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Netdisco INSTALL -- Instructions for setting up the Netdisco application.
Netdisco 1.0
Developed by team of Open Source authors headed by Eric Miller, Bill Fenner, and Oliver Gorwits, originally created by Max Baker. See list at the end of README of all the contributors.
Netdisco was created at the University of California, Santa Cruz (UCSC), Networking and Technology Services (NTS) department. UCSC continues to support the development of Netdisco by providing development servers and beer.
The Netdisco project is hosted by Source Forge at https://sourceforge.net/projects/netdisco and https://sourceforge.net/projects/snmp-info.
Netdisco is an Open Source project created and maintained by volunteer developers.
Please use the netdisco-users
mailing list for all help, problems and
comments. Developers, patches, and ideas are always welcome.
In case of problems, the first thing you should do is search for answers on the mailing list at http://sourceforge.net/search/.
To subscribe to the netdisco-users
mailing list to ask questions go to
http://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/netdisco-users.
To report bugs, please use the Bug tracker on the Netdisco Source Forge project page at https://sourceforge.net/tracker2/?group_id=80033&atid=558508
If you would like to help develop Netdisco, or have code to contribute, please
submit your code to the patches tracker at
https://sourceforge.net/tracker2/?group_id=80033&atid=558510 and join us on
the netdisco-devel
mailing list.
The developers are now maintaining a registry of Netdisco installs. This is mainly for morale boosting purposes, but also helps us direct feature requests to our target audience. One drawback of the Source Forge system is that we have no idea how many people are using the software compared to the number of downloads. So after you have Netdisco up and running please spend a minute to let us know you're using it at http://netdisco.org/register.html.
There are three general flavors of installs out there for Netdisco:
The most common way is to install it from source on your machine using an install script (see bin/install and http://www.auburn.edu/~gouldwp/netdisco/), or manually using this document.
Netdisco is available as a package / port on a few flavors of Linux and BSD. Check your favorite package repository first before going to the trouble of installing it manually.
Charles Goldsmith maintains a VMWARE Appliance version of Netdisco at http://wokka.org/netdisco/. This is by far the easiest way to get up and running w/ Netdisco.
Netdisco is built using lots of fine Open-Source tools:
5.8.x and newer advised. Whatever version that comes with your distro should be fine.
Listed below
5.1.x and newer advised. Reported working on 5.0.x as well.
Version 8.x or higher suggested.
Reported working for versions 7.2, 7.3, 7.4, 8.0, 8.1
1.26 or newer required. 1.39 or newer advised, especially for Apache2 installs.
1.3.x and 2.x supported. 2.x strongly preferred.
Get the mod_perl version to match your Apache:
mod_perl version 1.29 or higher is recommended.
Do not install version 1.99! Make sure you have mod_perl version 2.02 or later.
Version 2.22 or higher recommended.
See INSTALL below for details on how to retrieve and install each prerequisite.
Netdisco was developed on a FreeBSD system but should work on any system that Postgres, Perl, Apache, and Net-SNMP run on.
Linux is a sure bet. Successful installs have been reported under Redhat, Mandrivia, Gentoo and Debian. A beta RPM is available for Mandrivia, but may be out of date. One user has reported getting Netdisco running on OS X. Solaris has been successful for 8 and 10. Windows will take a lot of massaging but should be possible under Cygwin.
See OS Specific Notes below for details.
If you are upgrading your copy of Netdisco, please read through this file
and then read the UPGRADE
document in this directory.
This is not a terribly easy install. If you aren't comfortable installing programs from source and using a text editor, get some help. Some packaged versions of Netdisco are available.
Get the newest version from http://www.netdisco.org.
tar xvfz netdisco-x.xx_with_mibs.tar.gz
mkdir /usr/share/netdisco mv netdisco-x.xx/* /usr/share/netdisco
If you plan to install to a directory other than /usr/share/netdisco
then
you must change a couple files. Otherwise Skip down to Number 2.
The following shell scripts require you specify the Netdisco directory if it is not in the default location:
sql/pg -d /path/to/netdisco bin/netdisco_daemon
Set the home
option in netdisco.conf.
