Wt  3.3.8
Installation: Unix-like platforms
Wt Installation

Wt Installation instructions on Unix-like systems

This page lists the instructions for building and installing Wt. It is organized in 3 sections:

Requirements

The library provides two ways for deploying applications: either using the FastCGI protocol, in conjunction with a webserver (like apache), or using a built-in web server (wthttpd). You only need one of these, but you can have both of them.

The built-in web server is more convenient during development and is easier to setup. It also allows you to use WebSockets.

The FastCGI based solution can be more convenient for deployment behind another web server.

Each of these two choices correspond to a library, a so-called connector library. Below it is outlined how to configure the build process of Wt to build either or both libraries (libwthttp and libfcgi).

Thus, to build a Wt library with built-in web server you need to link against libwt and libwthttp. To build a Wt library which acts as a FastCGI process, you need to link against libwt and libfcgi.

1 Wt requirements

1a Using FastCGI

When using FastCGI, Wt requires a webserver (like apache, lighttpd or nginx) which supports the FastCGI protocol.

Given that Apache is still the most popular webserver, below are the requirements for apache, for other web servers the list is similar:

1b Using wthttpd

When using the built-in webserver, two more libraries may be installed to enable optional features (you can also build without them), but otherwise no extra dependencies are required.

2 Additional and optional requirements for some of the examples


Building and installing the Wt library

1. Create a build directory

The recommended way to build the library is in a seperate build directory, for example within the top-level of the Wt package:

    $ cd wt-x.xx
    $ mkdir build
    $ cd build

2. Configure the library

    $ cmake ../

The latter command will try to locate the necessary libraries. If everything is OK, then this should end with something like:

  -- Generating done
  -- Build files have been written to: /home/kdforc0/project/wt/build

To build a multi-threaded version of Wt, which uses multiple threads for handling concurrent requests, you need a thread-enabled boost library. By default, CMake 2.6 will only search for a thread-enabled boost installation, while CMake 2.4 will fall-back to a non-multithreaded boost library, reporting:

  ...
  -- Looking for pthread_create in pthread - found
  ** Disabling multi threading.
  ...

Most linux distributions provide multi-threaded boost libraries by default now.

If CMake fails, because it cannot resolve all dependencies, then you may help CMake by setting some variables to help CMake locate the libraries. This may be done on the command-line using -Dvar=value or using the interactive program:

    $ ccmake ../
or
    $ cmake-gui ../

The GUI lists all variables that are configurable in Wt's build process. Variables that you may set to configure Wt's built-in boost finding method:

BOOST_COMPILER
The boost compiler signature. For a library libboost_regex-gcc41-mt-1_37.so, this is 'gcc41'
BOOST_VERSION
The boost compiler signature. For a library libboost_regex-gcc41-mt-1_37.so, this is '1_37'
BOOST_DIR
The boost installation directory. This is the directory where lib/ and include/ are located for your boost installation.
Other variables specify several build and configuration aspects of Wt, of which the most relevant ones are (there are many more visible in the GUI):
CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX
Installation prefix for the library and include files)
CONFIGDIR
Path for configuration files (default is /etc/wt/)
CONNECTOR_FCGI
Build the FastCGI connector (libwtfcgi) ?
CONNECTOR_HTTP
Build the stand-alone httpd connector (libwthttp) ?
EXAMPLES_CONNECTOR
Which connector library to use for the examples? (wthttp or wtfcgi)
MULTI_THREADED
Build a multi-threaded wthttpd? While on by default, and recommended, you may want to disable this for example if you suspect threading problems. Note that recursive event loops (most notably when using Dialog::exec()) are not possible without thread support.
The following variables apply to the FastCGI connector:
RUNDIR
Default location for Wt runtime session management (can be overridden in the Configuration file)
WEBUSER
Webserver username: used to assign permissions to RUNDIR
WEBGROUP
Webserver groupname: used to assign permissions to RUNDIR
The following variables apply to the wthttpd connector:
WTHTTP_CONFIGURATION
Location of the wthttpd configuration file (default is /etc/wt/wthttpd)
To change any entry, use [Enter]. To save and quit, do [c] followed by [g].

3. Build the library

    $ make

4. Install the library (as user with sufficient permissions):

    $ make install

5. Get your LD_LIBRARY_PATH ok, if needed (mostly for FastCGI).

If you did not install Wt in a directory (CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX) included in the default linker dynamic library search path, then the web server will not be able to start Wt programs (such as the examples).

