5 Laconica 0.6.4 ("Catapult")
8 This is the README file for Laconica, the Open Source microblogging
9 platform. It includes installation instructions, descriptions of
10 options you can set, warnings, tips, and general info for
11 administrators. Information on using Laconica can be found in the
12 "doc" subdirectory or in the "help" section on-line.
17 Laconica (pronounced "luh-KAWN-ih-kuh") is a Free and Open Source
18 microblogging platform. It helps people in a community, company or
19 group to exchange short (140 character) messages over the Web. Users
20 can choose which people to "follow" and receive only their friends' or
21 colleagues' status messages. It provides a similar service to sites
22 like Twitter, Jaiku, Pownce and Plurk.
24 With a little work, status messages can be sent to mobile phones,
25 instant messenger programs (GTalk/Jabber), and specially-designed
26 desktop clients that support the Twitter API.
28 Laconica supports an open standard called OpenMicroBlogging
29 (http://openmicroblogging.org/) that lets users on different Web sites
30 or in different companies subscribe to each others' notices. It
31 enables a distributed social network spread all across the Web.
33 Laconica was originally developed for the Open Software Service,
34 Identi.ca (http://identi.ca/). It is shared with you in hope that you
35 too make an Open Software Service available to your users. To learn
36 more, please see the Open Software Service Definition 1.0:
38 http://www.openknowledge.org/ossd
43 This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
44 it under the terms of the GNU Affero General Public License as
45 published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the
46 License, or (at your option) any later version.
48 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
49 WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
50 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
51 Affero General Public License for more details.
53 You should have received a copy of the GNU Affero General Public
54 License along with this program, in the file "COPYING". If not, see
55 <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
57 IMPORTANT NOTE: The GNU Affero General Public License (AGPL) has
58 *different requirements* from the "regular" GPL. In particular, if
59 you make modifications to the Laconica source code on your server,
60 you *MUST MAKE AVAILABLE* the modified version of the source code
61 to your users under the same license. This is a legal requirement
62 of using the software, and if you do not wish to share your
63 modifications, *YOU MAY NOT INSTALL LACONICA*.
65 Additional library software has been made available in the 'extlib'
66 directory. All of it is Free Software and can be distributed under
67 liberal terms, but those terms may differ in detail from the AGPL's
68 particulars. See each package's license file in the extlib directory
74 This is a minor feature and security improvement version from version
75 0.6.3 (release 24 Nov 2008). Notable features of version 0.6.4 include:
77 - "private" installs won't show any data to the outside world; redirect
78 non-logged-in users to login. (See "Private" below)
79 - Ability to "block" a subscriber, which forces them to unsubscribe,
80 doesn't allow them to subscribe again, and doesn't allow them to send
82 - Fine-grained control of subscriptions; users can choose not to receive
83 notices from other users over SMS, or IM, or both
84 - support for Mozilla microsummaries
85 (https://wiki.mozilla.org/Microsummaries)
86 - more efficient support for blacklisting users from the public page
87 - instructions on the public page for people who aren't logged in
88 - better registration instructions
89 - a check for license compatibility in receiving OMB notices
90 - HTML output in RSS 1.0, 2.0, and Atom feeds
91 - tuned and more reliable 'rememberme' cookies for username/password
93 - a utility for setting user passwords
94 - a "ban" configuration variable to ban certain users from posting
96 - an configurable posting throttle to keep any one user from flooding
97 the site with messages.
98 - fine-tuned url-shortening: only shorten if it's needed, only expand
99 certain URLs, and handle failure of URL-shortening services reliably
100 - disable Ajax input for notices, subscribe, nudge, while the
101 request is processing
102 - early implementation of support for Last-Modified and ETag-based
104 - initial microformats support
105 - redirect on bad nicknames in URLs
106 - correctly send emails in recipient's, not sender's, language
107 - correct email content type
108 - Change "Most Favorited" page to "Popular"
109 - properly support the "since" parameter in API calls
110 - Fix for changes in validate_credentials API call for the Twitter
112 - Fix for fatal error when sending email confirmation on registration
113 - Better replies for commands sent through the Ajax channel
114 - Add a User-Agent string for OMB requests
115 - Upgrade upstream library XMPPHP
116 - Upgrade upstream library JQuery Forms
117 - Code cleanup: checkboxes have proper <label> elements
118 - Code cleanup: consolidated various notice-listing code in one place
119 - Better support for unsubscribing from a remote user
120 - Stump of experimental Facebook application (not ready for use! code
122 - Stump of experimental user account deletion (not ready for use! code
128 The following software packages are *required* for this software to
131 - PHP 5.2.x. It may be possible to run this software on earlier
132 versions of PHP, but many of the functions used are only available
134 - MySQL 5.x. The Laconica database is stored, by default, in a MySQL
135 server. It has been primarily tested on 5.x servers, although it may
136 be possible to install on earlier (or later!) versions. The server
137 *must* support the MyISAM storage engine -- the default for most
138 MySQL servers -- *and* the InnoDB storage engine.
139 - A Web server. Preferably, you should have Apache 2.2.x with the
140 mod_rewrite extension installed and enabled.
142 Your PHP installation must include the following PHP extensions:
144 - Curl. This is for fetching files by HTTP.
145 - XMLWriter. This is for formatting XML and HTML output.
