--- /dev/null
--- /dev/null
++Evergreen Server Installation
++-----------------------------
++
++Preamble: referenced user accounts
++~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
++
++In subsequent sections, we will refer to a number of different accounts, as
++follows:
++
++ * Linux user accounts:
++ ** The *user* Linux account is the account that you use to log onto the
++ Linux system as a regular user.
++ ** The *root* Linux account is an account that has system administrator
++ privileges. On Debian and Fedora you can switch to this account from
++ your *user* account by issuing the `su -` command and entering the
++ password for the *root* account when prompted. On Ubuntu you can switch
++ to this account from your *user* account using the `sudo su -` command
++ and entering the password for your *user* account when prompted.
++ ** The *opensrf* Linux account is an account that you create when installing
++ OpenSRF. You can switch to this account from the *root* account by
++ issuing the `su - opensrf` command.
++ ** The *postgres* Linux account is created automatically when you install
++ the PostgreSQL database server. You can switch to this account from the
++ *root* account by issuing the `su - postgres` command.
++ * PostgreSQL user accounts:
++ ** The *evergreen* PostgreSQL account is a superuser account that you will
++ create to connect to the PostgreSQL database server.
++ * Evergreen administrator account:
++ ** The *egadmin* Evergreen account is an administrator account for
++ Evergreen that you will use to test connectivity and configure your
++ Evergreen instance.
++
++Preamble: Getting an Evergreen official release tarball
++~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
++
++To download and extract the source for the current release of Evergreen, issue
++the following commands as the *user* Linux account:
++
++[source, bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++wget -c http://evergreen-ils.org/downloads/Evergreen-ILS-2.2-alpha1.tar.gz
++tar xzf Evergreen-ILS-2.2-alpha1.tar.gz
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++
++Preamble: Developer instructions
++~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
++
++[NOTE]
++Skip this section if you are using an official release tarball downloaded
++from http://evergreen-ils.org/downloads
++
++Developers working directly with the source code from the Git repository,
++rather than an official release tarball, must install some extra packages
++and perform one step before they can proceed with the `./configure` step.
++
++As the *root* Linux account, install the following packages:
++
++ * autoconf
++ * automake
++ * libtool
++
++As the *user* Linux account, issue the following command in the Evergreen
++source directory to generate the configure script and Makefiles:
++
++[source, bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++./autogen.sh
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++
++After running `make install`, developers also need to install the Dojo Toolkit
++set of JavaScript libraries. The appropriate version of Dojo is included
++in Evergreen release tarballs. Developers should install the Dojo 1.3.3
++version of Dojo by issuing the following commands as the *opensrf* Linux
++account:
++
++[source, bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++wget http://download.dojotoolkit.org/release-1.3.3/dojo-release-1.3.3.tar.gz
++tar -C /openils/var/web/js -xzf dojo-release-1.3.3.tar.gz
++cp -r /openils/var/web/js/dojo-release-1.3.3/* /openils/var/web/js/dojo/.
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++
++Installing prerequisites
++~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
++
++Evergreen has a number of prerequisite packages that must be installed
++before you can successfully configure, compile, and install Evergreen.
++
++1. Begin by installing the most recent version of OpenSRF (2.0 or later).
++ You can download OpenSRF releases from http://evergreen-ils.org/opensrf.php
++2. On many distributions, it is necessary to install PostgreSQL 9 from external
++ repositories.
+++
++ * On Debian Squeeze, open `/etc/apt/sources.list` in a text editor as the
++ *root* Linux account and add the following line:
+++
++[source, bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++deb http://backports.debian.org/debian-backports squeeze-backports main contrib
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+++
++ * On Ubuntu Lucid, you can use a PPA (personal package archive), which are
++ package sources hosted on Launchpad. The one most commonly used by Evergreen
++ Community members is maintained by Martin Pitt, who also maintains the
++ official PostgreSQL packages for Ubuntu. As the *root* Linux account, issue
++ the following commands to add the PPA source:
+++
++[source, bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++apt-get install python-software-properties
++add-apt-repository ppa:pitti/postgresql
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+++
++ * Fedora 16 comes with PostgreSQL 9, so no additional steps are required.
