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<!--
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* '$RCSfile$'
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* Purpose: web page describing the installation of Metacat
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* Copyright: 2000 Regents of the University of California and the
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* National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis
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* Authors: Chad Berkley
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*
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* '$Author: jones $'
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* '$Date: 2004-09-21 00:31:11 -0700 (Tue, 21 Sep 2004) $'
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* '$Revision: 2309 $'
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*
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*
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-->
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<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD html 4.0//EN">
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<html>
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<head>
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<title>Metacat Installation Instructions</title>
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<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="@docrooturl@default.css">
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</head>
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<body>
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<table class="tabledefault" width="100%">
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<tr><td rowspan="2"><img src="@docrooturl@images/KNBLogo.gif"></td>
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<td colspan="7">
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<div class="title">Metacat UNIX Installation Instructions</div>
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</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td><a href="@server@/" class="toollink"> KNB Home </a></td>
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<td><a href="@server@/data.html" class="toollink"> Data </a></td>
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<td><a href="@server@/people.html" class="toollink"> People </a></td>
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<td><a href="@server@/informatics" class="toollink"> Informatics </a></td>
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<td><a href="@server@/biodiversity" class="toollink"> Biocomplexity </a></td>
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<td><a href="@server@/education" class="toollink"> Education </a></td>
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<td><a href="@server@/software" class="toollink"> Software </a></td>
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</tr>
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</table>
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<hr>
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<table class="tabledefault" width="100%">
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<td class="tablehead" colspan="2"><p class="emphasis">***Disclaimer***</p></td>
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<tr>
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<td>
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<p class="emphasis">
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These installation instructions are meant for a systems administrator/DBA
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or someone who is an advanced computer user. They are NOT meant for
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the average computer user. Please realize that by executing these
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instructions, you may have to trouble shoot many advanced issues yourself.
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</td>
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</tr>
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</table>
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<table class="tabledefault" width="100%">
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<td class="tablehead" colspan="2"><p>Pre-Installation</p></td>
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<tr>
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<td>
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<p class="header">Minimum Requirements</p>
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<p>
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Installing Metacat requires a server running an SQL92 compliant database
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(Oracle 8i recommended) with at least 128MB RAM, and a Pentium III class
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processor or higher. The amount of disk space required depends on the
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size of your RDBMS tablespace (which should be at least 10 MB,
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however Metacat itself requires only about 1 MB of free space after
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installation. These instructions assume a Linux environment but may
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work on other UNIX type environments, however this has not been tested.
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</p>
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<p class = "header">Additional Required Software</p>
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<p>
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The server on which you wish to install Metacat must have the following
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software installed and running correctly before attempting to install
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Metacat.
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<ul>
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<li><a href="http://www.oracle.com">Oracle 8i</a> (or another SQL92
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compliant RDBMS like Postgres)</li>
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<li><a href="http://jakarta.apache.org/ant/index.html">Apache Jakarta-Ant</a>
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</li>
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<li><a href="http://jakarta.apache.org/tomcat/index.html">Apache Jakarta-Tomcat</a>
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<p class="emphasis">Note: For a more robust web serving environment,
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Apache web server should
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be installed along with Tomcat and the two should be integrated
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as described on the Apache web site.</p>
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</li>
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</ul>
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</p>
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</td>
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</tr>
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</table>
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<table class="tabledefault" width="100%">
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<td class="tablehead" colspan="2"><p>Aditional Software Setup</p></td>
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<tr>
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<td>
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<p class="header">Java</p>
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<p>You'll need a recent Java SDK; j2sdk1.4.2 or later is required. We haven't
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tested with any of the 1.5.x versions yet, so probably best to stay with 1.4.x.
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Make sure that JAVA_HOME environment variable is properly set and that both
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java and javac are on your PATH.
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</p>
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<p class="header">Oracle 8i or Postgres</p>
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<p><i>Oracle:</i><br>
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The Oracle RDBMS must be installed and running as a daemon on the system.
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In addition the JDBC listener must be enabled. You can enable it by
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logging in as your Oracle user and typing the following:
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<pre>lsnrctl start</pre>
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Your instance should have a table space of at least 5 MB (10 MB or higher
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recommended). You should also have a username specific to Metacat
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created and enabled. This user must have most normal permissions
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including CREATE SESSION, CREATE TABLE, CREATE INDEX, CREATE TRIGGER,
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EXECUTE PROCEDURE, EXECUTE TYPE, etc. If an action is unexplainably
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rejected by Metacat it is probably because the user permissions are not
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correctly set.
