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	big changes to the README, part 1
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| This package requires PHP 5.x and the following PHP Pear libraries: | ||||
| ------ | ||||
| README | ||||
| ------ | ||||
|  | ||||
| Laconica 0.6.0 | ||||
| 12 September 2008 | ||||
|  | ||||
| This is the README file for Laconica, the Open Source microblogging | ||||
| platform. It includes installation instructions, descriptions of | ||||
| options you can set, warnings, tips, and general info for | ||||
| administrators. Information on using Laconica can be found in the | ||||
| "doc" subdirectory or in the "help" section on-line. | ||||
|  | ||||
| About | ||||
| ===== | ||||
|  | ||||
| Laconica (pronounced "luh-KAWN-ih-kuh") is a Free and Open Source | ||||
| microblogging platform. It helps people in a community, company or | ||||
| group to exchange short (140 character) messages over the Web. Users | ||||
| can choose which people to "follow" and receive only their friends' or | ||||
| colleagues' status messages. It provides a similar service to sites | ||||
| like Twitter, Jaiku, Pownce and Plurk. | ||||
|  | ||||
| With a little work, status messages can be sent to mobile phones, | ||||
| instant messenger programs (GTalk/Jabber), and specially-designed | ||||
| desktop clients that support the Twitter API. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Laconica supports an open standard called OpenMicroBlogging | ||||
| (http://openmicroblogging.org/) that lets users on different Web sites | ||||
| or in different companies subscribe to each others' notices. It | ||||
| enables a distributed social network spread all across the Web. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Laconica was originally developed for the Open Software Service, | ||||
| Identi.ca (http://identi.ca/). It is shared with you in hope that you | ||||
| too make an Open Software Service available to your users. To learn | ||||
| more, please see the Open Software Service Definition 1.0: | ||||
|  | ||||
|       http://www.openknowledge.org/ossd | ||||
|  | ||||
| License | ||||
| ======= | ||||
|  | ||||
| This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify | ||||
| it under the terms of the GNU Affero General Public License as | ||||
| published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the | ||||
| License, or (at your option) any later version. | ||||
|  | ||||
| This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but | ||||
| WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of | ||||
| MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU | ||||
| Affero General Public License for more details. | ||||
|  | ||||
| You should have received a copy of the GNU Affero General Public | ||||
| License along with this program, in the file "COPYING".  If not, see | ||||
| <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. | ||||
|  | ||||
|     IMPORTANT NOTE: The GNU Affero General Public License (AGPL) has | ||||
|     *different requirements* from the "regular" GPL. In particular, if | ||||
|     you make modifications to the Laconica source code on your server, | ||||
|     you *MUST MAKE AVAILABLE* the modified version of the source code | ||||
|     to your users under the same license. This is a legal requirement | ||||
|     of using the software, and if you do not wish to share your | ||||
|     modifications, *YOU MAY NOT INSTALL LACONICA*. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Prerequisites | ||||
| ============= | ||||
|  | ||||
| The following software packages are *required* for this software to | ||||
| run correctly. | ||||
|  | ||||
| - PHP 5.2.x. It may be possible to run this software on earlier | ||||
|   versions of PHP, but many of the functions used are only available | ||||
|   in PHP 5.2 or above. | ||||
| - MySQL 5.x. The Laconica database is stored, by default, in a MySQL | ||||
|   server. It has been primarily tested on 5.x servers, although it may | ||||
|   be possible to install on earlier (or later!) versions. The server | ||||