+++
++3. On Debian and Ubuntu, run `aptitude update` as the *root* Linux account to
++ retrieve the new packages from the backports repository.
++4. Issue the following commands as the *root* Linux account to install
++ prerequisites using the `Makefile.install` prerequisite installer,
++ substituting `debian-squeeze`, `fedora16`, `ubuntu-lucid`, `centos`, or
++ `rhel` for <osname> below:
+++
++[source, bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++make -f Open-ILS/src/extras/Makefile.install <osname>
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+++
++[NOTE]
++`centos` and `rhel` are less tested than the `debian`, `fedora`,
++and `ubuntu` options. Your patches and suggestions for improvement are
++welcome!
+++
++5. Add the libdbi-libdbd libraries to the system dynamic library path by
++ issuing the following commands as the *root* Linux account:
+++
++.Debian / Ubuntu
++[source, bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++echo "/usr/local/lib/dbd" > /etc/ld.so.conf.d/eg.conf
++ldconfig
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+++
++.Fedora
++[source, bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++echo "/usr/lib64/dbd" > /etc/ld.so.conf.d/eg.conf
++ldconfig
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++
++Configuration and compilation instructions
++~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
++
++For the time being, we are still installing everything in the `/openils/`
++directory. From the Evergreen source directory, issue the following commands as
++the *user* Linux account to configure and build Evergreen:
++
++[source, bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++./configure --prefix=/openils --sysconfdir=/openils/conf
++make
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++
++Installation instructions
++~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
++
++1. Once you have configured and compiled Evergreen, issue the following
++ command as the *root* Linux account to install Evergreen, build the server
++ portion of the staff client, and copy example configuration files to
++ `/openils/conf`.
++ Change the value of the `STAFF_CLIENT_STAMP_ID` variable to match the version
++ of the staff client that you will use to connect to the Evergreen server.
+++
++[source, bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++make STAFF_CLIENT_STAMP_ID=rel_2_2_alpha1 install
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+++
++2. The server portion of the staff client expects `http://hostname/xul/server`
++ to resolve. Issue the following commands as the *root* Linux account to
++ create a symbolic link pointing to the `server` subdirectory of the server
++ portion of the staff client that we just built using the staff client ID
++ 'rel_name':
+++
++[source, bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++cd /openils/var/web/xul
++ln -sf rel_name/server server
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++
++Change ownership of the Evergreen files
++~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
++
++All files in the `/openils/` directory and subdirectories must be owned by the
++`opensrf` user. Issue the following command as the *root* Linux account to
++change the ownership on the files:
++
++[source, bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++chown -R opensrf:opensrf /openils
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++
++Configure the Apache Web server
++~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
++
++1. Use the example configuration files in `Open-ILS/examples/apache/` to
++configure your Web server for the Evergreen catalog, staff client, Web
++services, and administration interfaces. Issue the following commands as the
++*root* Linux account:
+++
++.Debian and Ubuntu
++[source,bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++cp Open-ILS/examples/apache/eg.conf /etc/apache2/sites-available/
++cp Open-ILS/examples/apache/eg_vhost.conf /etc/apache2/
++cp Open-ILS/examples/apache/startup.pl /etc/apache2/
++# Now set up SSL
++mkdir /etc/apache2/ssl
++cd /etc/apache2/ssl
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+++
++.Fedora
++[source,bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++cp Open-ILS/examples/apache/eg.conf /etc/httpd/sites-available/
++cp Open-ILS/examples/apache/eg_vhost.conf /etc/httpd/
++cp Open-ILS/examples/apache/startup.pl /etc/httpd/
++# Now set up SSL
++mkdir /etc/httpd/ssl
++cd /etc/httpd/ssl
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+++
++2. The `openssl` command cuts a new SSL key for your Apache server. For a
++production server, you should purchase a signed SSL certificate, but you can
++just use a self-signed certificate and accept the warnings in the staff client
++and browser during testing and development. Create an SSL key for the Apache
++server by issuing the following command as the *root* Linux account:
+++
++[source,bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++openssl req -new -x509 -days 365 -nodes -out server.crt -keyout server.key
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+++
++3. As the *root* Linux account, edit the `eg.conf` file that you copied into
++place.