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</p>
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<p><i>Postgres:</i><br>
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Postgres can be easily installed on most linux distributions and on
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Windows (using cygwin) and Mac OS X. Using Fedora Core or RedHat Linux,
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you can install the rpms for postgres and then run
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<code>/etc/init.d/postgresql start</code> in order to start the database.
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This initializes the data files. You need to do a bit of configuration
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to create a database and set up a user account and allow internet access
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via jdbc. See the postgres documentation for this, but here is a quick
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start:
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<ul>
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<li>Switch to the "postgres" user account and edit "data/pg_hba.conf", adding the following line to the file:<br>
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<code>host metacat metacat 127.0.0.1 255.255.255.255 password</code></li>
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<li>Edit the "data/postgres.conf" file and uncomment and edit the line
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starting with "tcpip_socket" so that it reads
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<code>tcpip_socket = true</code></li>
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<li>Run <code>createdb metacat</code> to create a new database</li>
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<li>Run <code>psql metacat</code> to log in using the postgres account and create a new "metacat" user account
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<ul>
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<li>In postgres, run <code>CREATE USER metacat WITH UNENCRYPTED PASSWORD 'apasswordyoulike';</code></li>
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<li>This creates a new account called metacat on the database named metacat</li>
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<li>Note: there are many ways to do this, so others such as using
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ENCRYPTED passwords will work fine.</li>
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</ul>
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</li>
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<li>Exit the postgres account back to root and restart the postgres
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database with <code>/etc/init.d/postgresql restart</code></li>
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<li>Test logging into the postgres db using the metacat account with
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the following command:
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<code>psql -U metacat -W -h localhost metacat</code></li>
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</ul>
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</p>
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<p class="header">Ant</p>
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<p>
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Ant is a Java based build application similar to Make on UNIX systems.
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It takes in installation parameters from a file in the root installation
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directory named "build.xml". The Metacat CVS module contains a default
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build.xml file that may require some modification upon installation. Ant
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should be installed on the system and the "ant" executable shell script
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should be available in the users path. We note that the current build is
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not working with Ant 1.6.x, so you'll need to use an earler version. We have
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successfully used Ant 1.5.1, 1.5.2, and some earlier versions.
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</p>
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<p class="header">Tomcat</p>
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<p>
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Install Tomcat into the directory of your choice. The directory in which
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you install Tomcat itself will be referred to as the "$CATALINA_HOME".
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We recommend that you install Tomcat version 4.0. More details about
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Tomcat installation is available <a href=" http://jakarta.apache.org/tomcat/index.html">here</a>.
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</p>
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</td>
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</tr>
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</table>
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<table class="tabledefault" width="100%">
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<td class="tablehead" colspan="2"></td>
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<tr>
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<td>
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<p>
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Once all of the prerequisite software is installed as described above,
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the installation of Metacat can begin. First you must have a current
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version of the source distribution of Metacat. You can get it two ways.
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Authorized users can check it out of the NCEAS
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<a href="http://www.nceas.ucsb.edu/cgi-bin/cvsweb.cgi/xmltodb/">CVS</a>
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system. You'll need both the "metacat" module and the "utilities" module to
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be checked out in sibling directories. The command is as follows:
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<pre>mkdir knb-software</pre>
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<pre>cd knb-software</pre>
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<pre>cvs checkout -P metacat</pre>
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<pre>cvs checkout -P utilities</pre>
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Or you can
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<a href="@server@/software/download.html">download</a> a gzipped tar file
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from this site.
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</p>
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<p><h2>Edit <code>build.properties</code> File</h2></p>
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<p>
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Once you have either checked out or unzipped and untarred the source
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distribution, you can begin the installation process. Change into the
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metacat directory and edit the file called "<code>build.properties</code>". You will need
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to change a number of configuration properties to match the setup on
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your system.
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</p>
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<p>
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The properties that you will likely need to change will include
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<code>tomcat</code>, <code>tomcatversion</code>, <code>webapps</code>,
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<code>context</code>, <code>server</code>, <code>httpserver</code>,
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<code>database</code>, <code>jdbc-connect</code>, <code>jdbc-base</code>,
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<code>user</code>, <code>password</code>, <code>datafilepath</code>,
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<code>inlinedatafilepath</code>, <code>cvsroot</code>,
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<code>cvsroot-alternate</code>, <code>default-style</code>, and
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<code>administrators</code>.