|   *must* support the MyISAM storage engine -- the default for most | ||||
|   MySQL servers -- *and* the InnoDB storage engine. | ||||
| - A Web server. Preferably, you should have Apache 2.2.x with the | ||||
|   mod_rewrite extension installed and enabled.  | ||||
|  | ||||
| Your PHP installation must include the following PHP extensions: | ||||
|  | ||||
| - Curl. This is for fetching files by HTTP. | ||||
| - XMLWriter. This is for formatting XML and HTML output. | ||||
| - MySQL. For accessing the database. | ||||
|  | ||||
| For some functionality, you will also need the following extensions: | ||||
|  | ||||
| - Memcache. A client for the memcached server, which caches database | ||||
|   information in volatile memory. This is important for adequate | ||||
|   performance on high-traffic sites. You will also need a memcached | ||||
|   server to store the data in. | ||||
| - Mailparse. Efficient parsing of email requires this extension. | ||||
|   Submission by email or SMS-over-email uses this extension. | ||||
|    | ||||
| You will almost definitely get 2-3 times better performance from your | ||||
| site if you install a PHP bytecode cache/accelerator. Some well-known | ||||
| examples are: eaccelerator, Turck mmcache, xcache, apc. Zend Optimizer | ||||
| is a proprietary accelerator installed on some hosting sites. | ||||
|  | ||||
| External libraries | ||||
| ------------------ | ||||
|  | ||||
| A number of external PHP libraries are used to provide basic | ||||
| functionality and optional functionality for your system. For your | ||||
| convenience, they are available in the "extlib" directory of this | ||||
| package, and you do not have to download and install them. However, | ||||
| you may want to keep them up-to-date with the latest upstream version, | ||||
| and the URLs are listed here for your convenience. | ||||
|  | ||||
| - DB_DataObject http://pear.php.net/package/DB_DataObject | ||||
| - Validate http://pear.php.net/package/Validate | ||||
| - XMLWriter (built-in) | ||||
| - Auth_Yadis from OpenIDEnabled (not the PEAR version!). I decided | ||||
| - OpenID from OpenIDEnabled (not the PEAR version!). We decided | ||||
|   to use the openidenabled.com version since it's more widely | ||||
|   implemented, seems to be better supported, and it may make sense to | ||||
|   use the openidenabled.com libraries for OpenID auth sometime in the | ||||
|   future. Note that this is no longer distributed separately; it's only | ||||
|   in the openidenabled.com OpenID PHP tarball. | ||||
|   implemented, and seems to be better supported. | ||||
|   http://openidenabled.com/php-openid/ | ||||
| - PEAR DB. Although this is an older data access system (new | ||||
|   packages should probably use PHP DBO), the OpenID libraries | ||||
|   depend on PEAR DB so we use it here, too. DB_DataObject can | ||||
|   also use PEAR MDB2, which may give you better performance | ||||
|   but won't work with OpenID. | ||||
|   http://pear.php.net/package/DB | ||||
| - OAuth.php from http://oauth.googlecode.com/svn/code/php/ | ||||
| - markdown.php from http://michelf.com/projects/php-markdown/  | ||||
| - PEAR Mail, for sending out mail notifications | ||||
|   http://pear.php.net/package/Mail | ||||
| - PEAR Net_SMTP, if you use the SMTP factory for notifications | ||||
|   http://pear.php.net/package/Net_SMTP | ||||
| - xmpphp, the follow-up to Class.Jabber.php. Probably the best XMPP | ||||
|   library available for PHP. http://xmpphp.googlecode.com/ | ||||
| - XMPPHP, the follow-up to Class.Jabber.php. Probably the best XMPP | ||||
|   library available for PHP. http://xmpphp.googlecode.com/. Note that | ||||
|   as of this writing the version of this library that is available in | ||||
|   the extlib directory is *significantly different* from the upstream | ||||
|   version (patches have been submitted). Upgrading to the upstream | ||||
|   version may render your Laconica site unable to send or receive XMPP | ||||
|   messages. | ||||
|  | ||||
