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doc/install.txt
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doc/install.txt
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@ -1,300 +1,354 @@
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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This is a summary of the VIVO installation process. This and other documentation
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can be found at:
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||||
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http://vivoweb.org/support
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||||
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||||
PLEASE NOTE!
|
||||
These instructions assume that you are performing a clean install,
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||||
including emptying an existing database and removing a previous installation
|
||||
from the tomcat webapps directory. Product functionality may not be as expected
|
||||
if you install over an existing installation of an earlier version.
|
||||
|
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Upgrade:
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||||
If you are going to upgrade an existing service, please consult the upgrade.txt
|
||||
in this directory.
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||||
|
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VIVO Developers:
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If you are working on the VIVO source code from Subversion, the instructions
|
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are slightly different. Please consult "developers.txt" in this directory.
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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* I. Install required software
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||||
* II. Create an empty MySQL database
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* III. Download the VIVO code distribution
|
||||
* IV. Specify deployment properties
|
||||
* V. Compile and deploy
|
||||
* VI. Set Tomcat JVM Parameters
|
||||
* VII. Start Tomcat
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||||
* VIII. Log in and add RDF data
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||||
* IX. Create an initial Lucene search index
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* X. Setup Apache Tomcat Connector
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* XI. Configure Pellet Reasoner
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* XII. Was the Installation Successful?
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||||
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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||||
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||||
I. Install required software
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||||
|
||||
Before installing VIVO, make sure that the following software is installed on
|
||||
the desired machine:
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||||
|
||||
* Java (SE) 1.5 or higher [http://java.sun.com/javase/downloads/]
|
||||
* Apache Tomcat 5.x or higher* [http://tomcat.apache.org]
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||||
* Apache Ant [http://ant.apache.org/]
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* MySQL 4.1 or higher [http://www.mysql.com/downloads/mysql/#downloads]
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* Subversion client (developers only)
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|
||||
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
II. Create an empty MySQL database
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||||
|
||||
Decide on a database name, username, and password. Log into your mysql server
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||||
and create a new database in MySQL that uses UTF-8 encoding. You will need
|
||||
these values for step IV when you configure the deployment properties. At the
|
||||
mysql command line you can create the database and user with these commands
|
||||
substituting your values for "dbname", "username", and "password". Most of the
|
||||
time, the "hostname" will equal "localhost".
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||||
|
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CREATE DATABASE dbname CHARACTER SET utf8;
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||||
|
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Grant access to a database user. For example:
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|
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GRANT ALL ON dbname.* TO 'username'@'hostname' IDENTIFIED BY 'password';
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||||
|
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Keep track of the database name, username, and password for the next step.
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
|
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III. Download the VIVO code distribution
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||||
|
||||
Download either a zip or gz file and unpack it on your web server:
|
||||
ftp://download.mannlib.cornell.edu/pub/Vivo/rel-1.0.zip
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||||
ftp://download.mannlib.cornell.edu/pub/Vivo/rel-1.0.tar.gz
|
||||
|
||||
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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|
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IV. Specify deployment properties
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||||
|
||||
At the top level of the unpacked distribution, copy the file
|
||||
example.deploy.properties to a file named simply deploy.properties. This file
|
||||
sets several properties used in compilation and deployment.
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|
||||
Directory where Vitro code is located
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(this is used by developers, and should not be changed)
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property name: vitro.core.dir
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example value: ./vitro-core
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Directory where tomcat is installed
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property name: tomcat.home
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example value: /usr/local/tomcat
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Name of your VIVO application
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property name: webapp.name
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example value: vivo
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Directory where uploaded files will be stored
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property name: upload.directory
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example value: /usr/local/vivo/data/uploads
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Directory where the Lucene search index will be built.
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property name: LuceneSetup.indexDir
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example value: /usr/local/vivo/data/luceneIndex
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Specify the namespace in which the Vitro editor should create new ABox and portal resources
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Note that the trailing slash is essential.
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property name: Vitro.defaultNamespace
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example value: http://vivo.mydomain.edu/individual/
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|
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Specify an SMTP host that the form will use for sending e-mail (Optional)
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property name: Vitro.smtpHost
|
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example value: smtp.servername.edu
|
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|
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Specify the JDBC URL of your database. Change the end of the
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URL to reflect your database name (if it is not "vivo").
|
||||
property name: VitroConnection.DataSource.url
|
||||
example value: jdbc:mysql://localhost/vivo
|
||||
|
||||
Change the username to match the authorized user you created in MySQL
|
||||
property name: VitroConnection.DataSource.username
|
||||
example value: username
|
||||
|
||||
Change the password to match the password you created in MySQL
|
||||
property name: VitroConnection.DataSource.password
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||||
example value: password
|
||||
|
||||
Specify the name of your first admin user for the VIVO application. This user
|
||||
will have an initial password of 'defaultAdmin'. This will be changed on first
|
||||
login.
