| 1 | $Id: INSTALL 445 2010-07-26 21:00:00Z kdeugau $
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| 2 | 
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| 3 | Requirements
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| 4 | ============
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| 5 | 
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| 6 | - Any CGI-capable web server that can execute arbitrary files or 
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| 7 |   files with administrator-defineable extensions
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| 8 | - PostgreSQL >= 7.4.  It should be possible to (fairly) trivially patch 
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| 9 |   the code for any other DBMS that supports:
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| 10 |   - an IP address/CIDR netblock data type
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| 11 |   - higher/greater, lower/less than, contains, and is-contained-by 
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| 12 |     operators
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| 13 | - Perl >= 5.6
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| 14 |   - Standard modules:
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| 15 |     These should be included in any base Perl install
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| 16 |     - File::Path
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| 17 |     - CGI::Carp
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| 18 |     - POSIX
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| 19 |     - Sys::Syslog
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| 20 |   - Extra modules:
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| 21 |     - NetAddr::IP >= 4.x.  3.x may work, however 4.x has been out for 
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| 22 |       more than 4 years.
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| 23 |     - DBI
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| 24 |     - DBD::Pg
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| 25 |     - Sys::SigAction.  This isn't strictly required;  it's used in an 
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| 26 |       example hook for validating customer IDs against an external 
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| 27 |       database.  It could arguably be replaced with sigaction() from the 
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| 28 |       POSIX module when using Perl >= 5.8.2.  See eg Sys::SigAction on 
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| 29 |       CPAN (http://search.cpan.org/~lbaxter/Sys-SigAction-0.11/lib/Sys/SigAction.pm) 
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| 30 |       for some thoughts on the gritty details.
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| 31 | 
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| 32 | Installing the IPDB
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| 33 | ===================
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| 34 | 
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| 35 | 1) Untar in a convenient location.  You should be able to simply use the 
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| 36 | unpacked tarball as-is, or you can run "make install" to install files 
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| 37 | in /usr/local/lib/ipdb-#VERSION#, with configuration modules in 
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| 38 | /usr/local/etc/ipdb-#VERSION#.
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| 39 | 
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| 40 | The Makefile supports substitution on most standard 
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| 41 | GNU/FHS-ish paths, so you could also run:
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| 42 | 
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| 43 |   make install prefix=/opt
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| 44 | 
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| 45 | to install it under /opt.
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| 46 | 
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| 47 | The Makefile also supports DESTDIR for packaging, so you can use:
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| 48 | 
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| 49 |   make install libdir=/usr/lib sysconfdir=/etc DESTDIR=/tmp/ipdbpkgroot
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| 50 | 
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| 51 | to install for packaging under /tmp/ipdbpkgroot with the core scripts 
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| 52 | and HTML packaged under /usr/lib/ipdb-#VERSION#, and the configuration 
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| 53 | modules packaged under /etc/ipdb-#VERSION#.
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| 54 | 
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| 55 | 2) Configuration:  These module files will either be in the cgi-bin/ 
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| 56 | directory from the unpacked tarball, or /usr/local/etc/ipdb-#VERSION# 
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| 57 | if installed with 'make install'.
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| 58 |   a) Edit MyIPDB.pm:  you need to set the database DSN and 
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| 59 |     company info.  You should probably also set the syslog facility and 
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| 60 |     default custid.
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| 61 |   b) Edit CustIDCK.pm as needed to validate customer IDs.
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| 62 | 
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| 63 | 4) Create the database, and the inital tables using cgi-bin/ipdb.psql.
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| 64 | 
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| 65 | 5) Configure your webserver to call the IPDB scripts at an appropriate 
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| 66 | web path.  A webroot pointing to the HTML files (first level under 
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| 67 | the ipdb-#VERSION#/ tarball directory, or /usr/local/lib/ipdb-#VERSION#) 
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| 68 | with a symlink or alias for ip/ -> . should work fine;  a server alias 
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| 69 | under an existing virtual host should work as well.
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| 70 | 
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| 71 | Note that all URLs referenced internally currently assume they will be 
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| 72 | presented at http://host/ip/;  you cannot put the IPDB at 
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| 73 | http://host/noc/misc/ipdb/.
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| 74 | 
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| 75 | The directory containing the HTML and scripts must have at least the 
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| 76 | following Apache directives (or other server equivalent) set:
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| 77 | 
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| 78 |   Options ExecCGI IncludesNoEXEC FollowSymlinks
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| 79 | 
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| 80 | 6) User lists can be maintained two basic ways:
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| 81 | 
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| 82 |   a) Use the built-in user manager to add and remove users.  This 
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| 83 |     requires mod_auth_pgsql, configured with read/write access to the 
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| 84 |     IPDB users table.  A default user admin, password admin, is created 
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| 85 |     in step 4 above - make sure to create a new user as an admin, and 
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| 86 |     remove the default user (or at least change its password).
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| 87 | 
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| 88 |   b) Maintain an external .htpasswd file of your own, configured and 
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| 89 |     maintained however you like.  In this case the access-pwd-update.pl 
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| 90 |     script should edited to match the .htpasswd filename/path and should 
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| 91 |     be called from cron to make sure new users get added to the 
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| 92 |     database, and old ones get deleted.  This extra maintenance of user 
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| 93 |     lists is necessary to support the access controls, which are stored 
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| 94 |     in the database.
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| 95 | 
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| 96 | You will have to either temporarily create a user "admin", so that user
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| 97 | can grant other users priviledges, or run the following on the database:
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| 98 | 
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| 99 |   UPDATE users SET acl='bacdsA' WHERE username='newadminuser';
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| 100 | 
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| 101 | Replace 'newadminuser' as appropriate.
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| 102 | 
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| 103 | If you don't do this, nobody will be able to make any changes;  
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| 104 | access-pwd-update.pl only grants minimal read access to new users.
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| 105 | 
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| 106 | 7) (optional) Pick a log facility by setting $IPDB::syslog_facility in 
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| 107 | MyIPDB.pm, and tweak your syslog configuration to direct IPDB logging 
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| 108 | to a custom log.  Most logging is at the level of "info" or "warn".  
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| 109 | Full changes are not logged.  Logging verbosity isn't very high, so it 
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| 110 | may be acceptable to leave the log stream at the defaults.
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| 111 | 
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| 112 | ---
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| 113 | 
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| 114 | Basic installation should now be complete!  Log in as an admin user, 
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| 115 | add your ARIN, RIPE, LACNIC, AfriNIC, or APNIC allocations and start 
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| 116 | documenting your netblock usage.
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| 117 | 
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| 118 | If you want to export rWHOIS data, see http://www.unixadmin.cc/rwhois/ 
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| 119 | for a place to start on setting up an rWHOIS server.  Note that 
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| 120 | db2rwhois.pl creates and maintains the net-<cidr> trees, all you have 
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| 121 | to do is configure the daemon itself.  Schedule runs of 
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| 122 | cgi-bin/extras/db2rwhois.pl followed by rwhois_indexer (every hour 
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| 123 | should be plenty often).  You'll need to fill in correct organization 
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| 124 | contact info in MyIPDB.pm.
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| 125 | 
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| 126 | If you're just running from the unpacked tarball directory, you may need 
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| 127 | to create symlinks in cgi-bin/extras/ for IPDB.pm and MyIPDB.pm, 
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| 128 | pointing to ../IPDB.pm and ../MyIPDB.pm respectively.  Otherwise 
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| 129 | db2rwhois.pl won't be able to find these modules.
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