- Description
- Prerequisites
- Downloading Stable Release Sources
- Getting Bleeding Edge Sources
- Configuring and Installing Prerequisites
- Apache
- Installing mod_perl from Binary Packages
- Installing mod_perl from Source
- Downloading the mod_perl Source
- Configuring mod_perl
- Dynamic mod_perl
- Static mod_perl
- mod_perl Build Options
- Boolean Build Options
- MP_PROMPT_DEFAULT
- MP_GENERATE_XS
- MP_USE_DSO
- MP_USE_STATIC
- MP_STATIC_EXTS
- MP_USE_GTOP
- MP_COMPAT_1X
- MP_DEBUG
- MP_MAINTAINER
- MP_TRACE
- Non-Boolean Build Options
- MP_APXS
- MP_AP_CONFIGURE
- MP_AP_PREFIX
- MP_AP_DESTDIR
- MP_APR_CONFIG
- MP_CCOPTS
- MP_OPTIONS_FILE
- MP_APR_LIB
- mod_perl-specific Compiler Options
- -DMP_IOBUFSIZE
- mod_perl Options File
- Re-using Configure Options
- Compiling mod_perl
- Testing mod_perl
- Installing mod_perl
- If Something Goes Wrong
- Maintainers
- Authors
Description
This chapter provides an in-depth mod_perl 2.0 installation coverage.
Prerequisites
Before building mod_perl 2.0 you need to have its prerequisites installed. If you don’t have them, download and install them first, using the information in the following sections. Otherwise proceed directly to the mod_perl building instructions.
The mod_perl 2.0 prerequisites are:
Apache 2.0 is required. mod_perl 2.0 does not work with Apache 1.3.
Dynamic (DSO) mod_perl build requires Apache 2.0.47 or higher. Static build requires Apache 2.0.51 or higher.
Requires at least Perl version 5.6.1.
You don’t need to have threads-support enabled in Perl. If you do have it, it must be ithreads and not 5005threads! If you have:
you must rebuild Perl without threads enabled or with -Dusethreads . Remember that threads-support slows things down and on some platforms it’s unstable (e.g., FreeBSD), so don’t enable it unless you really need it.
If while running make test while building mod_perl 2 you get an error like this:
You’re likely on 64 bit Linux and will need to build Perl for that platform. You can do so by running Perl’s Configure with the $CFLAGS environment variable and the -A and ccflags options. So if you normally build Perl with:
You would instead configure with:
Require at least Perl version 5.8.0 with ithreads support built-in. That means that it should report:
If that’s not what you see rebuild Perl with -Dusethreads .
Static prefork build
Perl with ithreads support version 5.6.1 or higher
Perl without ithreads support version 5.8.2 or higher
Static non-prefork build
Perl with ithreads support version 5.8.0 or higher
If you want to run applications that take benefit of Perl’s threads.pm Perl version 5.8.1 or higher w/ithreads enabled is required. Perl 5.8.0’s threads.pm doesn’t work with mod_perl 2.0.
CPAN Perl Modules
The mod_perl 2.0 test suite has several requirements on its own. If you don’t satisfy them, the tests depending on these requirements will be skipped, which is OK, but you won’t get to run these tests and potential problems, which may exhibit themselves in your own code, could be missed. We don’t require them from Makefile.PL , which could have been automated the requirements installation, in order to have less dependencies to get mod_perl 2.0 installed.
Also if your code uses any of these modules, chances are that you will need to use at least the version numbers listed here.
Though the easiest way to satisfy all the dependencies is to install Bundle::Apache2 available from CPAN.
Downloading Stable Release Sources
If you are going to install mod_perl on a production site, you want to use the officially released stable components. Since the latest stable versions change all the time you should check for the latest stable version at the listed below URLs:
This direct link which symlinks to the latest release should work too: http://cpan.org/src/stable.tar.gz.
For the purpose of examples in this chapter we will use the package named perl-5.8.x.tar.gz, where x should be replaced with the real version number.
For the purpose of examples in this chapter we will use the package named httpd-2.x.xx.tar.gz, where x.xx should be replaced with the real version number.
Getting Bleeding Edge Sources
If you really know what you are doing you can use the cvs/svn versions of the components. Chances are that you don’t want to them on a production site. You have been warned!
The cutting edge version of Perl (aka bleadperl or bleedperl) is only generally available through an rsync repository maintained by ActiveState:
If you are re-building Perl after rsync-ing, make sure to cleanup first:
before running ./Configure .
You’ll also want to install (at least) LWP if you want to fully test mod_perl. You can install LWP with CPAN.pm shell:
Configuring and Installing Prerequisites
If you don’t have the prerequisites installed yet, install them now.