++ a. Replace `Allow from 10.0.0.0/8` with `Allow from all` (to enable
++ access to the offline upload / execute interface from any workstation on
++ any network - note that you must secure this for a production instance)
++4. Change the user for the Apache server.
++ * (Debian and Ubuntu): As the *root* Linux account, edit
++ `/etc/apache2/envvars`. Change `export APACHE_RUN_USER=www-data` to
++ `export APACHE_RUN_USER=opensrf`.
++ * (Fedora): As the *root* Linux account , edit `/etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf`.
++ Change `User apache` to `User opensrf`.
++5. Configure Apache with performance settings appropriate for Evergreen:
++ * (Debian and Ubuntu): As the *root* Linux account, edit
++ `/etc/apache2/apache2.conf`:
++ * (Fedora): As the *root* Linux account, edit `/etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf`:
++ a. Change `KeepAliveTimeout` to `1`. Higher values reduce the chance of
++ a request timing out unexpectedly, but increase the risk of using up
++ all available Apache child processes.
++ b. 'Optional': Change `MaxKeepAliveRequests` to `100`
++ c. Update the prefork configuration section to suit your environment. The
++ following settings apply to a busy system:
+++
++[source,bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++<IfModule mpm_prefork_module>
++ StartServers 20
++ MinSpareServers 5
++ MaxSpareServers 15
++ MaxClients 150
++ MaxRequestsPerChild 10000
++</IfModule>
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+++
++6. (Debian and Ubuntu): As the *root* Linux account, enable the Evergreen site:
+++
++[source,bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++a2dissite default # OPTIONAL: disable the default site (the "It Works" page)
++a2ensite eg.conf
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++
++Configure OpenSRF for the Evergreen application
++~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
++There are a number of example OpenSRF configuration files in `/openils/conf/`
++that you can use as a template for your Evergreen installation. Issue the
++following commands as the *opensrf* Linux account:
++
++[source, bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++cp -b /openils/conf/opensrf_core.xml.example /openils/conf/opensrf_core.xml
++cp -b /openils/conf/opensrf.xml.example /openils/conf/opensrf.xml
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++
++When you installed OpenSRF, you created four Jabber users on two
++separate domains and edited the `opensrf_core.xml` file accordingly. Please
++refer back to the OpenSRF README and, as the *opensrf* Linux account, edit the
++Evergreen version of the `opensrf_core.xml` file using the same Jabber users
++and domains as you used while installing and testing OpenSRF.
++
++[NOTE]
++The `-b` flag tells the `cp` command to create a backup version of the
++destination file. The backup version of the destination file has a tilde (`~`)
++appended to the file name, so if you have forgotten the Jabber users and
++domains, you can retrieve the settings from the backup version of the files.
++
++`eg_db_config.pl`, described in the following section, sets the database
++connection information in `opensrf.xml` for you.
++
++Creating the Evergreen database
++~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
++
++By default, the `Makefile.install` prerequisite installer does not install
++the PostgreSQL 9 database server required by every Evergreen system;
++for production use, most libraries install the PostgreSQL database server on a
++dedicated machine. You can install the packages required by Debian or Ubuntu
++on the machine of your choice using the following commands as the *root*
++Linux account:
++
++.(Debian / Ubuntu) Installing PostgreSQL 9.1 server packages
++[source, bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++make -f Open-ILS/src/extras/Makefile.install install_pgsql_server_debs_91
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++
++You can install the packages required by Fedora on the machine of your choice
++using the following commands as the *root* Linux account:
++
++.(Fedora 16) Installing PostgreSQL server packages
++[source, bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++make -f Open-ILS/src/extras/Makefile.install install_fedora_pgsql_server
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++
++For a standalone PostgreSQL server, install the following Perl modules as the
++*root* Linux account:
++
++.(Debian / Ubuntu) Installing additional Perl modules on a standalone PostgreSQL 9 server
++[source, bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++aptitude install gcc libxml-libxml-perl libxml-libxslt-perl
++cpan Business::ISBN
++cpan JSON::XS
++cpan Library::CallNumber::LC
++cpan MARC::Record
++cpan MARC::File::XML
++cpan UUID::Tiny
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++
++.(Fedora 16) Installing additional Perl modules on a standalone PostgreSQL 9 server
++[source, bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++yum install gcc perl-XML-LibXML perl-XML-LibXSLT perl-Business-ISBN
++cpan Library::CallNumber::LC
++cpan MARC::Record
++cpan MARC::File::XML
++cpan UUID::Tiny
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++
++You need to create a PostgreSQL superuser to create and access the database.
