script. For example:
cd C:\path\to\foswiki\tools C:\path\to\perl -I ..\lib rewriteshebang.pl
.cgi
or .pl
). This is not normally required with the Apache web server, though some hosted web servers are configured to require it. If the documentation for your web server indicates that a special extension is necessary, rename all the executable scripts in bin
; that is, rename bin/view
to bin/view.pl
, and so on. When configuring Foswiki (see the section "Configure Foswiki"), set the ScriptSuffix
option to the special extension.
bin/
and lib/
located under the Foswiki installation directory. If you have moved these directories, or if your system requires changes to the default Perl libraries, then this step is required.
Create the file LocalLib.cfg located at bin/LocalLib.cfg
bin
directory, copy the template file LocalLib.cfg.txt
to LocalLib.cfg
. Make sure the ownership and access rights of the copy are the same as LocalLib.cfg.txt.
bin/LocalLib.cfg
so that $foswikiLibPath
is set to the absolute file path of your lib
directory. For example: /path/to/foswiki/lib
.
$CPANBASE
to point to your personal CPAN install. Don't forget that the web server user has to be able to read those files as well.
foswiki.conf
). Performance is much better with a config file, and one file gives the best overview and ensures that you get a safe installation . However to use a config file you need root or sudo access to stop and start Apache. The Foswiki apache config file can be included from the main Apache config file. (Typically httpd.conf
or apache.conf
depending on your distribution). However most distributions have a directory from which any file that ends with .conf
gets included when you restart Apache (Example RedHat/Fedora/Centos: /etc/httpd/conf.d
, Gentoo: /etc/apache2/vhost.d
). If you use a virtual host setup in Apache you should include the foswiki.conf
file from inside the desired virtual host config in your Apache configuration.
.htaccess
files on each page access. Normally this is the only way to control Apache in a shared host environment where you have no root or sudo privileges.
foswiki_httpd_conf.txt
can be found in the root of the foswiki installation.
bin
and pub
. foswiki_httpd_conf.txt
file also has examples of configuring Apache appropriately.
ScriptAlias
directive for the bin
subdirectory, or an Alias
directive with SetHandler cgi-script
and Options ExecCGI
directives for the bin
subdirectory, so that the bin
scripts will be executed by Apache.
.htaccess
files for various subdirectories in your installation. Each file has help text explaining how to modify it for your configuration. For more information, see Foswiki:Support.SupplementalDocuments. location and name of sample .htaccess file | copy sample file to the following location |
---|---|
foswiki/root-htaccess.txt | foswiki/.htaccess |
foswiki/bin-htaccess.txt | foswiki/bin/.htaccess |
foswiki/pub-htaccess.txt | foswiki/pub/.htaccess |
foswiki/subdir-htaccess.txt | foswiki/<subdir>/.htaccess Copy to all other subdirectories below foswiki , including data , lib , locale , templates , tools , working . Copy to any other directories except for bin and pub addressed above. |
bin
and pub
. The sample .htaccess
files show how to configure Apache appropriately. It is important to verify that none of these directories can be directly accessed.
foswiki/bin/.htaccess
files contains the line SetHandler cgi-script
so that all scripts in the bin
directory will be executed by Apache.
.htaccess
are hidden files and will not be listed unless using the -a option, ex. ls -la
pub
directory. For example, most Linux distributions have a default Apache installation with PHP and server side include (SSI) enabled. This would allow PHP scripts uploaded as attachments to be executed, which is a security risk, so it should be disabled in the Apache configuration with php_admin_flag engine off
.
Different script execution mechanisms are disabled in different ways; see your web server configuration and documentation for more details.
configure
script open to the public. Limit access to the bin/configure
script to either localhost, an IP address or a specific user using basic Apache authentication. The Foswiki:Support.ApacheConfigGenerator lets you setup who has access to the configure
script. Also see the foswiki-httpd-conf.txt
or bin/.htaccess.txt
file for an example of the setting required to protect the configure
script.
To limit access to a particular user, set up a .htpasswd
file that contains the user name and password that Apache will use to authenticate the user: .htpasswd
file. It will destroy the email addresses stored in that file! If the file already exists, you can choose an existing user for access to configure.
foswiki/data
directory.
htpasswd -c .htpasswd <username>
, where <username> is the name of the user you will use to access the configure
script. Choose the username with care: the username cannot be an existing login name for your Foswiki installation, nor can it be used later on to register in Foswiki. Enter a password when prompted.