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Each is described in detail in the table below.
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</p>
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Properties you will likely need to change:
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<br><br>
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<table border="1">
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<tr>
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<td><b>Property</b></td>
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<td><b>Description</b></td>
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<td><b>Default value and examples of other values</b></td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>tomcat</td>
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<td>The tomcat property is the location in which tomcat is installed.</td>
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<td>Default:
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<code>/usr/local/devtools/jakarta-tomcat</code>
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<br><br>Example:
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<code>C:/Tomcat4</code></td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>tomcatversion</td>
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<td>The tomcatversion property is the version of your Tomcat. You should
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put tomcat3, tomcat4, or tomcat5 here. We have most extensively
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tested Tomcat 4.x, but Tomcat 5.x seems to work fine as well.
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</td>
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<td>Default:
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<code>tomcat4</code>
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<br><br>Example:
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<code>tomcat3</code>
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</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>webapps</td>
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<td>The webapps property is the location in which your tomcat servlet
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contexts are installed. This is typically "TOMCAT_HOME/webapps",
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where TOMCAT_HOME is the same value that you entered for the 'tomcat'
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property above.
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</td>
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<td>Default:
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<code>/var/www/org.ecoinformatics.knb</code>
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<br><br>Example:
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<code>C:/Tomcat4/webapps</code>
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</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>context</td>
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<td>The context property is the name of the servlet context in which you
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want Metacat to be installed. This will determine the installation
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directory for the servlet and many of the URLs that are used to access
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the installed Metacat server.</td>
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<td>Default:
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<code>knb</code>
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<br><br>Example:
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<code>mycontext</code>
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</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>server</td>
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<td>The server property is hostname of for the server on which Metacat is
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running (note that you should not include the 'http://' in the server
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property). The server setting should include the port number
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appended to the end if Tomcat is running stand-alone (see example).
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</td>
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<td>Default:
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<code>knb.ecoinformatics.org</code>
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<br><br>Example:
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<code>somehost.university.edu:8080</code>
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</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>httpserver</td>
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<td>httpserver is the plain HTTP address on which Metacat is running
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(note that you should not include the 'http://' in the httpserver
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property).
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The httpserver setting should include the HTTP plain port number
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appended to the end if Tomcat is running stand-alone (see example).</td>
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<td>Default:
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<code>knb.ecoinformatics.org</code>
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<br><br>Example:
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<code>somehost.university.edu:8080</code>
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</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>ldapUrl</td>
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<td>URL to the LDAP server. The LDAP server is used in the default
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authentication module to authenticate and identify users of the
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system. To participate in the KNB network, you should leave this at
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the default. But it can be changed if you want to use a
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different directory of users.
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</td>
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<td>Default:
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<code>ldap://ldap.ecoinformatics.org/dc=ecoinformatics,dc=org</code>
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</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>database</td>
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<td>Select the database to use for metadata storage.
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Valid values are <code>oracle</code>, <code>postgresql</code>, or
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<code>sqlserver</code>. Note that sqlserver support is minimal and
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probably will not work without substantial changes on your part,
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possibly including code changes. We have not revcently tested on
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sqlserver.