| A design goal of Laconica is that the basic Web functionality should | ||||
| work on even the most restrictive commercial hosting services. | ||||
| However, additional functionality, such as receiving messages by | ||||
| Jabber/GTalk, require that you be able to run long-running processes | ||||
| on your account. In addition, posting by email or from SMS require | ||||
| that you be able to install a mail filter in your mail server. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Installation | ||||
| ============ | ||||
|  | ||||
| Installing the basic Laconica Web component is relatively easy, | ||||
| especially if you've previously installed PHP/MySQL packages. | ||||
|  | ||||
| 1. Unpack the tarball you downloaded on your Web server. Usually a | ||||
|    command like this will work: | ||||
|     | ||||
|    	   tar zxf laconica-0.6.0.tar.gz | ||||
|     | ||||
|    ...which will make a laconica-0.6.0 subdirectory in your current | ||||
|    directory. (If you don't have shell access on your Web server, you | ||||
|    may have to unpack the tarball on your local computer and FTP the | ||||
|    files to the server.) | ||||
|     | ||||
| 2. Move the tarball to a directory of your choosing in your Web root | ||||
|    directory. Usually something like this will work: | ||||
|     | ||||
|    	   mv laconica-0.6.0 /var/www/mublog | ||||
|     | ||||
|    This will make your Laconica instance available in the mublog path of | ||||
|    your server, like "http://example.net/mublog". "microblog" or | ||||
|    "laconica" might also be good path names. If you know how to | ||||
|    configure virtual hosts on your web server, you can try setting up | ||||
|    "http://micro.example.net/" or the like. | ||||
|     | ||||
| 3. You should also take this moment to make your avatar subdirectory | ||||
|    writeable by the Web server. An insecure way to do this is: | ||||
|     | ||||
|    	  chmod a+w /var/www/mublog/avatar | ||||
|     | ||||
|    On some systems, this will probably work: | ||||
|     | ||||
|       	   chgrp www-data /var/www/mublog/avatar | ||||
| 	   chmod g+w /var/www/mublog/avatar | ||||
|  | ||||
|    If your Web server runs as another user besides "www-data", try | ||||
|    that user's default group instead. As a last resort, you can create | ||||
|    a new group like "avatar" and add the Web server's user to the group. | ||||
|  | ||||
| 4. Create a database to hold your microblog data. Something like this | ||||
|    should work: | ||||
|     | ||||
|    	  mysqladmin -u "username" --password="password" create laconica | ||||
|     | ||||
|    Note that Laconica must have its own database; you can't share the | ||||
|    database with another program. You can name it whatever you want, | ||||
|    though. | ||||
|     | ||||
|    (If you don't have shell access to your server, you may need to use | ||||
|    a tool like PHPAdmin to create a database. Check your hosting | ||||
|    service's documentation for how to create a new MySQL database.) | ||||
|  | ||||
| 5. Run the laconica.sql SQL script in the db subdirectory to create | ||||
|    the database tables in the database. A typical system would work | ||||
|    like this: | ||||
|  | ||||
|    	  mysql -u "username" --password="password" laconica < /var/www/mublog/db/laconica.sql | ||||
|  | ||||
|    You may want to test by logging into the database and checking that | ||||
|    the tables were created. Here's an example: | ||||
|     | ||||
|           SHOW TABLES; | ||||
| 	   | ||||
| 6. Create a new database account that Laconica will use to access the | ||||
|    database. If you have shell access, this will probably work from the | ||||
|    MySQL shell: | ||||
|     | ||||
|           GRANT SELECT,INSERT,DELETE,UPDATE on laconica.* | ||||
| 	  TO 'lacuser'@'localhost' | ||||
| 	  IDENTIFIED BY 'lacpassword'; | ||||
| 	   | ||||
|    You should change 'lacuser' and 'lacpassword' to your preferred new | ||||
|    username and password. You may want to test logging in as this new | ||||
|    user and testing that you can SELECT from some of the tables in the | ||||