Change all the appearances of /usr/share/netdisco
in netdisco_apache.conf
to match your new directory.
Change all the appearances of /usr/share/netdisco
in netdisco_apache_dir.conf
to match your new directory.
netdisco
Linux:
useradd -d /usr/share/netdisco netdisco
BSD:
adduser netdisco
Give this user permission to the installed files
chown -R netdisco.netdisco /usr/share/netdisco
Once Netdisco is up and running most administration can be done from the Web interface. Whoever will be doing the back-end administration will need to have write access and will need write access on Netdisco's files.
Add the unix account names of administrators that will modify the
source code or use the command line interface interface to the netdisco
group in /etc/group.
Don't forget to logout and login after adding yourself to a group.
Netdisco runs Postgres SQL as its database back-end.
See the section OS Specific Notes below for any notes relating to your operating system of for a binary version.
There is probably a binary package all ready for you. See your distribution's instructions for more help.
If you cannot use a binary package, download and compile the source code from http://www.postgresql.org.
If you are installing Postgres from source you may have to run these two commands in order to install the DBD::Pg Perl module later on :
export POSTGRES_INCLUDE=/usr/local/postgres/include export POSTGRES_LIB=/usr/local/postgres/lib
You may also have to modify your /etc/ld.so.conf to include your new
POSTGRES_LIB directory. Don't forget to run ldconf
afterwards.
Netdisco's settings in Postgres are
Database User : netdisco Database Name : netdisco Database Password : you choose it
Edit netdisco.conf and netdisco_apache.conf to match this user name and password.
Follow these steps to setup Netdisco in Postgres.
If you have just setup Postgres for the first time you may have to change the default permissions in $PG_DATA/pg_hba.conf. $PG_DATA might be in /usr/local/pgsql or in /var/db, depends on your OS. Check the postgres users' homedir files for the location of $PG_DATA.
For installation you must give the database user access to the template1
database.
The following line will give all users who have logon permissions in Unix access
to the template1
database.
local template1 all ident
Restart Postgres. If you have permission problems try the following line which opens up access to all users.
local template1 all all
Next you must give the netdisco
database user access to the netdisco
database.
The following line will give all database users access to a database that is the same
name as them. This line must be put above all the rest of the uncommented lines in the
pg_hba.conf file to take precedence.
local sameuser all md5
For older 7.3 or 7.4 installs of Postgres you may have to swap md5
for crypt
.
Upgrade. Please.
Finally if you would like to have root
be able to access all databases,
try this one :
local all root trust
You must now restart Postgres
Linux : one of these three
/etc/rc.d/init.d/postgresql restart service postgresql restart /etc/rc.d/postgresql restart
FreeBSD :
/usr/local/etc/rc.d/*pgsql* restart
If there are problems with this step you will receive an error that mentions something about pg_hba.conf.
Make sure Postgres is up and running.
The pg
command use netdisco.conf to find the database
user name and password. Make sure that the database user name and password are
set.
As root, run sql/pg --init
to create the database and user for Netdisco.
When you are prompted for a password, enter the new password for the database
user you are creating. This is the same password you set in
netdisco_apache.conf and in netdisco.conf. The pg
command has additional
options shown in pg --help
cd /usr/share/netdisco/sql ./pg --help ./pg --init
If you get permissions errors, find out the name of your database user. This
is the unix
user that the Postgres database is running as. The default name
for some Linux RPM versions is postgres
and for some BSD installations
pgsql
. If yours is different, please specify it with the -u
option to
sql/pg.
Now as a non-privileged user (root) make sure you can get into the database by
running sql/pg
. The database user password given above will be
retrieved from netdisco.conf.
cd /usr/share/netdisco/sql ./pg
You should see output similar to the below:
Welcome to psql 8.0.6, the PostgreSQL interactive terminal.
Type: \copyright for distribution terms \h for help with SQL commands \? for help with psql commands \g or terminate with semicolon to execute query \q to quit
netdisco=> netdisco=> \q
If you have freshly installed Postgres then the default memory usage NEEDS to be increased for efficiency. See the Postgres documentation for postgresql.conf. Newer versions may have options to turn on for automatic tuning.