.htaccess
files, all include example settings to protect the configure script with a password. The critical section looks something like:
<FilesMatch "configure.*"> SetHandler cgi-script Order Deny,Allow Deny from all # List of IP addresses allowed to access configure Allow from 127.0.0.1 192.168.1.10 # specify username used on the "htpasswd" command above Require user someuserid # Set to "Any" to allow IP -or- userid, set to "All" to require both match Satisfy Any ErrorDocument 401 default </FilesMatch>Note: In addition to any web server security protection that you have set up, when saving any configuration settings for the first time on the
configure
web page, you will be prompted to set a configuration password. This password must be entered on all subsequent configuration changes, and is also used to log in via the internal admin link (see the section "Define the administrator user(s)"). Even after a configure
password has been set, access to the configure
page should still be restricted by the web server, in order to avoid revealing internal information to potential attackers.
Tip: You do not have to use the same password file for both Configure and for Foswiki user registration. If you use a separate file, you can create it using theFor more information, refer to Foswiki:Support.ProtectingYourConfiguration.htpasswd
commmand and complete segregate configure access from Foswiki access. This is probably safer, but does not allow users to change their configure password using Foswiki services. The password file has to be manually maintained..
- Generate an alternate password file to protect configure.
htpasswd -c -s /path/to/data/.htpasswd-admin configuserid
- Add / modify and delete this alternate file using the
htpasswd
command. Don't mix them up and usehtpasswd
on the Foswiki .htpasswd file!- Edit the foswiki apache configuration and modify the block (shown above) that protects the configuration command. Add or modify the following statements in the block. Don't remove the other statements!
<FilesMatch "configure.*"> AuthType Basic AuthName "admins only" AuthUserFile /path/to/data/.htpasswd-admin # Changing the Require user to Require valid-user allows any ID in the # file access to configure! Require valid-user </FilesMatch>
http://yourdomain/url/to/foswiki/bin/configure
into your browser address bar. configure
web page for the first time, you can only edit the section General Path Settings
. Make any required changes, and save the settings, whether or not you needed to make any changes. You will be prompted to set a password for the configure
page: this password must be entered for all subsequent configuration changes, and is also used to log in via the internal admin link (see the section "Define the administrator user(s)"). Note: The
configure
password is remembered byconfigure
, separate to web server access controls mentioned in "Protect the configure script".
General Path Settings
, continue configuring Foswiki. Configuration items which may require further attention will be highlighted.
{PermittedRedirectHostUrls}
. Example: if
{DefaultUrlHost}
is set tohttps://wiki.company.com
, an example{PermittedRedirectHostUrls}
might contain:https://company.com, http://111.222.123.234
Mail and Proxies
section. Email must be available so Foswiki can send registration emails. {EnableEmail}
. Otherwise the {WebMasterEmail}
parameter must be configured.
MailProgram
is typically suitable on most Linux systems, and no further configuration is required.
Net::SMPT
methods, you must also configure {SMTP}{MAILHOST}
. Many ISPs have introduced authentication when sending emails to fight spam so you may also have to set {SMTP}{Username}
and {SMTP}{Password}
.
Net::SMTP::SSL
will encrypt the connection to the e-mail server and is required for some email services like Google's GMail.
configure
, you may have to set {PROXY}{HOST}
and {PROXY}{PORT}
. Note: A standard Foswiki installation will not allow any new registrations unless there is a working SMTP configuration
SMTP authentication requires additional perl modules includingAuthen::SASL
andMIME::Base64
,
configure
page, you can configure Foswiki manually.
mod_auth_ldap
or mod_auth_mysql
. However, as your browser is caching your login, you must restart the browser to log out.
System.InstallationGuide
into the "Jump" text box. By doing this instead of using the INSTALL.html
file from the distribution, you will be able to use the embedded hyperlinks to jump directly to the referenced pages.
By default, your Foswiki installation is probably already using TemplateLogin, HtPasswdUser and TopicUserMappingContrib as the default
Login
,Password
anduser mapping
options.
Login
tab on the Security and Authentication
panel. Select the Foswiki::LoginManager::TemplateLogin
login manager.
Passwords
tab. Select the appropriate PasswordManager
for your system - the default is Foswiki::Users::HtPasswdUser
. There is also an EXPERT configure setting
{TemplateLogin}{PreventBrowserRememberingPassword}
that you can set to prevent Browsers from remembering username and passwords if you are concerned about public terminal usage.
HtPasswdUser
(the default), check the .htpasswd
file is being updated correctly with a new entry. If not, check {Htpasswd}{FileName}
is correct (under Security and Authentication
on the Password
tab in configure
), and that the webserver user has write permission.
This is a very important step, as users in this group can access all topics, independent of www.nutzpflanzen.de access controls.
Foswiki AccessControls do not protect topic attachments unless the web server has been configured to do so using the
viewfile
script. Visit Foswiki:Support.ApacheConfigGenerator for examples using Apache.As Template Login uses a wiki page for its login prompt, there is a great deal of flexibility in customizing the login page for your purposes.