|    DB (use SHOW TABLES to see which ones are there). | ||||
|     | ||||
| 7. Copy the config.php.sample in the Laconica directory to config.php. | ||||
|  | ||||
| 8. Edit config.php to set the basic configuration for your system. | ||||
|    (See descriptions below for basic config options.) Note that there | ||||
|    are lots of options and if you try to do them all at once, you will | ||||
|    have a hard time making sure what's working and what's not. So, | ||||
|    stick with the basics at first. | ||||
|  | ||||
| 9. At this point, you should be able to navigate in a browser to your | ||||
|    microblog's main directory and see the "Public Timeline", which | ||||
|    will be empty. If not, magic has happened! You can now register a | ||||
|    new user, post some notices, edit your profile, etc. However, you | ||||
|    may want to wait to do that stuff if you think you can set up | ||||
|    "fancy URLs" (see below), since some URLs are stored in the database.  | ||||
|     | ||||
| Fancy URLs | ||||
| ---------- | ||||
|  | ||||
| By default, Laconica will have big long sloppy URLs that are hard for | ||||
| people to remember or use. For example, a user's home profile might be | ||||
| found at: | ||||
|  | ||||
|     http://example.org/mublog/index.php?action=showstream&nickname=fred | ||||
|  | ||||
| It's possible to configure the software so it looks like this instead: | ||||
|  | ||||
|     http://example.org/mublog/fred | ||||
|  | ||||
| These "fancy URLs" are more readable and memorable for users. To use | ||||
| fancy URLs, you must either have Apache 2.2.x with .htaccess enabled | ||||
| and mod_redirect enabled, -OR- know how to configure "url redirection" | ||||
| in your server. | ||||
|  | ||||
| 1. Copy the htaccess.sample file to .htaccess in your Laconica | ||||
|    directory. Note: if you have control of your server's httpd.conf or | ||||
|    similar configuration files, it can greatly improve performance to | ||||
|    import the .htaccess file into your conf file instead. If you're | ||||
|    not sure how to do it, you may save yourself a lot of headache by | ||||
|    just leaving the .htaccess file. | ||||
|     | ||||
| 2. Change the "RewriteBase" in the new .htaccess file to be the URL path | ||||
|    to your Laconica installation on your server. Typically this will | ||||
|    be the path to your Laconica directory relative to your Web root. | ||||
|  | ||||
| 3. Add or uncomment or change a line in your config.php file so it says: | ||||
|  | ||||
|        $config['site']['fancy'] = true; | ||||
|         | ||||
| You should now be able to navigate to a "fancy" URL on your server, | ||||
| like: | ||||
|  | ||||
|      http://example.net/mublog/main/register | ||||
|  | ||||
| If you changed your HTTP server configuration, you may need to restart | ||||
| the server first. | ||||
|  | ||||
| If you have problems with the .htaccess file on versions of Apache | ||||
| earlier than 2.2.x, try changing the regular expressions in the | ||||
| htaccess.sample file that use "\w" to just use ".". | ||||
|  | ||||
| SMS | ||||
| --- | ||||
|  | ||||
| Laconica supports a cheap-and-dirty system for sending update messages | ||||
| to mobile phones and for receiving updates from the mobile. Instead of | ||||
| sending through the SMS network itself, which is costly and requires | ||||
| buy-in from the wireless carriers, it simply piggybacks on the email | ||||
| gateways that many carriers provide to their customers. So, SMS | ||||
| configuration is essentially email configuration. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Each user sends to a made-up email address, which they keep a secret. | ||||
| Incoming email that is "From" the user's SMS email address, and "To" | ||||
| the users' secret email address on the site's domain, will be | ||||
| converted to a message and stored in the DB. | ||||
|  | ||||
| For this to work, there *must* be a domain or sub-domain for which all | ||||
| (or most) incoming email can pass through the incoming mail filter. | ||||