|
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property name: initialAdminUser
|
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example value: defaultAdmin
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|
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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|
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V. Compile and deploy
|
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|
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At the command line, from the top level of the unpacked distribution directory,
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type:
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|
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ant clean deploy
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||||
|
||||
to build VIVO and deploy to Tomcat's webapps directory.
|
||||
|
||||
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
VI. Set Tomcat JVM Parameters
|
||||
|
||||
Currently, VIVO copies the contents of your RDF database into memory in order
|
||||
to serve Web requests quickly. (The in-memory copy and the underlying database
|
||||
are kept in synch as edits are performed.)
|
||||
|
||||
VIVO will require more memory than that allocated to Tomcat by default. With
|
||||
most installations of Tomcat, the setenv.sh or setenv.bat file in Tomcat's bin
|
||||
directory is a convenient place to set the memory parameters. For example:
|
||||
export CATALINA_OPTS="-Xms1024m -Xmx1024m -XX:MaxPermSize=64m" sets Tomcat to
|
||||
allocate an initial heap of 1024 megabytes, a maximum heap of 1024 megabytes,
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||||
and a PermGen space of 64 megs. 1024 megabytes is a minimum practical heap size
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||||
for production installations storing data for large academic institutions, and
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||||
additional heap space is preferable. For testing with small sets of data, 256m
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to 512m should be sufficient.
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||||
|
||||
If an OutOfMemoryError is encountered during VIVO execution, increasing the
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||||
heap parameters is the typical remedy.
|
||||
|
||||
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
VII. Start Tomcat
|
||||
|
||||
Most Tomcat installations can be started by running startup.sh or startup.bat
|
||||
in Tomcat's bin directory. Point your browser to http://localhost:8080/vivo/
|
||||
to test the application.
|
||||
|
||||
If Tomcat does not start up, or the VIVO application is not visible, check the
|
||||
catalina.out file in Tomcat's logs directory. (More information about detailed
|
||||
error logging to be added here.)
|
||||
|
||||
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
VIII. Log in and add RDF data
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||||
|
||||
If the startup was successful, you will see a relatively empty screen with the
|
||||
VIVO logo in the header. Click the "Log in" link near the upper right corner.
|
||||
Log in with the initialAdminUser username you set up in step IV. The initial
|
||||
password the initialAdminUser is defaultAdmin. On first login, you will be
|
||||
prompted to select a new password and verify it a second time.
|
||||
|
||||
After verifying your new password, you will be presented with a menu of
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||||
editing options. Here you can create OWL classes, object properties, datatype
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||||
properties, and configure the display of data. Currently, any classes you wish
|
||||
to make visible on your website must be part of a Class Group, and there a
|
||||
number of visibility and display options available for each ontology entity.
|
||||
More documentation is forthcoming.
|
||||
|
||||
VIVO comes with an ontology, but you may also upload another ontology from an
|
||||
RDF file. Under the "Advanced Data Tools", click "Add/Remove RDF Data." Note
|
||||
that Vitro currently works best with OWL-DL ontologies and has only limited
|
||||
support for pure RDF data. You can enter a URL pointing to the RDF data you
|
||||
wish to load or upload a file on your local machine. Ensure that the "add RDF"
|
||||
radio button is selected. You will also likely want to check "create
|
||||
classgroups automatically." Clicking the "Index" tab in the navigation bar at
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||||
the top left of the page will show a simple index of the knowledge base.
|
||||
See more documentation for configuring VIVO at vivoweb.org.
|
||||
|
||||
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
IX. Create an initial Lucene search index
|
||||
|
||||
Invoke the indexing servlet by requesting http://localhost:8080/vivo/SearchIndex
|
||||
|
||||
You will not see any output to the browser (though this will change in future
|
||||
versions). When your browser switches to a blank screen, the indexing has
|
||||
completed and the search box on the Vitro portal will be usable. Individuals
|
||||
that are created, edited, or deleted from the Vitro editing interface will
|
||||
trigger incremental updates of the search index.
|
||||
|
||||
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
X. Setup Apache Tomcat Connector
|
||||
|
||||
It is recommend that a Tomcat Connector, such as mod_jk be used to ensure that
|
||||
the site address does not include the port number and any extraneous Tomcat
|
||||
context.
|
||||
|
||||
For example - http://example.com instead of http://example.com:8080/vivo
|
||||
|
||||
Using the mod_jk connector allows for communication between Tomcat and the
|
||||
primary web server. The "Quick Start HowTo" on the Apache site
|
||||
http://tomcat.apache.org/connectors-doc/generic_howto/quick.html describes
|
||||
the minimum server configurations for several popular web servers.