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</td>
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<td>Default:
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<code>oracle</code>
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<br><br>Other possible values:
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<code>postgresql</code>
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<code>sqlserver</code>
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</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>jdbc-connect</td>
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<td>The JDBC connection string used to connect to the database.</td>
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<td>Default:
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<code>jdbc:oracle:thin:@metacat.nceas.ucsb.edu:1521:knb</code>
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</td>
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<tr>
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<td>jdbc-base</td>
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<td>The base directory for locating JDBC jar files (not needed for postgresql).</td>
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<td>Default:
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<code>/usr/oracle/jdbc/lib</code>
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<br><br>Example:
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<code>C:/jdev10g/jdbc/lib</code><br>
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</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>user</td>
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<td>The database user name that you set up to use Metacat. For example,
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an Oracle username.</td>
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<td>Default:
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<code>knb</code>
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<br><br>Example:
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<code>metacatdb</code>
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</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>password</td>
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<td>The database password that you set up to use Metacat.</td>
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<td>Default:
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<code>yourPasswordHere</code>
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<br><br>Example:
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<code>metacat123</code>
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</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>datafilepath</td>
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<td>The datafilepath is the directory to store data files.</td>
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<td>Default:
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<code>/var/metacat/data</code>
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<br><br>Example:
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<code>C:/Tomcat4/data/knb/data</code>
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</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>inlinedatafilepath</td>
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<td>The inlinedatafilepath is the directory to store inline data that
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has been extracted from EML documents.</td>
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<td>Default:
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<code>/var/metacat/inline-data</code>
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<br><br>Example:
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<code>C:/Tomcat4/data/knb/inlinedata</code>
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</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>cvsroot</td>
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<td>CVS access to retrieve latest EML. Only used by
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developers in building the release.</td>
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<td>Default:
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<code><pre>:ext:${env.USER}@cvs.ecoinformatics.org:/cvs</pre></code>
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Example:
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<code><pre>:ext:myaccount@cvs.ecoinformatics.org:/cvs</pre></code>
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</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>cvsroot-alternate</td>
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<td>CVS access to retrieve latest conversion styles. Only used by
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developers in building the release.</td>
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<td>Default:
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<code><pre>:ext:${env.USER}@cvs.nceas.ucsb.edu:/cvs/pbi</pre></code>
|
384
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Example:
|
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<code><pre>:ext:myaccount@cvs.nceas.ucsb.edu:/cvs/pbi</pre></code>
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</td>
|
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>default-style</td>
|
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<td>The default-style parameter defines the "style-set" that is to be used
|
391
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by default when the qformat parameter is missing or set to "html"
|
392
|
during a query. It is set to "knb", which is one of the styles that
|
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ships with the default metacat distribution. Other possible settings
|
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are shown in the examples to the right.</td>
|
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<td>Default:
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<code>knb</code>
|
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<br><br>Examples:
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<pre><code>default esa knb2 nceas nrs obfs specnet</code></pre>
|
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</td>
|
400
|
</tr>
|
401
|
<tr>
|
402
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<td>administrators</td>
|
403
|
<td>The administrators parameter lists the accounts that are allowed to
|
404
|
perform administrative actions such as rebuilding indices for
|
405
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documents. The list can can contain more than one account separated
|
406
|
by colons.</td>
|
407
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<td>Default:
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408
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<code>uid=jones,o=NCEAS,dc=ecoinformatics,dc=org</code>
|
409
|
<br><br>Examples:
|
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<code>uid=localadmin,o=ucnrs.org</code>
|
411
|
</td>
|
412
|
</tr>
|
413
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</table>
|
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<br>
|
415
|
<p>
|
416
|
Note that the build file is preconfigured to install Metacat either using
|
417
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Oracle, PostgreSQL, or Microsoft SQL Server as a backend database.
|
418
|
To change the database system, simply change the value of the 'database'
|
419
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property to be the name of the database target that you wish to use
|
420
|
(either 'oracle', 'postgresql', or 'sqlserver').
|
421
|
</p>
|
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Other properties in <code>build.properties</code> that you can (but generally need not) change:<br />
|
423
|
<br>
|
424
|
<table border="1">
|
425
|
<tr>
|
426
|
<td><b>Property</b></td>
|
427
|
<td><b>Description</b></td>
|
428
|
<td><b>Default value and examples of other values</b></td>
|
429
|
</tr>
|
430
|
<tr>
|
431
|
<td>inst.cgi.dir</td>
|
432
|
<td>Installation directory for registry CGI scripts</td>
|
433
|
<td>Default:
|
434
|
<code>/var/www/cgi-knb</code>
|
435
|
</td>
|
436
|
</tr>
|
437
|
<tr>
|
438
|
<td>cgi-prefix</td>
|
439
|
<td> </td>
|
440
|
<td>Default:
|
441
|
<code>http://knb.ecoinformatics.org/cgi-bin</code>
|
442
|
</td>
|
443
|
</tr>
|
444
|
<tr>
|
445
|
<td>knb-site-url</td>
|
446
|
<td>This is the URL to the web context root for the knb site.