|  | ||||
| 1. Run the SQL script carrier.sql in your Laconica database. This will | ||||
|    usually work: | ||||
|  | ||||
|    	   mysql -u "lacuser" --password="lacpassword" laconica < db/carrier.sql | ||||
|  | ||||
|    This will populate your database with a list of wireless carriers | ||||
|    that support email SMS gateways. | ||||
|  | ||||
| 2. Make sure the maildaemon.php file is executable: | ||||
|  | ||||
|    	chmod +x scripts/maildaemon.php   	 | ||||
|     | ||||
|    Note that "daemon" is kind of a misnomer here; the script is more | ||||
|    of a filter than a daemon. | ||||
|     | ||||
| 2. Edit /etc/aliases on your mail server and add the following line: | ||||
|  | ||||
|       *: /path/to/laconica/scripts/maildaemon.php | ||||
|  | ||||
| 3. Run whatever code you need to to update your aliases database. For | ||||
|    many mail servers (Postfix, Exim, Sendmail), this should work: | ||||
|     | ||||
|       newaliases | ||||
|        | ||||
|    You may need to restart your mail server for the new database to | ||||
|    take effect. | ||||
|  | ||||
| 4. Set the following in your config.php file: | ||||
|  | ||||
|    $config['mail']['domain'] = 'yourdomain.example.net'; | ||||
|     | ||||
| At this point, post-by-email and post-by-SMS-gateway should work. Note | ||||
| that if your mail server is on a different computer from your email | ||||
| server, you'll need to have a full installation of Laconica, a working | ||||
| config.php, and access to the Laconica database from the mail server. | ||||
|  | ||||
| XMPP | ||||
| ---- | ||||
|  | ||||
| XMPP (eXtended Message and Presence Protocol, http://xmpp.org/) is the | ||||
| instant-messenger protocol that drives Jabber and GTalk IM. You can | ||||
| distribute messages via XMPP using the system below; however, you | ||||
| need to run the XMPP incoming daemon to allow incoming messages as | ||||
| well. | ||||
|  | ||||
| 1. You may want to strongly consider setting up your own XMPP server. | ||||
|    Ejabberd, OpenFire, and JabberD are all Open Source servers. | ||||
|    Jabber, Inc. provides a high-performance commercial server. | ||||
|     | ||||
| 2. You must register a Jabber ID (JID) with your new server. It helps | ||||
|    to choose a name like "update@example.com" or "notice" or something | ||||
|    similar.  Alternately, your "update JID" can be registered on a | ||||
|    publicly-available XMPP service, like jabber.org or GTalk. | ||||
|     | ||||
|    Laconica will not register the JID with your chosen XMPP server; | ||||
|    you need to do this manually, with an XMPP client like Gajim, | ||||
|    Telepathy, or Pidgin.im. | ||||
|     | ||||
| 3. Configure your site's XMPP variables, as described below in the | ||||
|    configuration section. | ||||
|     | ||||
| On a default installation, your site can broadcast messages using | ||||
| XMPP. Users won't be able to post messages using XMPP unless you've | ||||
| got the XMPP daemon running.  See 'Queues and daemons' below for how | ||||
| to set that up. Also, once you have a sizable number of users, sending | ||||
| a lot of SMS, OMB, and XMPP messages whenever someone posts a message | ||||
| can really slow down your site; it may cause posting to timeout. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Public feed | ||||
| ----------- | ||||
|  | ||||
| You can send *all* messages from your microblogging site to a | ||||
| third-party service using XMPP. This can be useful for providing | ||||
| search, indexing, bridging, or other cool services. | ||||
|  | ||||
| To configure a downstream site to receive your public stream, add | ||||
| their "JID" (Jabber ID) to your config.php as follows: | ||||
|  | ||||
|       $config['xmpp']['public'][] = 'downstream@example.net'; | ||||
|        | ||||
| (Don't miss those square brackets at the end.) Note that your XMPP | ||||
| broadcasting must be configured as mentioned above. Although you can | ||||
| send out messages at "Web time", high-volume sites should strongly | ||||