++Issue the following command as the *postgres* Linux account to create a new
++PostgreSQL superuser named `evergreen`. When prompted, enter the new user's
++password:
++
++[source, bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++createuser -s -P evergreen
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++
++Once you have created the *evergreen* PostgreSQL account, you also need to
++create the database and schema, and configure your configuration files to point
++at the database server. Issue the following command as the *root* Linux account
++from inside the Evergreen source directory, replacing <user>, <password>,
++<hostname>, <port>, and <dbname> with the appropriate values for your
++PostgreSQL database (where <user> and <password> are for the *evergreen*
++PostgreSQL account you just created), and replace <admin-user> and <admin-pass>
++with the values you want for the *egadmin* Evergreen administrator account:
++
++[source, bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++perl Open-ILS/src/support-scripts/eg_db_config.pl --update-config \
++ --service all --create-database --create-schema --create-offline \
++ --user <user> --password <password> --hostname <hostname> --port <port> \
++ --database <dbname> --admin-user <admin-user> --admin-pass <admin-pass>
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++
++This creates the database and schema and configures all of the services in
++your `/openils/conf/opensrf.xml` configuration file to point to that database.
++It also creates the configuration files required by the Evergreen `cgi-bin`
++administration scripts, and sets the user name and password for the *egadmin*
++Evergreen administrator account to your requested values.
++
++Creating the database on a remote server
++^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
++In a production instance of Evergreen, your PostgreSQL server should be
++installed on a dedicated server. For PostgreSQL 9.1 and later you should be
++able to continue to use the --create-database flag on eg_db_config.pl, without
++needing to install any server modules on your application machine. For
++PostgreSQL 9.0 you can either:
++
++ * Install the PostgreSQL contrib modules on the machine on which you
++ are installing the Evergreen code, and use the --create-database
++ option from that machine, or
++ * Copy the `Open-ILS/src/sql/Pg/create_database.sql` script to your
++ PostgreSQL server and invoke it as the *postgres* Linux account:
+++
++[source, bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++psql -vdb_name=<dbname> -vcontrib_dir=`pg_config --sharedir`/contrib -f create_database.sql
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++
++Then you can issue the `eg_db_config.pl` command as above _without_ the
++`--create-database` argument to create your schema and configure your
++configuration files.
++
++Starting Evergreen
++~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
++1. As the *root* Linux account, start the `memcached` and `ejabberd` services
++(if they aren't already running):
+++
++[source, bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++/etc/init.d/ejabberd start
++/etc/init.d/memcached start
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+++
++2. As the *opensrf* Linux account, start Evergreen. The `-l` flag in the
++following command is only necessary if you want to force Evergreen to treat the
++hostname as `localhost`; if you configured `opensrf.xml` using the real
++hostname of your machine as returned by `perl -ENet::Domain 'print
++Net::Domain::hostfqdn() . "\n";'`, you should not use the `-l` flag.