The default new user template page is in System.NewUserTemplate. The same macros get expanded as in the template topics. You can create a custom new user topic by creating the NewUserTemplate topic in Main web, which will then override the default in System web. See System.UserForm for copy instructions.
EXCLUDED_
from the INCLUDE
tags) or add new ones.
New fields may also be added. The name=""
parameter of the <input>
tags must start with: "Fwk0..."
(if this is an optional entry), or "Fwk1..."
(if this is a required entry). This ensures that the fields are carried over into the user home page correctly.
Self-registration by Guest users
Registration by logged-in users
mod_auth_ldap
or mod_auth_mysql
you can just plug in to them directly.
The disadvantage is that because the user identity is cached in the browser, you can log in, but you can't log out again unless you restart the browser.
www.nutzpflanzen.de maps the REMOTE_USER
that was used to log in to the webserver to a WikiName using the table in Main.WikiUsers. This table is updated whenever a user registers, so users can choose not to register (in which case their webserver login name is used for their signature) or register (in which case that login name is mapped to their WikiName).
The same private .htpasswd
file used in www.nutzpflanzen.de Template Login can be used to authenticate Apache users, using the Apache Basic Authentication support.
To setup Apache Login, perform the following steps:Do not use the Apache
htpasswd
program with.htpasswd
files generated by www.nutzpflanzen.de!htpasswd
wipes out email addresses that www.nutzpflanzen.de plants in the info fields of this file.Apache Login is required for Apache-based login methods such as mod_ldap
You can use any Apache authentication module that sets the
REMOTE_USER
environment variable.
Security and Authentication
pane on the Login
tab in configure
: Foswiki::LoginManager::ApacheLogin
for {LoginManager}
.
Foswiki::Users::HtPasswdUser
for {PasswordManager}
.
Foswiki::Users::TopicUserMapping
for {UserMappingManager}
.
foswiki/bin-htaccess.txt
file to set the following Apache directives on the bin
scripts: <FilesMatch "(attach|edit|manage|rename|save|upload|mail|logon|rest|.*auth).*"> require valid-user </FilesMatch>You can also refer to the sample
foswiki_httpd_conf.txt
and bin-htaccess.txt
files to see how the appropriate Apache directives are specified.
HtPasswdUser
(the default), check the .htpasswd
file is being updated correctly with a new entry. If not, check {Htpasswd}{FileName}
is correct (under Security and Authentication
on the Password
tab in configure
), and that the webserver user has write permission.
This is a very important step, as users in this group can access all topics, independent of www.nutzpflanzen.de access controls.
Store
pane in configure
you will find the setting {RCS}{SearchAlgorithm}
.
By default it is set to Foswiki::Store::SearchAlgorithms::Forking
which is what you should keep if you install Foswiki in Linux or any other Unix type operating system.
If you install Foswiki on a Windows server, using an external grep program can create problems because of limitations in the length of command lines. You may be able to run with Forking in Windows if your directory path to Foswiki is kept short (short directory names and few levels), however the recommended (safe) setting for Windows is Foswiki::Store::SearchAlgorithms::PurePerl
.
admin
and the password established when initially saving the configuration. Don't log in with the wikiname AdminUser
.
After installing Foswiki, you can also register other users that you will use to administer Foswiki. To make a user an administrator, add the WikiName for the user to the AdminGroup
, defined in the Main.AdminGroup
topic in your Foswiki installation.
Note that with the sudo or internal admin login, it is not necessary to add other users to the AdminGroup. However if you have more than one administrator, you may still want to do this to ensure that topic changes are attributed to a specific user instead of the default Main.AdminUser.
By adding users to Main.AdminGroup: bin/configure
password is not required
bin/configure
will need to be shared among administrators
System.InstallationGuide
into the "Jump" text box. By doing this instead of using the INSTALL.html
file from the distribution, you will be able to use the embedded hyperlinks to jump directly to the referenced pages.
To add an initial administrator to the AdminGroup
, perform the following steps:
Main.AdminGroup
topic and select the "internal admin login" link. Login using the password you set on the configure
page.
Main.AdminGroup
topic. Follow the instructions on the page to add users to the AdminGroup. You do not need to edit the topic.
AdminGroup
that you use only for administering your Foswiki site. See System.AccessControls for more information on access controls and user groups.
http://yourdomain.com/url/to/foswiki/bin/view/System/InstallationGuidePart2
to proceed with further tailoring your site..
In order to keep your user, group, and site configuration information separate from the actual content of your site, it is recommended that you create a new web in which your site's pages will reside. See System.ManagingWebs for more information on Wiki webs and how to create one.
configure
script and make sure you have resolved all errors and are satisfied that you understand any warnings.