|
447
|
It is used for the qformat=knb skin only.</td>
|
448
|
<td>Default:
|
449
|
<code>http://knb.ecoinformatics.org</code>
|
450
|
</td>
|
451
|
</tr>
|
452
|
<tr>
|
453
|
<td>forcereplicationwaitingtime</td>
|
454
|
<td>The waiting time before replication is forced to begin after
|
455
|
uploading a package. The default value should usually suffice.</td>
|
456
|
<td>Default:
|
457
|
<code>30000</code>
|
458
|
<code> </code>
|
459
|
</td>
|
460
|
</tr>
|
461
|
</table>
|
462
|
<p>
|
463
|
Metacat has a number of additional settable properties in file
|
464
|
<code>metacat/lib/metacat.properties</code>. Under most circumstances,
|
465
|
you will not need to modify this file because the properties of interest
|
466
|
to you can be controlled by editing <code>build.properties</code> as
|
467
|
described above. To learn more about Metacat's additional properties,
|
468
|
see <a href="./properties.html">Metacat Properties File</a>.
|
469
|
</p>
|
470
|
<p class="emphasis">
|
471
|
Note: When setting properties, DO NOT add a trailing slash [/] to the end of any paths that are specified.
|
472
|
Metacat will not function correctly if you do so.
|
473
|
</p>
|
474
|
<p class="header"><h2>SQL Scripts</h2></p>
|
475
|
<p>
|
476
|
You now need to set up the table structure in your database. You can do
|
477
|
either do this using the ant build system, or by manually running the
|
478
|
scripts using a sql utility.
|
479
|
</p>
|
480
|
<p><b>WARNING: Do NOT run this on an existing metacat installation as it
|
481
|
will delete all of your data. If you have an existing metacat installation,
|
482
|
see the instructions for "Upgrading" below.</b></p>
|
483
|
|
484
|
<p>To run the scripts using ant, type <code>ant installdb</code>. This does
|
485
|
not work for postgres, so you'll need to run the xmltables-postgres.sql script
|
486
|
manually (see next paragraph).
|
487
|
</p>
|
488
|
<p>To run the scripts manually, change to the
|
489
|
metacat/build/src directory. Then run you RDBMS's SQL utility. In Oracle it is
|
490
|
SQLPlus. This tutorial assumes an Oracle database so this example is for
|
491
|
SQLPlus. Login as the oracle user that was set up for use with Metacat.
|
492
|
At the SQLPlus prompt type the following: <pre><b>@xmltables.sql;</b></pre>
|
493
|
For postgres, use a command like:
|
494
|
<code>psql -U metacat -W -h localhost -f build/src/xmltables-postgres.sql metacat</code>
|
495
|
</p>
|
496
|
<p>Either way,
|
497
|
you should see a bunch of output showing the creation of the Metacat table
|
498
|
space. The first time you run this script you will get several errors at the
|
499
|
beginning saying that you cannot drop a table/index/trigger because it
|
500
|
does not exist. This is normal. Any other errors besides this need to be
|
501
|
resolved before continuing. The script file name for PostgreSQL is
|
502
|
xmltables-postgres.sql and for Microsoft SQL server is
|
503
|
xmltables-sqlserver.sql.
|
504
|
</p>
|
505
|
<p>
|
506
|
If the script has run correctly you should be able to type
|
507
|
<pre>describe xml_documents</pre> and it should show:
|
508
|
<pre>
|
509
|
Name Null? Type
|
510
|
-------------- ------------ ----------------
|
511
|
DOCID NOT NULL VARCHAR2(250)
|
512
|
ROOTNODEID NUMBER(20)
|
513
|
DOCNAME VARCHAR2(100)
|
514
|
DOCTYPE VARCHAR2(100)
|
515
|
DOCTITLE VARCHAR2(1000)
|
516
|
USER_OWNER VARCHAR2(100)
|
517
|
USER_UPDATED VARCHAR2(100)
|
518
|
SERVER_LOCATION NUMBER(20)
|
519
|
REV NUMBER(10)
|
520
|
DATE_CREATED DATE
|
521
|
DATE_UPDATED DATE
|
522
|
PUBLIC_ACCESS NUMBER(1)
|
523
|
UPDATED NUMBER(1)
|
524
|
</pre>
|
525
|
</p>
|
526
|
<p class="header"><h2>Upgrading SQL Scripts</h2></p>
|
527
|
<p>
|
528
|
If you have an existing metacat installation, you should not run the install
|
529
|
script because it will replace all of the older tables with new, empty
|
530
|
copies of the tables. Thus you would lose your data! Instead, you can
|
531
|
run some upgrade scripts that will change the table structure as needed for
|
532
|
the new version. If you are skipping versions, run each upgrade script
|
533
|
for the intermediate versions as well. Currently the upgrade scripts are:
|
534
|
</p>
|
535
|
<ul>
|
536
|
<li>upgrade-db-to-1.2.sql</li>
|
537
|
<li>upgrade-db-to-1.3.sql</li>
|
538
|
<li>upgrade-db-to-1.4.sql</li>
|
539
|
</ul>
|
540
|
<p>
|
541
|
So, if you had an existing metacat 1.0 installation and you were upgrading
|
542
|
to 1.4, you would need to run all three scripts in sequence:
|
543
|
upgrade-db-to-1.2.sql, upgrade-db-to-1.3.sql, and upgrade-db-to-1.4.sql.