|
||||
|
||||
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
XI. Configure Pellet Reasoner
|
||||
|
||||
VIVO uses the ÒPelletÓ engine to perform reasoning, which runs in the
|
||||
background at startup and also when the knowledge base is edited. VIVO
|
||||
continues serving pages while the reasoner continues working; when it finishes,
|
||||
the new inferences appear. Inferred statements are cached in a database graph
|
||||
so that they are available immediately when VIVO is restarted.
|
||||
|
||||
By default, ÒPelletÓ is fed only an incomplete view of your ontology and only
|
||||
certain inferences are materialized. These include rdf:type,
|
||||
rdfs:subClassOf,owl:equivalentClass, and owl:disjointWith. This mode is
|
||||
typically suitable for ontologies with a lot of instance data. If you would
|
||||
like to keep the default mode, skip to the next step.
|
||||
|
||||
To enable "complete" OWL inference (materialize all significant entailed
|
||||
statements), openvitro-core/webapp/config/web.xml and search for
|
||||
PelletReasonerSetup.
|
||||
|
||||
Then change the name of the listener class to PelletReasonerSetupComplete.
|
||||
Because "complete" reasoning can be very resource intensive, there is also an
|
||||
option to materialize nearly all inferences except owl:sameAs and
|
||||
owl:differentFrom.
|
||||
|
||||
This is enabled by specifying PelletReasonerSetupPseudocomplete. For ontologies
|
||||
with large numbers of individuals, this mode can offer enormous performance
|
||||
improvements over the "complete" mode.
|
||||
|
||||
Finally, a class called PelletReasonerSetupPseudocompleteIgnoreDataproperties
|
||||
is provided to improve performance on ontologies with large literals where
|
||||
datatype property entailments are not needed.
|
||||
|
||||
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
XII. Was the installation successful?
|
||||
|
||||
If you have completed the previous steps, you have good indications that the
|
||||
installation was successful.
|
||||
|
||||
* Step VII showed that Tomcat recognized the webapp, and that the webapp was
|
||||
able to present the initial page.
|
||||
* Step VIII verified that you can log in to the administrator account.
|
||||
* Step IX initialized the Lucene Search system. Though there is very little
|
||||
feedback for a successful installation, there are dramatic indications
|
||||
for failures.
|
||||
|
||||
Here is a simple test to see whether the ontology files were loaded:
|
||||
* Point your browser to http://localhost:8080/vivo, and click the "Log in" link
|
||||
near the upper right corner. Log in with the initialAdminUser username you
|
||||
set up in step IV. If this is your first time logging in, you will be
|
||||
prompted to change the password.
|
||||
* Click on the "Index" link on the upper left, below the logo. You should see
|
||||
a "locations" section, with links for "Country" and "Geographic Location".
|
||||
The index is built in a background thread, so on your first login, you may
|
||||
see an empty index instead. Refresh the page periodically to see whether
|
||||
the index will be populated. This may take some time: with VIVO installed
|
||||
on a modest laptop computer, loading the ontology files and building the
|
||||
index took more than 5 minutes from the time that Tomcat was started.
|
||||
* Click on the "Country" link. You should see an alphabetical list of the
|
||||
countries of the world.
|
||||
|
||||
Finally, test the search index.
|
||||
* The search box is on the right side, directly opposite the "Index" link.
|
||||
Type the word "Afghanistan" into the box, and click on the "Search"
|
||||
button.You should see a page of results, with links to countries that
|
||||
border Afghanistan, entities that include Afghanistan, and to
|
||||
Afghanistan itself.
|
||||
|
||||
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
This document is a summary of the VIVO installation process. This and other documentation
|
||||
can be found at:
|
||||
|
||||
http://vivoweb.org/support
|
||||
|
||||
PLEASE NOTE!
|
||||
These instructions assume that you are performing a clean install,
|
||||
including emptying an existing database and removing a previous installation
|
||||
from the Tomcat webapps directory. Product functionality may not be as expected
|
||||
if you install over an existing installation of an earlier version.
|
||||
|
||||
Upgrade:
|
||||
If you are going to upgrade an existing service, please consult the upgrade.txt
|
||||
in this directory.
|
||||
|
||||
VIVO Developers:
|
||||
If you are working on the VIVO source code from Subversion, the instructions
|
||||
are slightly different. Please consult developers.txt in this directory.
|
||||
|
||||
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
* I. Install required software
|
||||
* II. Create an empty MySQL database
|
||||
* III. Download the VIVO code distribution
|
||||
* IV. Specify deployment properties
|
||||
* V. Compile and deploy
|
||||
* VI. Set Tomcat JVM Parameters
|
||||
* VII. Start Tomcat
|
||||
* VIII. Log in and add RDF data
|
||||
* IX. Create an initial Lucene search index
|
||||
* X. Setup Apache Tomcat Connector
|
||||
* XI. Configure Pellet Reasoner
|
||||
* XII. Was the Installation Successful?