Specifically, you really need to up the maximum connections and shared memory settings. After you have Netdisco running on a large installation it would be of great benefit to get a Postgres guru in there to tune things for you. See README for more info about how to speed things up now and again.
See http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/kernel-resources.html for kernel settings related to Postgres that you should check.
Make sure that Postgres is set to start on reboot of the server.
chkconfig postgresql on
Make sure that the file in /usr/local/etc/rc.d
is alright and
you have added
postgresql_enable="YES"
to /etc/rc.conf.
Read the section in README about Database Maintenance... every once in a
while you may have to run a VACUUM
and REINDEX
by hand if things get too slow.
This appears to be less necessary in Postgres 8.0 and up.
If you have Postgres installed in a remote location then all you have
to do is add that host information to the db_Pg
line in netdisco.conf.
db_Pg = dbi:Pg:dbname=netdisco;host=HOSTNAME;port=PORT;
On the Postgres machine, allow your remote front end to contact the back-end database. Here is a sample line in pg_hba.conf.
#TYPE DATABASE USER IP-ADDRESS IP-MASK METHOD host netdisco netdisco 101.102.103.104 255.255.255.0 md5
Don't forget to restart Postgres after changing the pg_hba.conf file.
There are three components to set up for SNMP:
Net-SNMP lives at http://net-snmp.sourceforge.net.
There are two known bad versions: 5.2.3 and 5.3.1 !
Please use the older working versions 5.2.2 or 5.3.0.1, or try the newer 5.2.4, 5.3.2 or 5.4 when they're available. See http://www.net-snmp.org/dev/schedule.html for release schedule plans. You can also use a nightly version from the appropriate patch branch, from http://www.net-snmp.org/nightly/tarballs/.
The symptom of the failure is getting an error Not an ARRAY reference at SNMP/Info.pm line xxx
.
A workaround if you must use a buggy Net-SNMP version is to use SNMPv1 or turn
off bulkwalk with bulkwalk_off: yes
-- but the best thing to do is change your
Net-SNMP version.
You can update the perl SNMP module seperately from the libraries and binaries, using CPAN. As of this writing, the current module on CPAN is 5.0301002 which does not have this bug. Only try to use this module with a matching Net-SNMP version - i.e., if you get a warning like this when you try to install:
ERROR: Net-SNMP installed version: 5.2.3 => 5.0203 Perl Module Version: 5.0301
then please try a different method.
Check the Net-SNMP page for binaries and see OS Specific Notes below for details.
Download Net-SNMP from http://net-snmp.sourceforge.net
This used to be called ucd-snmp. However, don't download ucd-snmp; it is too old.
When you run ./configure
, make sure you add the switch --with-perl-modules
./configure --with-perl-modules --enable-shared make make install
If you already have Net-SNMP installed, then go to the source directory and
in the perl
subdirectory and run perl Makefile.PL
cd /path/to/net-snmp-5.1.x/perl perl Makefile.PL make make install
********************************************************************
DO NOT INSTALL the SNMP::
or Net::SNMP
modules off of CPAN. These
modules are not related to Net-SNMP and are not compatible with Netdisco.
********************************************************************
You probably will not have to do this step unless you have installed Net-SNMP somewhere other than /usr/local/ or have some specific SNMP defaults to change for these tools. Usually the settings in netdisco.conf are more than enough.
snmpconf
Make sure to set the MIB dir if non-standard or you are not using the MIBS that come with Netdisco.
(Textual mib Parsing -> Specifies directories to be searched for mibs)
Make sure this newly created snmp.conf lives in /usr/local/share/snmp or wherever you put a custom install.
SNMP::Info is one half of the Netdisco application.
SNMP::Info holds all the device-specific code to retrieve data from network devices via SNMP. A wide variety of devices are supported. You may need to add support for other devices if they do not follow a standard interface. This is not too complex. See SNMP::Info and consult the mailing list archives for more details.
SNMP::Info is available from http://snmp-info.sourceforge.net and from CPAN. You must have Net-SNMP installed before installing it.