Most likely you don’t want perl-support for threads enabled, in which case pass: -Uusethreads instead of -Dusethreads .
If you want to debug mod_perl segmentation faults, add the following ./Configure options:
Apache
You need to have Apache built and installed prior to building mod_perl, only if you intend build a DSO mod_perl. If you intend to build a statically linked Apache+mod_perl, you only need to have the Apache source available (mod_perl will build and install Apache for you), you should skip this step.
Starting from 2.0.49, the Apache logging API escapes everything that goes to error_log, therefore if you’re annoyed by this feature during the development phase (as your error messages will be all messed up) you can disable the escaping during the Apache build time:
Do not use that CFLAGS in production unless you know what you are doing.
Installing mod_perl from Binary Packages
As of this writing only the binaries for the Win32 platform are available, kindly prepared and maintained by Randy Kobes. See the documentation on Win32 binaries for details.
Some RPM packages can be found using rpmfind services, e.g.:
http://www.rpmfind.net/linux/rpm2html/search.php?query=mod_perl&submit=Search+. However if you have problems using them, you have to contact those who have created them.
Installing mod_perl from Source
Building from source is the best option, because it ensures a binary compatibility with Apache and Perl. However it’s possible that your distribution provides a solid binary mod_perl 2.0 package.
For Win32 specific details, see the documentation on Win32 installation.
Downloading the mod_perl Source
First download the mod_perl source.
Download from http://perl.apache.org/download/ or your favorite CPAN mirror.
This direct link which symlinks to the latest release should work too: http://apache.org/dist/perl/mod_perl-2.0-current.tar.gz.
For the purpose of examples in this chapter we will use the package named mod_perl-2.x.x.tar.gz, where x.x should be replaced with the real version number.
Open the package with:
or an equivalent command.
Configuring mod_perl
To build mod_perl, you must also use the same compiler that Perl was built with. You can find that out by running perl -V and looking at the Compiler: section.
Like any other Perl module, mod_perl is configured via the Makefile.PL file, but requires one or more configuration options:
where options is an optional list of key/value pairs. These options can include all the usual options supported by ExtUtils::MakeMaker (e.g., PREFIX , LIB , etc.).
The following sections give the details about all the available options, but let’s mention first an important one.
Configuration options are discussed in Build Options.
Dynamic mod_perl
Before you proceed, make sure that Apache 2.0 has been built and installed. mod_perl cannot be built before that.
It seems that most users use pre-packaged Apache installation, most of which tend to spread the Apache files across many directories (i.e. not using —enable-layout=Apache, which puts all the files under the same directory). If Apache 2.0 files are spread under different directories, you need to use at least the MP_APXS option, which should be set to a full path to the apxs executable. For example:
For example RedHat Linux system installs the httpd binary, the apxs and apr-config scripts (the latter two are needed to build mod_perl) all in different locations, therefore they configure mod_perl 2.0 as:
However a correctly built Apache shouldn’t require the MP_APR_CONFIG option, since MP_APXS should provide the location of this script.
If however all Apache 2.0 files were installed under the same directory, mod_perl 2.0’s build only needs to know the path to that directory, passed via the MP_AP_PREFIX option:
Static mod_perl
Before you proceed make sure that Apache 2.0 has been downloaded and extracted. mod_perl cannot be built before that.
If this is an svn checkout and not an official distribution tarball, you need to first run:
To enable statically linking mod_perl into Apache, use the MP_USE_STATIC flag like this:
MP_AP_PREFIX must point to an extracted Apache 2.0 source tree.
This will configure Apache by passing MP_AP_CONFIGURE to Apache’s ./configure script.
Here is an example:
mod_perl Build Options
Boolean Build Options
The following options are boolean and can be set with MP_XXX=1 or unset with MP_XXX=0 , where XXX is the name of the option.
MP_PROMPT_DEFAULT
Accept default values for all would-be prompts.
MP_GENERATE_XS
Generate XS code from parsed source headers in xs/tables/$httpd_version. Default is 1, set to 0 to disable.
MP_USE_DSO
Build mod_perl as a DSO (mod_perl.so). This is the default.
MP_USE_STATIC
Build static mod_perl (mod_perl.a).
MP_STATIC_EXTS
Build Apache2::*.xs as static extensions.
MP_USE_GTOP
Link with libgtop and enable libgtop reporting.
MP_COMPAT_1X
MP_COMPAT_1X=1 or a lack of it enables several mod_perl 1.0 back-compatibility features, which are deprecated in mod_perl 2.0. It’s enabled by default, but can be disabled with MP_COMPAT_1X=0 during the build process.