|
||||
|
||||
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
I. Install required software
|
||||
|
||||
Before installing VIVO, make sure that the following software is installed on
|
||||
the desired machine:
|
||||
|
||||
* Java (SE) 1.5 or higher [http://java.sun.com]
|
||||
* Apache Tomcat 5.x or higher [http://tomcat.apache.org]
|
||||
* Apache Ant [http://ant.apache.org]
|
||||
* MySQL 4.1 or higher [http://www.mysql.com]
|
||||
|
||||
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
II. Create an empty MySQL database
|
||||
|
||||
Decide on a database name, username, and password. Log into your MySQL server
|
||||
and create a new database in MySQL that uses UTF-8 encoding. You will need
|
||||
these values for step IV when you configure the deployment properties. At the
|
||||
mysql command line you can create the database and user with these commands
|
||||
substituting your values for "dbname", "username", and "password". Most of the
|
||||
time, the "hostname" will equal "localhost".
|
||||
|
||||
CREATE DATABASE dbname CHARACTER SET utf8;
|
||||
|
||||
Grant access to a database user. For example:
|
||||
|
||||
GRANT ALL ON dbname.* TO 'username'@'hostname' IDENTIFIED BY 'password';
|
||||
|
||||
Keep track of the database name, username, and password for Step IV.
|
||||
|
||||
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
III. Download the VIVO code distribution
|
||||
|
||||
Download either a zip or gz file and unpack it on your web server:
|
||||
ftp://download.mannlib.cornell.edu/pub/Vivo/rel-1.0.zip
|
||||
ftp://download.mannlib.cornell.edu/pub/Vivo/rel-1.0.tar.gz
|
||||
|
||||
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
IV. Specify deployment properties
|
||||
|
||||
At the top level of the unpacked distribution, copy the file
|
||||
example.deploy.properties to a file named simply deploy.properties. This file
|
||||
sets several properties used in compilation and deployment.
|
||||
|
||||
Default namespace: VIVO installations make their RDF resources available for harvest
|
||||
using linked data. Requests for RDF resource URIs redirect to HTML
|
||||
or RDF representations as specified by the client. To make this
|
||||
possible, VIVO's default namespace must have certain structure and
|
||||
begin with the public web address of the VIVO installation.
|
||||
For example, if the web address of a VIVO installation is
|
||||
http://vivo.example.edu/ the default namespace must be set to
|
||||
http://vivo.example.edu/individual/ in order to support linked data.
|
||||
Similarly, if VIVO is installed at http://www.example.edu/vivo the
|
||||
default namespace must be set to http://www.example.edu/vivo/individual/
|
||||
Note: The namespace must end with "individual/" (including the
|
||||
trailing slash).
|
||||
property name: Vitro.defaultNamespace
|
||||
example value: http://vivo.mydomain.edu/individual/
|
||||
|
||||
Directory where Vitro code is located. In most deployments,
|
||||
this is set to ./vitro-core, but it commonly points elsewhere
|
||||
during development.
|
||||
property name: vitro.core.dir
|
||||
example value: ./vitro-core
|
||||
|
||||
Directory where tomcat is installed
|
||||
property name: tomcat.home
|
||||
example value: /usr/local/tomcat
|
||||
|
||||
Name of your VIVO application
|
||||
property name: webapp.name
|
||||
example value: vivo
|
||||
|
||||
Directory where uploaded files will be stored. Depending on
|
||||
your permissions and who Tomcat is running as, you may need
|
||||
to create these directories ahead of time.
|
||||
property name: upload.directory
|
||||
example value: /usr/local/vivo/data/uploads
|
||||
|
||||
Directory where the Lucene search index will be built.
|
||||
Depending on your permissions and who Tomcat is running as,
|
||||
you may need to create these directories ahead of time.
|
||||
property name: LuceneSetup.indexDir
|
||||
example value: /usr/local/vivo/data/luceneIndex
|
||||
|
||||
Specify an SMTP host that the form will use for sending
|
||||
e-mail (Optional). If this is left blank, the contact form
|
||||
will be hidden and disabled.
|
||||
property name: Vitro.smtpHost
|
||||
example value: smtp.servername.edu
|
||||
|
||||
Specify the JDBC URL of your database. Change the end of the
|
||||
URL to reflect your database name (if it is not "vivo").
|
||||
property name: VitroConnection.DataSource.url
|
||||
example value: jdbc:mysql://localhost/vivo
|
||||
|
||||
Change the username to match the authorized user you created in MySQL
|
||||
property name: VitroConnection.DataSource.username
|
||||
example value: username
|
||||
|
||||
Change the password to match the password you created in MySQL
|
||||
property name: VitroConnection.DataSource.password
|
||||
example value: password
|
||||
|
||||
Specify the name of your first admin user for the VIVO application.
|
||||
This user will have an initial temporary password of 'defaultAdmin'.
|
||||
You will be prompted to create a new password on first login.