You have four different options in installing SNMP::Info
perl -MCPAN -e shell o conf prerequisites_policy ask install SNMP::Info
Download newest version from http://snmp-info.sourceforge.net
tar xvfz SNMP-Info-1.x.tar.gz cd SNMP-Info-1.x perl Makefile.PL make install
If you plan to add or change device support in SNMP::Info to customize Netdisco to your devices, you should install SNMP::Info this way.
make snmp
This will create the SNMP/ directory where SNMP::Info will live. Periodically you should re-run
make snmp
To update to the most current CVS version.
See OS Specific Notes below for details.
MIBs that are required for SNMP::Info are included with Netdisco in the
mibs/ directory if you installed the netdisco-1.0_with_mibs
package.
If you installed the netdisco
package without included MIB files, then
please download the netdisco-mibs
package from
http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php. Place
these files in /usr/share/netdisco/mibs
.
GraphViz is used to create the Network Map.
It lives at http://www.graphviz.org/.
Get the newest version from http://www.graphviz.org/pub/graphviz. Unarchive and install. Some binary versions are available.
Copy a True Type Font file (.ttf) into the Netdisco directory and
change node_font
in netdisco.conf to match.
cp /path/to/windows/fonts/lucon.ttf /usr/share/netdisco
You can grab arial.ttf or lucon.ttf out of the c:\windows\fonts directory of any Windows machine.
Review other graph settings in netdisco.conf. See README for details on the settings.
Make sure that neato
or twopi
is in your path, and in the path
in netdisco.crontab.
which twopi which neato
After the Perl Modules step below, make sure the Graphviz Perl module got installed
perldoc GraphViz
NOTE: You can safely ignore all warnings about size too small for label
.
Using recent versions of Mason and mod_perl, Netdisco runs fine under Apache2.
It is strongly advised to use Apache2. Consider section 7.2 as historical.
See the O/S specific notes at the bottom of this document for a binary install or install Apache 1.3.x From Scratch:
Comment out the lines at the top of netdisco_apache.conf that are related to Apache2.
Install Apache 1.3.x and mod_perl 1.x and mod_ssl
Netdisco is designed to work in a secure (https) or non-secure environment. Due to the security and privacy concerned associated with this data, using a secure server is recommended.
Below is my method if you haven't installed apache and mod_perl before. I statically compile mod_perl, and mod_ssl then leave the rest of the modules as dynamically loadable objects (DSO).
Get Apache from http://httpd.apache.org
Get mod_perl from http://perl.apache.org
Get mod_ssl from http://www.modssl.org
Unarchive all three to the same directory, maybe /usr/local/src
This step makes the framework that mod_ssl and mod_perl need.
cd apache_1.3* ./configure
No need to make it yet.
Mod_SSL gives us a secure server (https) for Netdisco to run under.
The OpenSSL library is a prerequirement for mod_ssl and may or may not already be on your system. See OS Specific Notes at the bottom of this document.
To use a source version, you need to point the apache1 installer to the
install. First follow the instructions in the INSTALL that comes with
mod_ssl
. Then use the command below:
SSL_BASE=/path/to/openssl-0.9.x \ ./configure \ --with-apache=../apache_1.3.x \ --disable_rule=SSL_COMPAT
This step sets up mod_perl for this copy of apache :
cd ../mod_perl-1.x /usr/bin/perl Makefile.PL \ APACHE_SRC=../apache_1.3.x/src \ EVERYTHING=1 \ DO_HTTPD=1 \ USE_APACI=1 \ PREP_HTTPD=1 \ PERL_SECTIONS=1
make
Now we're ready to make the main apache and install all of the above (mod_ssl, mod_perl, and Apache).
cd ../apache_1.3* ./configure \ --prefix=/usr/local/apache \ --enable-module=most \ --enable-shared=max \ --activate-module=src/modules/perl/libperl.a \ --with-perl=/usr/bin/perl \ --enable-module=ssl make make certificate make install
cd ../mod_perl* make install
Add the following lines in your httpd.conf
.
Your httpd.conf
will live in /usr/local/apache/conf
if you installed
using the method above. For system installed packages, try /etc/httpd
or /usr/local/etc/httpd
.
