pjs/webtools/lxr/INSTALL

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This INSTALL file is customized for the version of lxr used by
mozilla.org. The original version can be found at
http://lxr.linux.no/
In order to install LXR, you will need:
- Perl version 5 or later.
- A webserver with cgi-script capabilities.
and optionally, to enable the freetext search queries:
- Glimpse
If you don't have Perl installed, get it from
<URL:http://www.perl.com/perl/info/software.html>.
If you need a webserver, take a look at Apache at
<URL:http://www.apache.org/>
If you want Glimpse and the freetext searching facilites, visit
<URL:http://glimpse.cs.arizona.edu/>.
LXR has so far been tested on the GNU/Linux operating system using the
Apache webserver. Other unix-like operating systems and decently
featured webservers should do as well.
To install LXR itself:
- Retrieve the lxr source via anonymous cvs from mozilla.org's
server from mozilla/webtools/lxr. Find out about anonymous
cvs at mozilla.org at http://www.mozilla.org/cvs.html
- Edit lxr.conf to fit your source code installations and needs.
- Make sure the files in http can be reached via your webserver.
Make sure your webserver executes the files search, source, ident
and diff as cgi-scripts. With the Apache webserver this can be
accomplished by making .htaccess contain the following lines:
<Files ~ (search|source|ident|diff)$>
SetHandler cgi-script
</Files>
You may also need to edit these Apache config files appropriately
srm.conf
AddHandler cgi-script .cgi
access.conf
Options <whatever> # setting to all will work
AllowOverride Options
Its also recommended to set up a robots.txt file on your server to
discourage robots from traversing your source tree and performing
an identifier lookup for each identifier in your code. This will
take up a lot of cpu time and probably several gigabytes of files.
- Generate the identifier database. Go to the directory you
configured as "dbdir" in lxr.conf and do "genxref foo", where foo
is the subdirectory containing the actual source code.
- (Optional) Generate the Glimpse database. Go to the directory you
configured as "dbdir" in lxr.conf and do "glimpseindex -H . foo",
where foo is the same as above. You might want to add other options
to the commandline (e.g. "-n"), see the Glimpse documentation for details.
If it doesn't work:
- Make sure all the permissions are right. Remember that the
webserver needs to be able to access most of them.
- Check that all the Perl scripts find their library files, also when
executed by the webserver.
The lxr.conf file:
LXR does not care much about your directory structure, all relevant
paths can be configured from the lxr.conf file. This file is located
in the same directory as the perl script files. This makes it
possible to have different source trees in different directories on
the web server.
LXR recognizes the following options in the configuration file.
baseurl
The url for the root directory of your source.
htmlhead
The header of all html files. This is a template that
contains mainly html code but it can also contain some special
directives, these are documented below.
sourcehead
A special version of htmlhead used for source code listings.
sourcedirhead
A special version of htmlhead used for directory listings.
htmltail
Template for bottom of pages.
htmldir
Template file for the directory listings.
sourceroot
The root directory of the source to be indexed. If you're indexing
several version you could include a variable in the path.
sourceroot: /usr/local/lxr/source/$v/linux/
virtroot
This is prepended to the path name when forming the url in links.
bonsaihome
If bonsai is set up for your code then set this as the url prefix. If not,
then remove the bonsai related code in the htmlhead file and ignore this.
More info on bonsai can be found at http://www.mozilla.org/bonsai.html
sourcerootname
The name of the root (more....)
incprefix
Where to find source specific include files.
dbdir
Where to find the database files that lxr needs (fileidx xref and
the glimpse files).
glimpsebin
Location of the glimpse binary on your system.
variable
This defines a variable that can be used in templates and
the config file. The syntax is
variable: <name>, <text>, <values>, <default>
<name> is the name of the variable, <text> is a textual description,
<values> are the possible values of the variable.
<default> is the default value of the variable.
The <values> field can either be a list starting with a "(" and
ending with a ")", with elements separated with ",", or it can be
[ <filename> ]. In this case the values are read from a file with
one value on each line.
EXAMPLE:
# Define typed variable "v", read valueset from file.
variable: v, Version, [/local/lxr/source/versions], [/local/lxr/source/defversion]
# Define typed variable "a". First value is default.
variable: a, Architecture, (i386, alpha, m68k, mips, ppc, sparc, sparc64)
map - This makes it possible to rewrite directories using variables.
The linux sourcecode for instance contains several different
architectures, the include files for each of these are found in the
directory /include/asm-<architecture>/. To remap each of these
according to a variable $a you can specify
map: /include/asm[^\/]*/ /include/asm-$a/
Find creative uses for this option :-)