|
||||
property name: initialAdminUser
|
||||
example value: defaultAdmin
|
||||
|
||||
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
V. Compile and deploy
|
||||
|
||||
At the command line, from the top level of the unpacked distribution directory,
|
||||
type:
|
||||
|
||||
ant all
|
||||
|
||||
to build VIVO and deploy to Tomcat's webapps directory.
|
||||
|
||||
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
VI. Set Tomcat JVM Parameters
|
||||
|
||||
Currently, VIVO copies the contents of your RDF database into memory in order
|
||||
to serve Web requests quickly. (The in-memory copy and the underlying database
|
||||
are kept in synch as edits are performed.)
|
||||
|
||||
VIVO will require more memory than that allocated to Tomcat by default. With
|
||||
most installations of Tomcat, the setenv.sh or setenv.bat file in Tomcat's bin
|
||||
directory is a convenient place to set the memory parameters.
|
||||
|
||||
For example:
|
||||
|
||||
export CATALINA_OPTS="-Xms1024m -Xmx1024m -XX:MaxPermSize=64m"
|
||||
|
||||
This sets Tomcat to allocate an initial heap of 1024 megabytes, a maximum heap
|
||||
of 1024 megabytes, and a PermGen space of 64 megs. 1024 megabytes is a minimum
|
||||
practical heap size for production installations storing data for large academic
|
||||
institutions, and additional heap space is preferable. For testing with small
|
||||
sets of data, 256m to 512m should be sufficient.
|
||||
|
||||
If an OutOfMemoryError is encountered during VIVO execution, increasing the
|
||||
heap parameters and restarting Tomcat is the typical remedy.
|
||||
|
||||
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
VII. Start Tomcat
|
||||
|
||||
Most Tomcat installations can be started by running startup.sh or startup.bat
|
||||
in Tomcat's bin directory. Point your browser to http://localhost:8080/vivo/
|
||||
to test the application.
|
||||
|
||||
If Tomcat does not start up, or the VIVO application is not visible, check the
|
||||
catalina.out file in Tomcat's logs directory.
|
||||
|
||||
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
VIII. Log in and add RDF data
|
||||
|
||||
If the startup was successful, you will see a welcome message informing you
|
||||
that you have successfully installed VIVO. Click the "Log in" link near the
|
||||
upper right corner. Log in with the initialAdminUser username you set up in
|
||||
step IV. The initial password the initialAdminUser is defaultAdmin. On first
|
||||
login, you will be prompted to select a new password and verify it a second
|
||||
time.
|
||||
|
||||
After verifying your new password, you will be presented with a menu of
|
||||
editing options. Here you can create OWL classes, object properties, data
|
||||
properties, and configure the display of data. Currently, any classes you wish
|
||||
to make visible on your website must be part of a class group, and there a
|
||||
number of visibility and display options available for each ontology entity.
|
||||
|
||||
VIVO comes with a core VIVO ontology, but you may also upload other ontologies
|
||||
from an RDF file. Under the "Advanced Data Tools", click "Add/Remove RDF Data."
|
||||
Note that Vitro currently works best with OWL-DL ontologies and has only limited
|
||||
support for pure RDF data. You can enter a URL pointing to the RDF data you
|
||||
wish to load or upload a file on your local machine. Ensure that the "add RDF"
|
||||
radio button is selected. You will also likely want to check "create
|
||||
classgroups automatically." Clicking the "Index" tab in the navigation bar at
|
||||
the top left of the page will show a simple index of the knowledge base.
|
||||
See more documentation for configuring VIVO at http://vivoweb.org/support.
|
||||
|
||||
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
IX. Set the Contact Email Address (if using "Contact Us" form)
|
||||
|
||||
If you have configured your application to use the "Contact Us" feature in Step
|
||||
IV (Vitro.smtpHost), you will also need to add an email address to the VIVO
|
||||
application. This is the email that the contact form submits to. It can be a
|
||||
list server or an individual's email address.
|
||||
|
||||
Log in as a system administrator. Navigate to the "Site Admin" table of contents
|
||||
(link in the right side of the header). Go to "Site Information" (under "Site
|
||||
Configuration"). In the "Site Information Editing Form", enter a functional
|
||||
email address in the field "Contact Email Address." and submit the change.
|
||||
|
||||
If you set the Vitro.smtpHost in Step IV and do NOT provide an email address
|
||||
in this step, your users will receive a java error in the interface.
|
||||
|
||||
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
X. Create an initial Lucene search index
|
||||
|
||||
Invoke the indexing servlet by requesting http://localhost:8080/vivo/SearchIndex
|
||||
|
||||
You will not see any output to the browser (though this will change in future
|
||||
versions). When your browser switches to a blank screen, the indexing has
|
||||
completed and the search box on the Vitro portal will be usable. Individuals
|
||||
that are created, edited, or deleted from the Vitro editing interface will
|
||||
trigger incremental updates of the search index.