Add this line once in the end of httpd.conf
not in a VirtualHost section.
Include /usr/share/netdisco/netdisco_apache.conf
If you do not have virtual hosts setup and/or you have a main server, add this line right after the first include :
Include /usr/share/netdisco/netdisco_apache_dir.conf
If you have Virtual Hosts or are setting up a secure server, put the following line in each of them that you want Netdisco turned on for:
If you are not using Virtual Hosts, then add this line under the netdisco_apache.conf line.
Include /usr/share/netdisco/netdisco_apache_dir.conf
Make sure you have this include line for the secure server virtual host *:443 at the bottom of http.conf.
Set the Mason data directory writable to the apache user that does the requests.
Assuming nobody
is the user that the apache web server runs under,
run this command as root
:
mkdir /usr/share/netdisco/mason chown nobody.netdisco /usr/share/netdisco/mason
The name of the user is listed in httpd.conf
under the User
directive.
Some distros use the name apache
or www
as the web server unix user.
Below is a list of required modules for Netdisco, freely available from CPAN http://www.cpan.org. Many of these modules have prerequisite modules. Many of these are available in distros already as packages.
PLEASE check that you have these in package form first to allow for automatic updating of these dependency libraries. A good place to start is the Mason library.
Use the CPAN module that comes with Perl to install the modules and their prerequisites automatically:
perl -MCPAN -e shell
o conf prerequisites_policy ask install Digest::MD5 install Bundle::DBI install Apache::DBI install DBD::Pg install DB_File (for Apache::Session) install Apache::Session install HTML::Entities install HTML::Mason install MasonX::Request::WithApacheSession install Graph ( > 0.50 ) install GraphViz ( > 2.02 ) install Compress::Zlib (probably already have this one) install Parallel::ForkManager install Net::NBName (optional for NetBIOS lookup on devices) install Net::LDAP (optional for LDAP authentication) install Net::SSLeay (optional for encrypted LDAP authentication) install IO::Socket::SSL (optional for encrypted LDAP authentication)
For Apache1 install these modules:
install Apache::Test (for Apache::Request, you may need to do a 'force install') install Apache::Request
For Apache2 install this module:
install Apache2::Request
Some of these you will probably already have installed. Others you may need to force
with force install ModuleName
. Do Not include the comments in (parens)!
If you don't have Perl installed in /usr/bin
, you will need to modify
the first lines of netdisco and bin/doc_munge to point to the
version of Perl you would like to use.
Modify netdisco.conf to match your site.
See README for detailed configuration descriptions.
Change the follow lines in netdisco_apache.conf to match your database user name and password that you picked in step 4.2:
session_user_name session_password session_cookie_domain
Use this crontab to control the frequency of data collection done by Netdisco. See section 15 of this document for details.
Change center_network_device
to a network device that is well connected to the main
segment by a supported discovery protocol (CDP/FDP/SONMP/LLDP).
Add a user to the Netdisco application that will be the administrator account.
/usr/share/netdisco/netdisco -u joebob
Add more users from the web Admin Panel
once Netdisco is up and running.
This step is only necessary if you have installed from CVS.
Make sure that the POD2TEXT
lines in Makefile point to where your Perl binaries
are installed.
This step will create documentation files from the source .pod
, .pm
, and
.pl
files.
cd /usr/share/netdisco && gmake doc
Run this step if you would like the SNMP::Info documentation available from Netdisco.
Since the config files contain SNMP community strings and database passwords, you must make them only available to the administrators for security.
chgrp netdisco /usr/share/netdisco/*.conf chmod 660 /usr/share/netdisco/*.conf
The Organizationally Unique Identifier
(OUI) database allows Netdisco to
identify the manufacture of a network card using the first 24 bits of the MAC
address.
Run the following command to import the contents of oui.txt into your database.
cd /usr/share/netdisco netdisco -O
If you run into errors because of UTF-8 or other exotic characters in oui.txt you may need to add this line to netdisco.conf.
db_Pg_env = PGCLIENTENCODING => iso8859-1
You may also try changing the above from iso8859-1
to UTF-8
.