When this option is disabled, the following things will happen:
Deprecated special variable, $Apache2::__T won’t be available. Use $ <^TAINT>instead.
$ServerRoot and $ServerRoot/lib/perl won’t be appended to @INC . Instead use:
in httpd.conf or:
The following deprecated configuration directives won’t be recognized by Apache:
MP_DEBUG
Turn on debugging ( -g -lperld ) and tracing.
MP_MAINTAINER
Enable maintainer compile mode, which sets MP_DEBUG=1 and adds the following gcc flags:
If gcc version 3.3.2+ is found, not compiling on OpenBSD, and -Wdeclaration-after-statement is not already part of the gcc flags add it.
To use this mode Apache must be build with —enable-maintainer-mode .
MP_TRACE
Non-Boolean Build Options
set the non-boolean options with MP_XXX=value.
MP_APXS
Path to apxs . For example if you’ve installed Apache 2.0 under /home/httpd/httpd-2.0 as DSO, the default location would be /home/httpd/httpd-2.0/bin/apxs.
MP_AP_CONFIGURE
The command-line arguments to pass to httpd’s configure script.
MP_AP_PREFIX
Apache installation prefix, under which the include/ directory with Apache C header files can be found. For example if you’ve installed Apache 2.0 in directory \Apache2 on Win32, you should use:
If Apache is not installed yet, you can point to the Apache 2.0 source directory, but only after you’ve built or configured Apache in it. For example:
Though in this case make test won’t automatically find httpd , therefore you should run t/TEST instead and pass the location of apxs or httpd , e.g.:
MP_AP_DESTDIR
This option exists to make the lives of package maintainers easier. If you aren’t a package manager you should not need to use this option.
Apache installation destination directory. This path will be prefixed to the installation paths for all Apache-specific files during make install . For instance, if Apache modules are normally installed into /path/to/httpd-2.0/modules/ and MP_AP_DESTDIR is set to /tmp/foo, the mod_perl.so will be installed in:
MP_APR_CONFIG
If APR wasn’t installed under the same file tree as httpd, you may need to tell the build process where it can find the executable apr-config , which can then be used to figure out where the apr and aprutil include/ and lib/ directories can be found.
MP_CCOPTS
Add to compiler flags, e.g.:
(Notice that -Werror will work only with the Perl version 5.7 and higher.)
MP_OPTIONS_FILE
Read build options from given file. e.g.:
MP_APR_LIB
On Win32, in order to build the APR and APR::* modules so as to be independent of mod_perl.so, a static library is first built containing the needed functions these modules link into. The option
specifies the name that this library has. The default used is aprext . This option has no effect on platforms other than Win32, as they use a different mechanism to accomplish the decoupling of APR and APR::* from mod_perl.so.
mod_perl-specific Compiler Options
-DMP_IOBUFSIZE
Change the default mod_perl’s 8K IO buffer size, e.g. to 16K:
mod_perl Options File
Options can also be specified in the file makepl_args.mod_perl2 or .makepl_args.mod_perl2. The file can be placed under $ENV
If the file specified in MP_OPTIONS_FILE is found the makepl_args.mod_perl2 will be ignored.
Options specified on the command line override those from makepl_args.mod_perl2 and those from MP_OPTIONS_FILE .
If your terminal supports colored text you may want to set the environment variable APACHE_TEST_COLOR to 1 to enable the colored tracing which makes it easier to tell the reported errors and warnings, from the rest of the notifications.
Re-using Configure Options
Since mod_perl remembers what build options were used to build it if first place, you can use this knowledge to rebuild itself using the same options. Simply chdir(1) to the mod_perl source directory and run:
Compiling mod_perl
Next stage is to build mod_perl:
Testing mod_perl
When mod_perl has been built, it’s very important to test that everything works on your machine:
If something goes wrong with the test phase and want to figure out how to run individual tests and pass various options to the test suite, see the corresponding sections of the bug reporting guidelines or the Apache::Test Framework tutorial.
Installing mod_perl
Once the test suite has passed, it’s a time to install mod_perl.
If you install mod_perl system wide, you probably need to become root prior to doing the installation:
If Something Goes Wrong
If something goes wrong during the installation, try to repeat the installation process from scratch, while verifying all the steps with this document.
If the problem persists report the problem.
Maintainers
Maintainer is the person(s) you should contact with updates, corrections and patches.
Authors
Only the major authors are listed above. For contributors see the Changes file.
Last modified Sat Feb 15 17:38:38 2014
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