+++
++[source, bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++osrf_ctl.sh -l -a start_all
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+++
++ ** If you receive the error message `bash: osrf_ctl.sh: command not found`,
++ then your environment variable `PATH` does not include the `/openils/bin`
++ directory; this should have been set in the *opensrf* Linux account's
++ `.bashrc` configuration file. To manually set the `PATH` variable, edit the
++ configuration file `~/.bashrc` as the *opensrf* Linux account and add the
++ following line:
+++
++[source, bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++export PATH=$PATH:/openils/bin
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+++
++3. As the *opensrf* Linux account, generate the Web files needed by the staff
++ client and catalogue and update the organization unit proximity (you need to do
++ this the first time you start Evergreen, and after that each time you change
++ the library hierarchy in `config.cgi`):
+++
++[source, bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++autogen.sh -u
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+++
++4. As the *root* Linux account, restart the Apache Web server:
+++
++[source, bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++/etc/init.d/apache2 restart
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+++
++If the Apache Web server was running when you started the OpenSRF services, you
++might not be able to successfully log in to the OPAC or staff client until the
++Apache Web server is restarted.
++
++Testing connections to Evergreen
++~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
++
++Once you have installed and started Evergreen, test your connection to
++Evergreen via `srfsh`. As the *opensrf* Linux account, issue the following
++commands to start `srfsh` and try to log onto the Evergreen server using the
++*egadmin* Evergreen administrator user name and password that you set using the
++`eg_db_config.pl` command:
++
++[source, bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++/openils/bin/srfsh
++srfsh% login <admin-user> <admin-pass>
++------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++
++You should see a result like:
++
++ Received Data: "250bf1518c7527a03249858687714376"
++ ------------------------------------
++ Request Completed Successfully
++ Request Time in seconds: 0.045286
++ ------------------------------------
++
++ Received Data: {
++ "ilsevent":0,
++ "textcode":"SUCCESS",
++ "desc":" ",
++ "pid":21616,
++ "stacktrace":"oils_auth.c:304",
++ "payload":{
++ "authtoken":"e5f9827cc0f93b503a1cc66bee6bdd1a",
++ "authtime":420
++ }
++
++ }
++
++ ------------------------------------
++ Request Completed Successfully
++ Request Time in seconds: 1.336568
++ ------------------------------------
++
++If this does not work, it's time to do some troubleshooting.
++
++ * As the *opensrf* Linux acccount, run the `settings-tester.pl` script to see
++ if it finds any system configuration problems. The script is found at
++ `Open-ILS/src/support-scripts/settings-tester.pl` in the Evergreen source
++ tree.
++ * Follow the steps in the http://evergreen-ils.org/dokuwiki/doku.php?id=troubleshooting:checking_for_errors[troubleshooting guide].
++ * If you have faithfully followed the entire set of installation steps
++ listed here, you are probably extremely close to a working system.
++ Gather your configuration files and log files and contact the
++ http://open-ils.org/listserv.php[Evergreen development mailing list]
++ for assistance before making any drastic changes to your system
++ configuration.
++
++Getting help
++~~~~~~~~~~~~
++
++Need help installing or using Evergreen? Join the mailing lists at
++http://evergreen-ils.org/listserv.php or contact us on the Freenode
++IRC network on the #evergreen channel.
++
--- /dev/null
--- /dev/null
++Upgrading the Evergreen Server
++------------------------------
++Before upgrading, it is important to carefully plan an upgrade strategy to minimize system downtime and service interruptions.
++All of the steps in this chapter are to be completed from the command line.
++
++Software Prerequisites:
++~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
++
++* PostgreSQL: Version 9.0 is the minimum supported version of PostgreSQL.
++* Linux: Evergreen 2.0 has been tested on Debian Squeeze (6.0) and Ubuntu Lucid Lynx (10.04). If you are running an older version of these distributions,
++you may want to upgrade before upgrading Evergreen. For instructions on upgrading these distributions, visit the Debian or Ubuntu websites.
++
++In the following instructions, you are asked to perform certain steps as either the root or opensrf user.
++
++ * Debian: To become the root user, issue the su command and enter the password of the root user.
++ * Ubuntu: To become the root user, issue the sudo su command and enter the password of your current user.
++
++To switch from the root user to a different user, issue the su - [user] command; for example, su - opensrf. Once you have become a non-root user, to become the root user again simply issue the exit command.