The database of OUIs is needed by Netdisco and is available from the IEEE.
This will use wget
to download oui.txt from the IEEE and import it into
the Netdisco database.
cd /usr/share/netdisco gmake oui
If you do not have wget
download oui.txt manually and run netdisco -O
.
Now that you have everything setup, ``cold'' restart the web-server.
apachectl stop apachectl start
Check the apache error_log for errors. See OS Specific Notes below for details.
Pick a device that you can access with the command snmpwalk
.
Tell Netdisco to discover that device:
cd /usr/share/netdisco ./netdisco -d devicename
Make sure that this step actually works. This is a good metric that you have now installed Netdisco correctly. Add the -D flag to get copious debugging info.
See README for a description of Topology Information.
If your network uses a supported topology discovery protocol (CDP/FDP/SONMP/LLDP) pick a device that you consider close to the center of the network and start an auto-discovery from there:
cd /usr/share/netdisco ./netdisco -r myrouter
If your network is not CDP friendly, then see README for how to use the manual topology file netdisco-topology.txt.
You MUST supply Netdisco with a working topology or MAC addresses will show up on uplink ports instead of end ports.
First restart Apache so that Netdisco will see the changes that you have made in netdisco.conf. Note that a graceful restart will not re-read the configuration file. A full restart is required. See Step 11.
Next, point a browser to /netdisco on the server you have Netdisco installed on.
http://localhost/netdisco
If everything is working you should be able to login with the user name and password you added in Step 9.4. You should also be able to access the Admin Panel.
If you have problems, check the error_log of apache for messages.
tail /usr/local/apache/logs/error_log
Once you're sure Netdisco is setup correctly, modify netdisco.crontab.
vi netdisco.crontab
Change center_network_device
to one of your core routers or switches.
You may want to fine-tune these jobs to your network. If jobs run too frequent and overlap, nothing bad will happen, it's just higher load on your network devices and Netdisco server.
Once Netdisco has been running for a day, look at the BackEnd Log
in the web
browser and see how long each of the jobs is taking to finish. If there is overlap,
for example if your arpnip is taking over 60 minutes or your macsuck is taking
over 120 minutes, then consider decreasing the frequency of these jobs as to not
cause extra load on your network devices.
Now, as root
, load the crontab for the netdisco
user.
su crontab -u netdisco /usr/share/netdisco/netdisco.crontab
The admin deaemon performs administration jobs that are requested from the web front-end. See README for a full description of the admin daemon.
/usr/share/netdisco/bin/netdisco_daemon start
The daemon will be respawned daily in the Cron job listed above. The restart is not 100% necessary, it is added as a precaution in case any of the prerequisite libraries have memory leaks.
If you would like the daemon to be started upon bootup, then do the following:
This is for Redhat/Mandrake/Fedora. Debian and Gentoo might be a little different.
ln -s /usr/share/netdisco/bin/netdisco_daemon /etc/rc.d/init.d chkconfig --add netdisco_daemon chkconfig netdisco_daemon on
Now you should be able to use this command:
service netdisco_daemon {stop,start,restart,status}
ln -s /usr/share/netdisco/bin/netdisco_daemon /usr/local/etc/rc.d/netdisco.sh
Add the following line to your /etc/rc.d/rc.local file :
/usr/share/netdisco/bin/netdisco_daemon start
A port is available for FreeBSD in /usr/ports/net-mgmt/netdisco
. Make sure
that the port is up to date with this version of Netdisco. This is the best
way to install Netdisco on FreeBSD.
Install Postgres from ports:
cd /usr/ports/databases/postgresql83-server make install
Make sure Postgres is configured to start at system startup time by putting
postgresql_enable="YES"
in /etc/rc.conf.
Next initialize the database:
/usr/local/etc/rc.d/010.pgsql.sh initdb
And start the database server:
/usr/local/etc/rc.d/010.pgsql.sh start
Install Net-SNMP from ports.
cd /usr/ports/net/net-snmp && make install
Anywhere in this document you see a reference to make you should run gmake.