| consider setting up queues and daemons. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Queues and daemons | ||||
| ------------------ | ||||
|  | ||||
| Some activities that Laconica needs to do, like broadcast OMB, SMS, | ||||
| and XMPP messages, can be 'queued' and done by off-line bots instead. | ||||
| For this to work, you must be able to run long-running offline | ||||
| processes, either on your main Web server or on another server you | ||||
| control. (Your other server will still need all the above | ||||
| prerequisites, with the exception of Apache.) Installing on a separate | ||||
| server is probably a good idea for high-volume sites. | ||||
|  | ||||
| 1. You'll need the "CLI" (command-line interface) version of PHP | ||||
|    installed on whatever server you use. | ||||
|  | ||||
| 2. If you're using a separate server for queues, install Laconica | ||||
|    somewhere on the server. You don't need to worry about the | ||||
|    .htaccess file, but make sure that your config.php file is close | ||||
|    to, or identical to, your Web server's version. | ||||
|  | ||||
| 3. In your config.php files (both the Web server and the queues | ||||
|    server!), set the following variable: | ||||
|  | ||||
|    $config['queue']['enabled'] = true; | ||||
|     | ||||
| 4. On the queues server, run the command scripts/startdaemons.sh. It | ||||
|    needs as a parameter the install path; if you run it from the | ||||
|    Laconica dir, "." should suffice. | ||||
|     | ||||
| This will run six (for now) queue handlers: | ||||
|  | ||||
| * xmppdaemon.php - listens for new XMPP messages from users and stores | ||||
|   them as notices in the database. | ||||
| * jabberqueuehandler.php - sends queued notices in the database to | ||||
|   registered users who should receive them. | ||||
| * publicqueuehandler.php - sends queued notices in the database to | ||||
|   public feed listeners. | ||||
| * ombqueuehandler.php - sends queued notices to OpenMicroBlogging | ||||
|   recipients on foreign servers. | ||||
| * smsqueuehandler.php - sends queued notices to SMS-over-email addresses | ||||
|   of registered users. | ||||
| * xmppconfirmhandler.php - sends confirmation messages to registered | ||||
|   users. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Note that these queue daemons are pretty raw, and need your care. In | ||||
| particular, they leak memory, and you may want to restart them on a | ||||
| regular (daily or so) basis with a cron job. Also, if they lose | ||||
| the connection to the XMPP server for too long, they'll simply die. It | ||||
| may be a good idea to use a daemon-monitoring service, like 'monit', | ||||
| to check their status and keep them running. | ||||
|  | ||||
| All the daemons write their process IDs (pids) to /var/run/ by | ||||
| default. This can be useful for starting, stopping, and monitoring the | ||||
| daemons. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Sitemaps | ||||
| -------- | ||||
|  | ||||
| Sitemap files (http://sitemaps.org/) are a very nice way of telling | ||||
| search engines and other interested bots what's available on your site | ||||
| and what's changed recently. You can generate sitemap files for your | ||||
| Laconica instance. | ||||
|  | ||||
| 1. Choose your sitemap URL layout. Laconica creates a number of | ||||
|    sitemap XML files for different parts of your site. You may want to | ||||
|    put these in a sub-directory of your Laconica directory to avoid | ||||
|    clutter. The sitemap index file tells the search engines and other | ||||
|    bots where to find all the sitemap files; it *must* be in the main | ||||
|    installation directory or higher. Both types of file must be | ||||
|    available through HTTP. | ||||
|     | ||||
| 2. To generate your sitemaps, run the following command on your server: | ||||
|  | ||||
|    php scripts/sitemap.php -f index-file-path -d sitemap-directory -u URL-prefix-for-sitemaps | ||||
|  | ||||
|    Here, index-file-path is the full path to the sitemap index file, | ||||