++
++In the following instructions, /path/to/OpenSRF/ represents the path to the OpenSRF source directory.
++
++1. Stop Evergreen and back up your data:
++a. As root, stop the Apache web server.
++b. As the opensrf user, stop all Evergreen and OpenSRF services:
+++
++[source, bash]
++-----------------------------
++osrf_ctl.sh -l -a stop_all
++-----------------------------
+++
++c. Back up of the /openils directory.
++d. Back up the evergreen database.
++2. Upgrade OpenSRF to the latest edition.
+++
++[NOTE]
++You may skip this step if the latest version of OpenSRF 2.0.x was previously installed.
+++
++3. Download and install the latest version of Opensrf from the OpenSRF download page. For details visit http://open-ils.org/opensrf.php.
++4. As the opensrf user, download and extract Evergreen 2.2
+++
++[source, bash]
++-----------------------------------------------
++wget http://www.open-ils.org/downloads/Evergreen-ILS-2.2.alpha1.tar.gz
++tar xzf Evergreen-ILS-2.2.alpha1.tar.gz
++-----------------------------------------------
+++
++[NOTE]
++For the latest edition of Evergreen, check the Evergreen download page at http://www.open-ils.org/downloads.php and adjust upgrading instructions accordingly.
+++
++5. As the root user, install the prerequisites:
+++
++[source, bash]
++----------------------------------------------
++cd /home/opensrf/Evergreen-ILS-2.2.alpha1
++---------------------------------------------
++ +
++On the next command, replace [distribution] with one of these values for your distribution of Debian or Ubuntu:
++* debian-squeeze for Debian Squeeze (6.0)
++* ubuntu-lucid for Ubuntu Lucid Lynx (10.04)
+++
++[source, bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------
++make -f Open-ILS/src/extras/Makefile.install [distribution]
++------------------------------------------------------------
+++
++6. As the opensrf user, configure and compile Evergreen:
+++
++[source, bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------
++cd /home/opensrf/Evergreen-ILS-2.2.alpha1
++./configure --prefix=/openils --sysconfdir=/openils/conf
++make
++------------------------------------------------------------
+++
++7. As the root user, install Evergreen:
+++
++[source, bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------
++make STAFF_CLIENT_BUILD_ID=rel_2_2_alpha1 install
++------------------------------------------------------------
+++
++. As the root user, change all files to be owned by the opensrf user and group:
+++
++[source, bash]
++------------------------------------------------------------
++chown -R opensrf:opensrf /openils
++------------------------------------------------------------
+++
++8. As the opensrf user, update configuration files:
+++
++[source, bash]
++-----------------------------------------------------------
++cd /home/opensrf/Evergreen-ILS-2.2.alpha1
++ # and offline-config.pl for the offline staff client data uploader
++perl Open-ILS/src/support-scripts/eg_db_config.pl \
++--create-offline --user evergreen --password evergreen \
++--hostname localhost --port 5432 --database evergreen
++----------------------------------------------------------
+++
++9. As the opensrf user, update server symlink in /openils/var/web/xul/:
+++
++[source, bash]
++-----------------------------------------------------------
++cd /openils/var/web/xul/
++rm server
++ln -s rel_2_2_alpha1/server
++----------------------------------------------------------
+++
++10. Change to the Evergreen installation directory:
+++
++[source, bash]
++----------------------------------------------------------
++cd /home/opensrf/Evergreen-ILS-2.2.alpha1
++---------------------------------------------------------
+++
++11. Update the evergreen database:
+++
++It is recommended that you back up your Evergreen database in order to restore your data if anything goes wrong.
+++
++[WARNING]
++Pay attention to error output as you run these scripts. You should do additional troubleshooting and error reporting to the Evergreen Developer List if you encounter errors.
+++
++[source, bash]
++----------------------------------------------------------
++cd /home/opensrf/Evergreen-ILS-2.1.alpha1
++psql -U evergreen -h localhost -f Open-ILS/src/sql/Pg/2.1-2.2-alpha1.sql evergreen
++----------------------------------------------------------
+++
++12. As the opensrf user, copy /openils/conf/oils_web.xml.example to /openils/conf/oils_web.xml . (If upgrading from 1.6.1.x, oils_web.xml should already exist.)