|
||||
|
||||
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
XI. Set up Apache Tomcat Connector
|
||||
|
||||
It is recommended that a Tomcat Connector such as mod_jk be used to ensure that
|
||||
the site address does not include the port number (e.g. 8080) and an additional
|
||||
reference to the Tomcat context name (e.g. /vivo).
|
||||
|
||||
For example - http://example.com instead of http://example.com:8080/vivo
|
||||
|
||||
Using the mod_jk connector allows for communication between Tomcat and the
|
||||
primary web server. The "Quick Start HowTo" on the Apache site
|
||||
http://tomcat.apache.org/connectors-doc/generic_howto/quick.html describes
|
||||
the minimum server configurations for several popular web servers.
|
||||
|
||||
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
XII. Configure Pellet Reasoner
|
||||
|
||||
VIVO uses the Pellet engine to perform reasoning, which runs in the
|
||||
background at startup and also when the knowledge base is edited. VIVO
|
||||
continues serving pages while the reasoner continues working; when the
|
||||
reasoner finishes, the new inferences appear. Inferred statements are cached
|
||||
in a database graph so that they are available immediately when VIVO is restarted.
|
||||
|
||||
By default, Pellet is fed only an incomplete view of your ontology and only
|
||||
certain inferences are materialized. These include rdf:type,
|
||||
rdfs:subClassOf,owl:equivalentClass, and owl:disjointWith. This mode is
|
||||
typically suitable for ontologies with a lot of instance data. If you would
|
||||
like to keep the default mode, skip to the next step.
|
||||
|
||||
To enable "complete" OWL inference (materialize all significant entailed
|
||||
statements), open "vitro-core/webapp/config/web.xml" and search for
|
||||
PelletReasonerSetup.
|
||||
|
||||
Then change the name of the listener class to PelletReasonerSetupComplete.
|
||||
Because "complete" reasoning can be very resource intensive, there is also an
|
||||
option to materialize nearly all inferences except owl:sameAs and
|
||||
owl:differentFrom.
|
||||
|
||||
This is enabled by specifying PelletReasonerSetupPseudocomplete. For ontologies
|
||||
with large numbers of individuals, this mode can offer enormous performance
|
||||
improvements over the "complete" mode.
|
||||
|
||||
Finally, a class called PelletReasonerSetupPseudocompleteIgnoreDataproperties
|
||||
is provided to improve performance on ontologies with large literals where data
|
||||
property entailments are not needed.
|
||||
|
||||
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
XIII. Was the installation successful?
|
||||
|
||||
If you have completed the previous steps, you have good indications that the
|
||||
installation was successful.
|
||||
|
||||
* Step VII showed that Tomcat recognized the webapp, and that the webapp was
|
||||
able to present the initial page.
|
||||
* Step VIII verified that you can log in to the administrator account.
|
||||
* Step X initialized the Lucene Search system. Though there is very little
|
||||
feedback for a successful installation, there are dramatic indications
|
||||
for failures.
|
||||
|
||||
Here is a simple test to see whether the ontology files were loaded:
|
||||
* Click on the "Index" link on the upper left, below the logo. You should see
|
||||
a "locations" section, with links for "Country" and "Geographic Location".
|
||||
The index is built in a background thread, so on your first login, you may
|
||||
see an empty index instead. Refresh the page periodically to see whether
|
||||
the index will be populated. This may take some time: with VIVO installed
|
||||
on a modest laptop computer, loading the ontology files and building the
|
||||
index took more than 5 minutes from the time that Tomcat was started.
|
||||
* Click on the "Country" link. You should see an alphabetical list of the
|
||||
countries of the world.
|
||||
|
||||
Here is a test to see whether your system is configured to serve linked data:
|
||||
* Point your browser to the home page of your website, and click the "Log in" link
|
||||
near the upper right corner. Log in with the initialAdminUser username you
|
||||
set up in step IV. If this is your first time logging in, you will be
|
||||
prompted to change the password.
|
||||
* After you have successfully logged in, click "site admin" in the upper right
|
||||
corner. In the drop down under "Data Input", select "Faculty Member(core)"
|
||||
and click the "Add individual of this class" button.
|
||||
* Enter the name "test individual" under the field "Individual Name", scroll to
|
||||
the bottom, and click "Create New Record".You will be taken to the "Individual
|
||||
Control Panel". Make note of the value of the field "URI", it will be used in
|
||||
the next step.
|
||||
* Open a new web browser or browser tab to the page "http://marbles.sourceforge.net/".
|
||||
In the pink box on that page enter the URI of the individual you created in the
|
||||
previous step and click "open."
|
||||
* In the resulting page search for the URI of the "test individual". You should
|
||||
find it towards the bottom of the page next to a red dot followed by "redirect (303)"
|
||||
This indicates that you are successfully serving linked RDF data.