Fix it by (as user with sufficient permissions):

    $ ln -s /your/path/to/lib/libwt.so /usr/lib
    $ ln -s /your/path/to/lib/libwtfcgi.so /usr/lib


Trying the examples (or your own Wt application)

Deploying an application is different when using FastCGI or the built-in web server (wthttpd).

The examples that come with the library use the connector specified by the build option EXAMPLES_CONNECTOR (see supra).

Some examples need third-party JavaScript libraries (ExtJS or TinyMCE).

You will notice 404 File not Found errors for ext/ or resources/tiny_mce/ if you are missing these JavaScript libraries.

A. Using FastCGI and apache

1. Build the examples

    $ make -C examples

2. Deploy the example foobar

The easiest way to deploy the examples is by copying the binary (from your build directory) and the source directory (which contains the images) and the resources/ into the same destination directory somewhere in your Apache server (we no longer generate a ./deploy.sh script that took care of some of this).

    $ export DESTINATION=/var/www/localhost/htdocs/wt-examples
    $ mkdir -p $DESTINATION/foobar
    $ cp -r examples/foobar/* resources/* build/examples/foobar/*.wt $DESTINATION/foobar/

This does however make public also files (such as message resources bundles, data files, etc...) that do not need to be served by your web server. The clean way to deploy your own applications is to use the "approot" property to deploy those files to a directory outside the webserver's doc root.

3. Configure Apache

Treat the example as a mod_fastcgi application, by adding a line to 20_mod_fastcgi.conf in your Apache configuration modules.d/ directory, e.g.:

    FastCgiServer /var/www/localhost/htdocs/wt-examples/composer/composer.wt

4. Restart apache

B. Using wthttpd

1. Build the examples

    $ make -C examples

2. Running an example

Most examples use additional files, such as message resource bundles, which are not indicated with absolute path names. Therefore the working directory should be the source directory for the example. A similar argument goes for icons and the setting of the --docroot variable. Since Wt 3.1.4, you can use the "approot" property to move the additional files that should not be available to browsers outside of the docroot.

    $ cd ../examples/foobar # source directory for example foobar
    $ ln -s ../../resources . # include standard Wt resource files
    $ ../../build/examples/foobar/foobar.wt --docroot . --http-address 0.0.0.0 --http-port 8080

This will start a httpd server listening on all local interfaces, on port 8080, and you may browse the example at http://127.0.0.1:8080/

You will notice 404 File not Found errors for resources/ files if you are missing the resources files.

These are all the command-line options that are available:

General options:
  -h [ --help ]                 produce help message
  -t [ --threads ] arg (=10)    number of threads
  --servername arg (=vierwerf)  servername (IP address or DNS name)
  --docroot arg                 document root for static files
  --errroot arg                 root for error pages
  --accesslog arg               access log file (defaults to stdout)
  --no-compression              do not compress dynamic text/html and text/plai
                                n responses
  --deploy-path arg (=/)        location for deployment
  --session-id-prefix arg       prefix for session-id's (overrides wt_config.xm
                                l setting)
  -p [ --pid-file ] arg         path to pid file (optional)
  -c [ --config ] arg           location of wt_config.xml. If unspecified, 
                                WT_CONFIG_XML is searched in the environment, 
                                if it does not exist then the compiled-in 
                                default (/etc/wt/wt_config.xml) is tried. If 
                                the default does not exist, we revert to 
                                default values for all parameters.
  --max-request-size arg        Maximum size of a HTTP request. This also 
                                limits POST requests, so this is an upper limit
                                for file uploads. Default is 40MB.
  --max-memory-request-size arg Requests are usually read in memory before 
                                being processed. To avoid DOS attacks where 
                                large requests take up all RAM, use this 
                                parameter to force requests that are larger 
                                than the specified size to be spooled to disk. 
                                This will also spool file uploads to disk.
  --gdb                         do not shutdown when receiving Ctrl-C (and let 
                                gdb break instead)

HTTP server options:
  --http-address arg    IPv4 (e.g. 0.0.0.0) or IPv6 Address (e.g. 0::0)
  --http-port arg (=80) HTTP port (e.g. 80)

HTTPS server options:
  --https-address arg     IPv4 (e.g. 0.0.0.0) or IPv6 Address (e.g. 0::0)
  --https-port arg (=443) HTTPS port (e.g. 443)
  --ssl-certificate arg   SSL server certificate chain file
                          e.g. "/etc/ssl/certs/vsign1.pem"
  --ssl-private-key arg   SSL server private key file
                          e.g. "/etc/ssl/private/company.pem"
  --ssl-tmp-dh arg        File for temporary Diffie-Hellman parameters
                          e.g. "/etc/ssl/dh512.pem"


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