Resource | Required Server Environment |
---|---|
Perl | 5.8.8 or higher |
RCS (Revision Control System) | 5.7 or higher (including GNU diff ) Optional. Foswiki includes a pure Perl implementation of RCS (RcsLite) that can be used instead, at the cost of performance |
GNU diff | GNU diff 2.7 or higher is required when not using the all-Perl RcsLite. Install within the PATH if not included with RCS (check version with diff -v ) Must be the version used by RCS, to avoid problems with binary attachments - RCS may have hard-coded path to diff |
Other external programs | fgrep, egrep |
Cron/scheduler | • Unix: cron • Windows: cron equivalents |
Web server | Apache is well supported; for information on other servers, see Foswiki:Support.InstallingOnSpecificPlatforms. |
lib/DEPENDENCIES
.
The following CPAN modules are not shipped with Foswiki. Note that Foswiki extensions may add additional requirements.
Modules marked as Required may still be optional if certain default core features are not used.
Module | Required/Optional | Description |
---|---|---|
CPAN:HTML::Entities | Required | Used for WYSIWYG Editing |
CPAN:HTML::Parser | Required | Used for WYSIWYG Editing |
CPAN:HTML::Tree | Required | Used by CompareRevisionsAddOn. |
CPAN:URI | Required | Used by MailerContrib for email notifications of topic changes. |
CPAN:LWP | Required | Used by the Configure Extensions Installer, and for external URL based INCLUDEs |
CPAN:version | Required | version >= 0.77 required for module version checks |
CPAN:Digest::SHA | Optional | Required to use SHA1 password encoding, since Perl 5.9.3 part of core |
CPAN:Digest::SHA1 | Optional | Required by the Foswiki PageCaching feature |
CPAN:Win32::Console | Optional | May be required for Internationalization on Windows |
CPAN:Archive::Tar | Optional | Required by the Extensions Installer in configure if command line tar or unzip is not available, since Perl 5.9.3 part of core. |
CPAN:Archive::Zip | Optional | Alternative to Archive::Tar, used by the Extensions Installer if Archive::Tar and command line tar and unzip also unavailable |
CPAN:Net::SMTP::SSL | Optional | Required by Net::SMPT to send email over SSL to providers such as gmail. |
CPAN:Authen::SASL | Optional | Required by Net::SMTP if email server requires authentication. |
configure
script, or if you're still trying to get to that point, check from the command line like this:
perl -e 'use FileHandle; print $FileHandle::VERSION."\n"'For more detailed dependency information, try the script
dependencies_installer.pl
located in the tools
directory, which makes perl module installation easier. Run it with option -h
to understand basics. This script requires confirmation before it actually does something.
Change
{ValidationMethod}{Method}
fromstrikeone
toembedded
in configure to allow non-javascript browsers to edit/save/upload
pub
directory.)
lib
directory at the same level as the bin
directory. You can create this directory elsewhere and configure the bin/setlib.cfg
file. Foswiki dir: | What it is: | Where to copy: | Example: |
---|---|---|---|
foswiki | start-up pages | root Foswiki dir | /home/smith/public_html/foswiki/ |
foswiki/bin | CGI bin | CGI-enabled dir | /home/smith/public_html/foswiki/bin |
foswiki/lib | library files | same level as bin | /home/smith/public_html/foswiki/lib |
foswiki/locale | language files | dir secure from public access | /home/smith/public_html/foswiki/locale |
foswiki/pub | public files | htdoc enabled dir | /home/smith/public_html/foswiki/pub |
foswiki/data | topic data | dir secure from public access | /home/smith/public_html/foswiki/data |
foswiki/templates | web templates | dir secure from public access | /home/smith/public_html/foswiki/templates |
foswiki/tools | Foswiki utlilities | dir secure from public access | /home/smith/public_html/foswiki/tools |
foswiki/working | Temporary and internal files | dir secure from public access | /home/smith/public_html/foswiki/working |
configure
page) configure
page. However, if you are unable to get the configure
page to display (for example, if a dependency is missing), or for some reason you do not wish to use the configure
page, then you can configure Foswiki manually
Perform the following steps to manually configure Foswiki: lib/Foswiki.spec
to lib/LocalSite.cfg
$Foswiki::cfg{DefaultUrlHost} $Foswiki::cfg{ScriptUrlPath} $Foswiki::cfg{ScriptDir} $Foswiki::cfg{PubUrlPath} $Foswiki::cfg{PubDir} $Foswiki::cfg{DataDir} $Foswiki::cfg{ToolsDir} $Foswiki::cfg{TemplateDir} $Foswiki::cfg{LocalesDir} $Foswiki::cfg{WorkingDir} $Foswiki::cfg{OS}
$Foswiki::cfg{LoginManager} $Foswiki::cfg{WebMasterEmail} $Foswiki::cfg{SMTP}{MAILHOST} $Foswiki::cfg{SMTP}{SENDERHOST}
__END__
and everything following it.