|    like './sitemapindex.xml'. sitemap-directory is the directory where | ||||
|    you want the sitemaps stored, like './sitemaps/' (make sure the dir | ||||
|    exists). URL-prefix-for-sitemaps is the full URL for the sitemap dir, | ||||
|    typically something like 'http://example.net/mublog/sitemaps/'. | ||||
|     | ||||
| You can use several methods for submitting your sitemap index to | ||||
| search engines to get your site indexed. One is to add a line like the | ||||
| following to your robots.txt file: | ||||
|  | ||||
|    Sitemap: /mublog/sitemapindex.xml | ||||
|  | ||||
| This is a good idea for letting *all* Web spiders know about your | ||||
| sitemap. You can also submit sitemap files to major search engines | ||||
| using their respective "Webmaster centres"; see sitemaps.org for links | ||||
| to these resources. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Themes | ||||
| ------ | ||||
|  | ||||
| Translation | ||||
| ----------- | ||||
|  | ||||
| Upgrading | ||||
| ========= | ||||
|  | ||||
| Configuration options | ||||
| ===================== | ||||
|  | ||||
| The sole configuration file for Laconica (excepting configurations for | ||||
| dependency software) is config.php in your Laconica directory. If you | ||||
| edit any other file in the directory, like lib/common.php (where most | ||||
| of the defaults are defined), you will lose your configuration options | ||||
| in any upgrade, and you will wish that you had been more careful. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Almost all configuration options are made through a two-dimensional | ||||
| associative array, cleverly named $config. A typical configuration | ||||
| line will be: | ||||
|  | ||||
|      $config['section']['option'] = value; | ||||
|  | ||||
| For brevity, the following documentation describes each section and | ||||
| option. | ||||
|  | ||||
| site | ||||
| ---- | ||||
|  | ||||
| This section is a catch-all for site-wide variables. | ||||
|  | ||||
| name: the name of your site, like 'YourCompany Microblog'. | ||||
| server: the server part of your site's URLs, like 'example.net'. | ||||
| path: The path part of your site's URLs, like 'mublog' or '/' | ||||
|       (installed in root). | ||||
| fancy: whether or not your site uses fancy URLs (see Fancy URLs | ||||
|        section above). Default is false. | ||||
| logfile: full path to a file for Laconica to save logging  | ||||
| 	 information to. You may want to use this if you don't have | ||||
| 	 access to syslog. | ||||
| locale_path: full path to the directory for locale data. Unless you | ||||
| 	     store all your locale data in one place, you probably | ||||
| 	     don't need to use this. | ||||
| language: default language for your site. Defaults to US English. | ||||
| languages: A list of languages supported on your site. Typically you'd | ||||
| 	   only change this if you wanted to disable support for one | ||||
| 	   or another language: | ||||
| 	   "unset($config['site']['languages']['de'])" will disable | ||||
| 	   support for German. | ||||
| theme: Theme for your site (see Theme section). Two themes are | ||||
|        provided by default: 'default' and 'stoica' (the one used by | ||||
|        Identi.ca). It's appreciated if you don't use the 'stoica' theme | ||||
|        except as the basis for your own. | ||||
| email: contact email address for your site. By default, it's extracted | ||||
|        from your Web server environment; you may want to customize it. | ||||
| broughtbyurl: name of an organization or individual who provides the | ||||
| 	   service. Each page will include a link to this name in the | ||||
| 	   footer. A good way to link to the blog, forum, wiki, | ||||
| 	   corporate portal, or whoever is making the service available. | ||||
| broughtby: text used for the "brought by" link. | ||||
| timezone: default timezone for message display. Users can set their | ||||
| 	  own time zone. Defaults to 'UTC', which is a pretty good default. | ||||
| closed: If set to 'true', will disallow registration on your site. | ||||