|
544
|
However, if you were starting from a Metacat 1.3.x
|
545
|
installation, you would only need to run the upgrade-db-to-1.4.sql script.
|
546
|
</p>
|
547
|
</p>
|
548
|
</td>
|
549
|
</tr>
|
550
|
</table>
|
551
|
|
552
|
<table class="tabledefault" width="100%">
|
553
|
<td class="tablehead" colspan="2"><p><h2>Compilation and Installation</h2></p></td>
|
554
|
<tr>
|
555
|
<td>
|
556
|
<a name="protocol"></a>
|
557
|
<p>
|
558
|
Ant allows compilation and installation to be done in one step.
|
559
|
Change into the metacat directory and type:
|
560
|
<pre><b>ant geteml install</b></pre>
|
561
|
or, if you are upgrading an existing installation, type:
|
562
|
<pre><b>ant clean geteml upgrade</b></pre>
|
563
|
<p>
|
564
|
You should see a bunch of messages telling you the progress of compilation
|
565
|
and installation. When it is done you should see the message
|
566
|
BUILD SUCCESSFUL
|
567
|
and you should be returned to a UNIX command prompt. If you do not see
|
568
|
the message BUILD SUCCESSFUL then there was an error that you need to
|
569
|
resolve.
|
570
|
This may come up if you are logged in as a user that does not have write
|
571
|
access to one or more of the directories that are listed in the build.xml
|
572
|
file, or if any of the paths to files are not configured correctly in the
|
573
|
"config" target.
|
574
|
</p>
|
575
|
<p>Once metacat itself is installed, you should also register
|
576
|
the Ecological Metadata Language (EML) DTDs and schemas. This process is done most
|
577
|
easily by running:</p>
|
578
|
<pre><b>ant dtdschemasql</b></pre>
|
579
|
<p>This command registers the DTDs' and schemas' location in the
|
580
|
metacat server. Your database username and password have to be set correctly
|
581
|
for this to work.
|
582
|
</p>
|
583
|
<p>
|
584
|
Note: The 'data' directory in the installation directory must be writeable
|
585
|
by whatever user is running Tomcat or you will not be able to upload data
|
586
|
files to the system.
|
587
|
<h2>Restart Tomcat</h2>
|
588
|
<p>
|
589
|
Once you have successfully installed Metacat, there is one more step. Tomcat
|
590
|
(and Apache if you have Tomcat integrated with it) must be restarted. To do
|
591
|
this, login as the user that runs your tomcat server (often "tomcat"),
|
592
|
go to $CATALINA_HOME/bin and type:
|
593
|
<pre>
|
594
|
./shutdown.sh
|
595
|
./startup.sh
|
596
|
</pre>
|
597
|
In the Tomcat startup messages you should see something in log file like:
|
598
|
<pre>
|
599
|
MetacatServlet Initialize
|
600
|
Context log path="/metadata" :Metacat: init
|
601
|
MetacatServlet Initialize
|
602
|
</pre>
|
603
|
If you see that message Tomcat is successfully loading the Metacat servlet.
|
604
|
Next, try to run your new servlet. Go to a web browser and type:
|
605
|
<pre>http://yourserver.yourdomain.com/yourcontext/</pre>
|
606
|
You should substitute your context name for "yourcontext" in the url above.
|
607
|
If everything is working correctly, you should see a query page followed
|
608
|
by an empty result set. Note that if you do not have Tomcat integrated with
|
609
|
Apache you will probably have to type
|
610
|
<pre>http://yourserver.yourdomain.com:8080/yourcontext/</pre>
|
611
|
</p>
|
612
|
</td>
|
613
|
</tr>
|
614
|
</table>
|
615
|
|
616
|
</body>
|
617
|
</html>
|