SNMP::Info is available on ports. Please check that the version listed there is as new as the version required by Netdisco.
cd /usr/ports/net-mgmt/p5-SNMP-Info make install
GraphViz is available on ports:
cd /usr/ports/graphics/graphviz && make install
For the ports version of apache, to cold restart (ie. for Step 11) or for whenever you change the config file, use this command :
/usr/local/etc/rc.d/apache2.sh stop /usr/local/etc/rc.d/apache2.sh start
or
/usr/local/etc/rc.d/apache.sh stop /usr/local/etc/rc.d/apache.sh start
Also, double-check that Apache starts on its own at reboot. On BSD, make sure that you've added
apache2_enable="YES"
to /etc/rc.conf.
You can install these Perl modules from Ports
www/p5-HTML-Mason database/p5-DBI database/p5-DBD-Pg www/p5-Apache-DBI www/p5-Apache-Session www/p5-MasonX-Request-WithApacheSession
Install these ports
www/apache22 www/mod_perl2 www/p5-libapreq2
If you choose to use apache1 from source you will need to install OpenSSL to provide a secure (https) server.
Installing OpenSSL :
cd /usr/ports/devel/mm && make install cd /usr/ports/security/openssl && make install
Setup mod_ssl :
cd /path/to/mod_ssl_1.x.x SSL_BASE=SYSTEM \ ./configure \ --with-apache=../apache_1.3.x \ --disable_rule=SSL_COMPAT
See http://developer.apple.com/internet/macosx/postgres.html for detailed instructions on installing PostgreSQL with OS X.
It is reported to be in DarwinPorts
or you can check out
http://www.phil.uu.nl/~js/graphviz/.
See the very old, following three links in addition to this document to use Apache1 w/ OS X:
http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/a/mac/2002/11/05/apache_osx.html http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/a/mac/2002/12/18/apache_modssl.html http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/a/mac/2003/02/07/libapreq_update.html
Here are some notes for installing Netdisco on Linux. If your distro is not listed here, look over the install scripts for other distros at http://www.auburn.edu/~gouldwp/netdisco/ in the READMEs section.
If you have installed the Net-SNMP RPM from an old
Redhat or Mandrake it
does not include the Perl modules. Uninstall it and install a newer
version by hand as below.
rpm -e net-snmp
Same goes for Debian. DO NOT use the apt-get version of Net-SNMP, install by hand (it's easy!).
For Redhat and Mandrake systems you will make sure that a lot of -devel
packages are installed. For example, if you see errors about not having a
PNG or JPEG library you must install the -devel
packages of those libraries
as needed:
urpmi libjpeg62-devel libpng3-devel
If you get some weird error in build about not having intl.la
then
make sure you have the gettext packages installed :
urpmi gettext-devel
For most Linux distros where you use the built-in apache web server use one of these commands to cold restart Apache in Step 11 :
service httpd stop service httpd start
OR
/path/to/init.d/httpd stop /path/to/init.d/httpd start
For the path try /etc/init.d or /etc/rc.d/init.d.
Warning: Some Linux distributions such as Redhat 6.x install mod_perl as a
Dynamic Shared Object (DSO). This is known to be unstable, especially with
Mason. Compile mod_perl statically using the method listed above if your
distro compiles mod_perl1 using DSOs. If you suspect yours is not compiled in,
run httpd -l
and see if mod_perl.c
is listed (it should be).
OpenSSL is required for a secure (https) server when using apache1. OpenSSL is installed by default on most Linux distros.
You will have to tell the OS to look for the Kerberos libraries used in this version of OpenSSL:
./configure \ --with-apache=../apache_1.3.x \ --disable_rule=SSL_COMPAT make C_INCLUDE_PATH=/usr/kerberos/include
(Thanks to David Martin for this info)
Netdisco 0.95 packages are available in the Fedora 11 repositories, and the EPEL repositories for RHEL/CentOS 5.
Newer releases may be available from the package author's website, at http://www.auburn.edu/~gouldwp/netdisco.
We expect RPMs for Netdisco 1.0 and its dependencies to appear in the Fedora and EPEL repositories in due course.
An RPM is available for Mandrivia Linux, but may be out of date. Please check that the RPM for Netdisco 0.95 is marked at least 200611 or newer.