|
||||
If the URI of the "test individual" is followed by "failed (400)" you are not
|
||||
successfully serving linked data.
|
||||
|
||||
Finally, test the search index (assuming you have created the initial Lucene
|
||||
index in Step X).
|
||||
* The search box is on the right side, directly opposite the "Index" link.
|
||||
Type the word "Australia" into the box, and click on the "Search"
|
||||
button.You should see a page of results, with links to countries that
|
||||
border Australia, individuals that include Australia, and to
|
||||
Australia itself.
|
165
doc/upgrade.txt
165
doc/upgrade.txt
|
@ -1,37 +1,51 @@
|
|||
|
||||
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
Upgrading NIH VIVO
|
||||
|
||||
Steps to Upgrade from Version 1 Release 0.9 to Release 1.0
|
||||
Steps to Upgrade from Release 1 Version 0.9 to Release 1 Version 1.0
|
||||
|
||||
This file provides a short description of the steps involved in upgrading your
|
||||
installation of <20>NIH VIVO<56> from Version 1 Release 0.9 to Version 1 Release 1.0.
|
||||
installation of NIH VIVO from Release 1 Version 0.9 to Release 1 Version 1.0.
|
||||
This and other documentation can be found at:
|
||||
|
||||
----------
|
||||
Before Performing the Upgrade
|
||||
----------
|
||||
http://vivoweb.org/support
|
||||
|
||||
The bullet points listed below are important to know before beginning the
|
||||
upgrade process.
|
||||
Installation:
|
||||
If you need to do a fresh install, please consult the install.txt in this
|
||||
directory.
|
||||
|
||||
The upgrade process is like the original install process with the following
|
||||
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
I. Before Performing the Upgrade
|
||||
II. The Upgrade Process
|
||||
III. Ontology Changes
|
||||
|
||||
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
I. Before Performing the Upgrade
|
||||
|
||||
Please read the bullet points below BEFORE beginning the upgrade.
|
||||
|
||||
The upgrade process is similar to the original install process with the following
|
||||
exceptions:
|
||||
* DO NOT re-install MySQL or re-create the MySQL database. Please ensure that
|
||||
|
||||
* DO NOT reinstall MySQL or recreate the MySQL database. Please ensure that
|
||||
you back-up the MySQL database.
|
||||
* It is not necessary to add RDF data, initialize the Lucene Search Index, or
|
||||
re-configure the Apache HTTP Server.
|
||||
* It is not necessary to add RDF data or reconfigure the Apache HTTP Server.
|
||||
* First-time login of the administrator account will use the password
|
||||
previously set, NOT the password in deploy.properties.
|
||||
* Any image files that have been uploaded into the system will not be disturbed
|
||||
by the upgrade.
|
||||
* The first time that Apache Tomcat starts up after the upgrade, it will
|
||||
initiate a process which modifies the data in the model, aligning the data
|
||||
with the revised ontology. For the most part, data in the model will not be
|
||||
lost. See the section on "Ontology Changes" (below) for more information.
|
||||
* If you make any changes to the application, they should be made in the source
|
||||
directory and deployed, and not made directly within Apache Tomcat.
|
||||
* The first time Apache Tomcat starts up after the upgrade, it will
|
||||
initiate a process that modifies the knowledge base to align the data
|
||||
with the revised ontology. See the section on "Ontology Changes"
|
||||
below for more information.
|
||||
|
||||
----------
|
||||
The Process
|
||||
----------
|
||||
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
II. The Upgrade Process
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
1. Ensure that backups are created of the Tomcat webapps directory, the
|
||||
original source directory, and the MySQL database.
|
||||
|
@ -60,42 +74,93 @@ The Process
|
|||
Note: Version 1 Release 0.9 contained two directories called "modifications"
|
||||
and "ontology". These directories have been combined into a directory
|
||||
called "productMods". If your site has made changes to the ontology
|
||||
ensure that those changes are moved into "productMods".
|
||||
ensure that those changes are moved into the appropriate subdirectory of
|
||||
"productMods".
|
||||
|
||||
5. If you had modified web.xml to configure the "Pellet Reasoner" (as described
|
||||
Note: This process assumes any changes made to the application were made in
|
||||
the source directory and deployed, and were not made directly within
|
||||
Apache Tomcat webapp.
|
||||
|
||||
5. If you had modified web.xml to configure the Pellet Reasoner (as described
|
||||
in the installation instructions), repeat that modification.
|
||||
|
||||
6. Run ant deploy by typing: ant
|
||||
6. Run ant deploy by typing: ant deploy
|
||||
|
||||
7. Lastly, start "Apache Tomcat" and login to VIVO.
|
||||
7. Start "Apache Tomcat" and login to VIVO.
|
||||
|
||||
----------
|
||||
Ontology Changes
|
||||
----------
|
||||
8. Rebuild the Lucene search index as described in step IX of
|
||||
the install process. This step will ensure that changes in the RDF
|
||||
data to align with the latest version of the core ontology
|
||||
will be reflected in the search index.