+++
++[source, bash]
++----------------------------------------------------------
++cp /openils/conf/oils_web.xml.example /openils/conf/oils_web.xml
++----------------------------------------------------------
+++
++13. Update opensrf_core.xml and opensrf.xml by copying the new example files (/openils/conf/opensrf_core.xml.example and /openils/conf/opensrf.xml).
+++
++[source, bash]
++----------------------------------------------------------
++cp /openils/conf/opensrf_core.xml.example /openils/conf/opensrf_core.xml
++cp /openils/conf/opensrf.xml.example /openils/conf/opensrf.xml
++----------------------------------------------------------
+++
++[WARNING]
++Copying these configuration files will remove any customizations you have made to them. Remember to redo your customizations after copying them.
+++
++14. Update Apache files:
+++
++[WARNING]
++Copying these Apache configuration files will remove any customizations you have made to them. Remember to redo your customizations after copying them. For example,
++if you purchased an SSL certificate, you will need to edit eg.conf to point to the appropriate SSL certificate files.
+++
++.. Update /etc/apache2/startup.pl by copying the example from Open-ILS/examples/apache/startup.pl.
++.. Update /etc/apache2/eg_vhost.conf by copying the example from Open-ILS/examples/apache/eg_vhost.conf.
++.. Update /etc/apache2/sites-available/eg.conf by copying the example from Open-ILS/ examples/apache/eg.conf.
++15. Update opensrf.xml with the database connection info:
+++
++If you are happy with the default settings in opensrf.xml.example, then:
+++
++[source, bash]
++-------------------------------------------------------------------------
++cp -b /openils/conf/opensrf.xml.example /openils/conf/opensrf.xml
++perl Open-ILS/src/support-scripts/eg_db_config.pl --update-config --service all \
++--database evergreen --host localhost --user evergreen --password evergreen
++-------------------------------------------------------------------------
+++
++Otherwise, compare /openils/conf/opensrf.xml with /openils/conf/opensrf.xml and manually copy the new pieces into place in your existing opensrf.xml file
++
++Restart Evergreen and Test
++~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
++
++1. As the opensrf user, start all Evergreen and OpenSRF services:
+++
++[source, bash]
++--------------------------------------------------------------
++osrf_ctl.sh -l -a start_all
++--------------------------------------------------------------
+++
++2. As the opensrf user, run autogen to refresh the static organizational data files:
+++
++[source, bash]
++--------------------------------------------------------------
++cd /openils/bin
++./autogen.sh -c /openils/conf/opensrf_core.xml -u
++--------------------------------------------------------------
+++
++3. Start srfsh and try logging in using your Evergreen username and password:
+++
++[source, bash]
++--------------------------------------------------------------
++/openils/bin/srfsh
++srfsh% login username password
++--------------------------------------------------------------
+++
++You should see a result like:
+++
++[source, bash]
++------------------------------------------------------
++Received Data: "250bf1518c7527a03249858687714376"
++ ------------------------------------
++ Request Completed Successfully
++ Request Time in seconds: 0.045286
++ ------------------------------------
++
++ Received Data: {
++ "ilsevent":0,
++ "textcode":"SUCCESS",
++ "desc":" ",
++ "pid":21616,
++ "stacktrace":"oils_auth.c:304",
++ "payload":{
++ "authtoken":"e5f9827cc0f93b503a1cc66bee6bdd1a",
++ "authtime":420
++ }
++
++ }
++
++ ------------------------------------
++ Request Completed Successfully
++ Request Time in seconds: 1.336568
++ ------------------------------------
++----------------------------------------------------------
+++
++If this does not work, it's time to do some troubleshooting.
++
++4. Start the Apache web server.
+++
++If you encounter errors, refer to the troubleshooting section of this documentation for tips on finding solutions and seeking further assistance from the Evergreen community.