Debian 5.0 (Lenny) contains the Netdisco 0.95 packages and all dependencies. Newer releases may be available at http://packages.debian.org/netdisco.
We expect packages for Netdisco 1.0 and its dependencies to appear in the official repositories for Debian ``Squeeze'' in due course.
Jordi Guijarro reported that the version that comes with Woody is too old. Install a newer version from source.
Netdisco has been tested with Mandake 9.1
Perl 5.8.1 on Mandrake 9.x may be a problem (if you get
an out of memory
error, you may need to change to
5.6.1 or 5.8.3+).
Installing Postgres the easy way:
urpmi postgresql postgresql-devel postgresql-server postgresql-docs
The files you will need to edit below are in /var/lib/pgsql/data.
If you lost / don't have install CDs :
The following line uses an FTP site that has the 9.0 RPMs because I lost the CDs. Check the current mirror list at http://www.mandrakelinux.com/en/ftp.php3 and choose a mirror close to you.
urpmi.addmedia ftpsite ftp://mirror.mcs.anl.gov/pub/Mandrake-old/9.0/i586/Mandrake/RPMS \ with ../base/hdlist.cz
Now you have to add --media ftpsite
in each urpmi
command like so :
urpmi --media ftpsite postgresql postgresql-devel
Remember this for the Apache setup too.
Mandrake 9.1 comes with Apache2. It also has the option of installing a version of Apache1/mod_perl on a different port and then reverse-proxying it.
Install Apache1 and Mod_Perl 1 and their development packages :
urpmi apache-devel-1 mod_perl-devel-1 apache-mod_perl-1 mod_perl-common-1
Mandrake 9.1 - Do this for the DB_File Perl module
ln -s /usr/include/db1/* /usr/include ln -s /usr/lib/libdb1.so.2 /usr/lib/libdb.so
Configure Both Apaches:
Mandrake and some Redhats come with two copies of Apache installed. The mod_perl server sits on a weird port and is reversed proxied by a normal Apache server.
Mandrake 9.0 uses two Apache1 servers, while Mandrake 9.1 uses an Apache2 server that sits in front of the apache1/mod_perl server.
Configuration files for Mandrake live in /etc/httpd/conf
In the file httpd-perl.conf add the two Include
lines:
Include /usr/share/netdisco/netdisco_apache.conf Include /usr/share/netdisco/netdisco_apache_dir.conf
In the file httpd.conf (httpd2.conf for 9.1) add the final RewriteRule
line:
<IfModule mod_rewrite.c> RewriteEngine on RewriteRule ^proxy:.* - [F] RewriteRule ^(.*\/perl\/.*)$ http://%{HTTP_HOST}:8200$1 [P] RewriteRule ^(.*\/cgi-perl\/.*)$ http://%{HTTP_HOST}:8200$1 [P] RewriteRule ^(.*\/netdisco\/.*)$ http://%{HTTP_HOST}:8200$1 [P] </IfModule>
In the file commonhttpd.conf add the Alias line :
Alias /netdisco /netdisco/
Restart Apache.
/etc/rc.d/init.d/httpd restart
See http://www.saintmarys.edu/~dmckeown/netdisco_solaris10.htm for a great document on getting Netdisco 0.94 to work with Solaris 10.
Anywhere in this document you see a reference to make you should run gmake.
Make the JPEG and EXPAT libraries first and when making the JPEG library make sure you have
./configure --enabled-shared --enabled-static
Now that you have spent ten hours of your life installing this go drink a Beer, you deserve it.
Once you have or have not succeeded, come join the Netdisco User's mailing list at http://netdisco.org and pass on any hints you may have in the INSTALL process. It's a good place to keep up on new features and releases, and it's the place to ask any questions.
The developers are now maintaining a registry of Netdisco installs. This is mainly for morale boosting purposes, but also helps us direct feature requests to our target audience. One drawback of the Source Forge system is that we have no idea how many people are using the software compared to the number of downloads. So after you have Netdisco up and running please spend a minute to let us know you're using it at http://netdisco.org/register.html.
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