|
||||
|
||||
There are changes in the ontology that may require sites to modify the data in
|
||||
their model.
|
||||
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
For example, if there is a split in a combined class
|
||||
(e.g., SchoolOrCollegeWithinUniversity into School and College) it is
|
||||
impossible to determine which class of individuals were added to the combined
|
||||
class and which class those individuals should be assigned.
|
||||
III. Ontology Changes
|
||||
|
||||
Note: When "Apache Tomcat" starts up following the upgrade, it will initiate
|
||||
a process which may modify the data in the model, to align the data to the
|
||||
current ontology. Refer to your institutions ontology team representative for
|
||||
additional information on ontology changes affecting data prior to performing
|
||||
the upgrade.
|
||||
|
||||
The ontology alignment process will create these files in the Tomcat webapps directory:
|
||||
* WEB-INF/ontologies/update/logs/knowledgeBaseUpdate.log
|
||||
a log of updates that were made to the knowledge base and notes about some
|
||||
of the recommended manual reviews.
|
||||
* WEB-INF/ontologies/update/logs/knowledgeBaseUpdate.error.log
|
||||
a log of errors that were encoundered during the upgrade process.
|
||||
* WEB-INF/ontologies/update/removedData/removedData.rdf
|
||||
a file containing the stataements that were removed from the data model.
|
||||
* WEB-INF/ontologies/update/addedData/addedData.rdf
|
||||
a file containing the statements that were added to the data model.
|
||||
After Apache Tomcat is started, you should review these files to see whether
|
||||
you need to edit any data in response to the ontology changes.
|
||||
Changes to the VIVO core ontology may require corresponding
|
||||
modifications of the knowledge base instance data and local ontology
|
||||
extensions.
|
||||
|
||||
When Apache Tomcat starts up following the upgrade, it will initiate
|
||||
a process to examine the knowledge base and apply necessary changes.
|
||||
Not all of the modifications that may be required can be automated,
|
||||
so manual review of the knowledge base is recommended after the
|
||||
automated upgrade process. The automated process will make only
|
||||
the following types of changes:
|
||||
|
||||
Class or Property renaming
|
||||
All references to the class (in the subject or object position) will
|
||||
be updated to the new name. References to the property will be
|
||||
updated to the new name.
|
||||
|
||||
Class or Property deletion
|
||||
All individuals in a deleted class will be changed to
|
||||
belong to the nearest available superclass (which may be owl:Thing).
|
||||
|
||||
All statements using a deleted property will be changed
|
||||
to use the nearest available superproperty. If there is no available
|
||||
superproperty then the statement will be deleted from the
|
||||
knowledge base. Note that all removed and added data
|
||||
is recorded in the files in the changedData directory.
|
||||
|
||||
Class or Property addition
|
||||
If a newly added class has a superclass and there are
|
||||
individuals in that superclass, then a note will be
|
||||
added to the log file suggesting review of those individuals to
|
||||
see if they should be reasserted in the newly added class.
|
||||
|
||||
If a newly added property has a superproperty and there are
|
||||
statements using the superproperty, then a note will be added to
|
||||
the log file suggesting review of those statements to see if they
|
||||
should be reasserted using the newly added property.
|
||||
|
||||
Annotation property default values
|
||||
It a site has modified the value of a vitro annotation (such as
|
||||
displayRankAnnot or displayLimitAnnot) so that it is
|
||||
no longer using the default, then that setting will be left unchanged.
|
||||
If a site is using the default value of a vitro annotation, and the
|
||||
default has been changed in the new version of the ontology, then
|
||||
the new default value will be propagated to the knowledge base.
|
||||
|
||||
The ontology alignment process will create the following files in the
|
||||
Tomcat webapps/vivo/WEB-INF directory:
|
||||
|
||||
ontologies/update/logs/knowledgeBaseUpdate.log
|
||||
a log of a summary of updates that were made to the knowledge base and notes
|
||||
about some recommended manual reviews. This file should end with
|
||||
"Successfully finished processing ontology changes".
|
||||
|
||||
ontologies/update/logs/knowledgeBaseUpdate.error.log
|
||||
a log of errors that were encountered during the upgrade process. This file
|
||||
should be empty if the upgrade was successful.
|
||||
|
||||
ontologies/update/changedData/removedData.rdf
|
||||
a file containing all the statements that were removed from the knowledge base.
|
||||
|
||||
ontologies/update/changedData/addedData.rdf
|
||||
a file containing all the statements that were added to the knowledge base.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
After Apache Tomcat is started, these files should be reviewed to verify that
|
||||
the automated upgrade process was executed successfully.
|
||||
|
|
Loading…
Add table
Reference in a new issue