| 	This is a cheap way to restrict accounts to only one | ||||
| 	individual or group; just register the accounts you want on | ||||
| 	the service, *then* set this variable to 'true'. | ||||
|  | ||||
| syslog | ||||
| ------ | ||||
|  | ||||
| By default, Laconica sites log error messages to the syslog facility. | ||||
| (You can override this using the 'logfile' parameter described above). | ||||
|  | ||||
| appname: The name that Laconica uses to log messages. By default it's | ||||
| 	 "laconica", but if you have more than one installation on the | ||||
| 	 server, you may want to change the name for each instance so | ||||
| 	 you can track log messages more easily. | ||||
|  | ||||
| queue | ||||
| ----- | ||||
|  | ||||
| You can configure the software to queue time-consuming tasks, like | ||||
| sending out SMS email or XMPP messages, for off-line processing. See | ||||
| 'Queues and daemons' above for how to set this up. | ||||
|  | ||||
| enabled: Whether to  | ||||
|  | ||||
| 		'queue' => | ||||
| 		array('enabled' => false), | ||||
| 		'license' => | ||||
| 		array('url' => 'http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/', | ||||
| 			  'title' => 'Creative Commons Attribution 3.0', | ||||
| 			  'image' => 'http://i.creativecommons.org/l/by/3.0/88x31.png'), | ||||
| 		'mail' => | ||||
| 		array('backend' => 'mail', | ||||
| 			  'params' => NULL), | ||||
| 		'nickname' => | ||||
| 		array('blacklist' => array()), | ||||
| 		'avatar' => | ||||
| 		array('server' => NULL), | ||||
| 		'public' => | ||||
| 		array('localonly' => true), | ||||
| 		'theme' => | ||||
| 		array('server' => NULL), | ||||
| 		'xmpp' => | ||||
| 		array('enabled' => false, | ||||
| 			  'server' => 'INVALID SERVER', | ||||
| 			  'port' => 5222, | ||||
| 			  'user' => 'update', | ||||
| 			  'encryption' => true, | ||||
| 			  'resource' => 'uniquename', | ||||
| 			  'password' => 'blahblahblah', | ||||
| 			  'host' => NULL, # only set if != server | ||||
| 			  'debug' => false, # print extra debug info | ||||
| 			  'public' => array()), # JIDs of users who want to receive the public stream | ||||
| 		'tag' => | ||||
| 		array('dropoff' => 864000.0), | ||||
| 		'daemon' => | ||||
| 		array('piddir' => '/var/run', | ||||
| 			  'user' => false, | ||||
| 			  'group' => false) | ||||
| 		); | ||||
| Web | ||||
| --- | ||||
|  | ||||
| Mail | ||||
| ---- | ||||
|  | ||||
| SMS | ||||
| --- | ||||
|  | ||||
| XMPP | ||||
| ---- | ||||
|  | ||||
| Troubleshooting | ||||
| =============== | ||||
|  | ||||
| The primary output for  | ||||
|  | ||||
| Myths | ||||
| ===== | ||||
|  | ||||
| These are some myths you may see on the Web about Laconica. | ||||
| Documentation from the core team about Laconica has been pretty | ||||
| sparse, so some backtracking and guesswork resulted in some incorrect | ||||
| assumptions. | ||||
|  | ||||
| - "Set $config['db']['debug'] = 5 to debug the database." This is an | ||||
|   extremely bad idea. It's a tool built into DB_DataObject that will | ||||
|   emit oodles of print lines directly to the browser of your users. | ||||
|   Among these lines will be your database username and password. Do | ||||
|   not enable this option on a production Web site for any reason. | ||||
|    | ||||
| - "Edit dataobject.ini with the following settings..." dataobject.ini | ||||
|   is a development file for the DB_DataObject framework and is not | ||||
|   used by the running software. It was removed from the Laconica | ||||
|   distribution because its presence was confusing. Do not bother | ||||
|   configuring dataobject.ini, and do not put your database username | ||||
|   and password into the file on a production Web server; unscrupulous | ||||
|   persons may try to read it to get your passwords. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Further information and Feedback | ||||
| ================================ | ||||
|  | ||||
| There are several ways to get more information and  | ||||
|  | ||||
|  | ||||
| Credits | ||||
| ======= | ||||
|   | ||||
		Reference in New Issue
	
	Block a user