146 - MySQL. For accessing the database.
147 - GD. For scaling down avatar images.
148 - mbstring. For handling Unicode (UTF-8) encoded strings.
149 - gettext. For multiple languages. Default on many PHP installs.
151 For some functionality, you will also need the following extensions:
153 - Memcache. A client for the memcached server, which caches database
154 information in volatile memory. This is important for adequate
155 performance on high-traffic sites. You will also need a memcached
156 server to store the data in.
157 - Mailparse. Efficient parsing of email requires this extension.
158 Submission by email or SMS-over-email uses this extension.
159 - Sphinx Search. A client for the sphinx server, an alternative
160 to MySQL or Postgresql fulltext search. You will also need a
161 Sphinx server to serve the search queries.
163 You will almost definitely get 2-3 times better performance from your
164 site if you install a PHP bytecode cache/accelerator. Some well-known
165 examples are: eaccelerator, Turck mmcache, xcache, apc. Zend Optimizer
166 is a proprietary accelerator installed on some hosting sites.
171 A number of external PHP libraries are used to provide basic
172 functionality and optional functionality for your system. For your
173 convenience, they are available in the "extlib" directory of this
174 package, and you do not have to download and install them. However,
175 you may want to keep them up-to-date with the latest upstream version,
176 and the URLs are listed here for your convenience.
178 - DB_DataObject http://pear.php.net/package/DB_DataObject
179 - Validate http://pear.php.net/package/Validate
180 - OpenID from OpenIDEnabled (not the PEAR version!). We decided
181 to use the openidenabled.com version since it's more widely
182 implemented, and seems to be better supported.
183 http://openidenabled.com/php-openid/
184 - PEAR DB. Although this is an older data access system (new
185 packages should probably use PHP DBO), the OpenID libraries
186 depend on PEAR DB so we use it here, too. DB_DataObject can
187 also use PEAR MDB2, which may give you better performance
188 but won't work with OpenID.
189 http://pear.php.net/package/DB
190 - OAuth.php from http://oauth.googlecode.com/svn/code/php/
191 - markdown.php from http://michelf.com/projects/php-markdown/
192 - PEAR Mail, for sending out mail notifications
193 http://pear.php.net/package/Mail
194 - PEAR Net_SMTP, if you use the SMTP factory for notifications
195 http://pear.php.net/package/Net_SMTP
196 - PEAR Net_Socket, if you use the SMTP factory for notifications
197 http://pear.php.net/package/Net_Socket
198 - XMPPHP, the follow-up to Class.Jabber.php. Probably the best XMPP
199 library available for PHP. http://xmpphp.googlecode.com/. Note that
200 as of this writing the version of this library that is available in
201 the extlib directory is *significantly different* from the upstream
202 version (patches have been submitted). Upgrading to the upstream
203 version may render your Laconica site unable to send or receive XMPP
206 A design goal of Laconica is that the basic Web functionality should
207 work on even the most restrictive commercial hosting services.
208 However, additional functionality, such as receiving messages by
209 Jabber/GTalk, require that you be able to run long-running processes
210 on your account. In addition, posting by email or from SMS require
211 that you be able to install a mail filter in your mail server.
216 Installing the basic Laconica Web component is relatively easy,
217 especially if you've previously installed PHP/MySQL packages.
219 1. Unpack the tarball you downloaded on your Web server. Usually a
220 command like this will work:
222 tar zxf laconica-0.6.4.tar.gz
224 ...which will make a laconica-0.6.4 subdirectory in your current
225 directory. (If you don't have shell access on your Web server, you
226 may have to unpack the tarball on your local computer and FTP the
227 files to the server.)
229 2. Move the tarball to a directory of your choosing in your Web root
230 directory. Usually something like this will work:
232 mv laconica-0.6.4 /var/www/mublog
234 This will make your Laconica instance available in the mublog path of
235 your server, like "http://example.net/mublog". "microblog" or
236 "laconica" might also be good path names. If you know how to
237 configure virtual hosts on your web server, you can try setting up
238 "http://micro.example.net/" or the like.
240 3. You should also take this moment to make your avatar subdirectory
241 writeable by the Web server. An insecure way to do this is:
243 chmod a+w /var/www/mublog/avatar
245 On some systems, this will probably work:
247 chgrp www-data /var/www/mublog/avatar
248 chmod g+w /var/www/mublog/avatar
250 If your Web server runs as another user besides "www-data", try
251 that user's default group instead. As a last resort, you can create
252 a new group like "avatar" and add the Web server's user to the group.
254 4. Create a database to hold your microblog data. Something like this
257 mysqladmin -u "username" --password="password" create laconica
259 Note that Laconica must have its own database; you can't share the
260 database with another program. You can name it whatever you want,
263 (If you don't have shell access to your server, you may need to use
264 a tool like PHPAdmin to create a database. Check your hosting
265 service's documentation for how to create a new MySQL database.)
267 5. Run the laconica.sql SQL script in the db subdirectory to create
268 the database tables in the database. A typical system would work
271 mysql -u "username" --password="password" laconica < /var/www/mublog/db/laconica.sql
273 You may want to test by logging into the database and checking that
274 the tables were created. Here's an example:
278 6. Create a new database account that Laconica will use to access the
279 database. If you have shell access, this will probably work from the
282 GRANT SELECT,INSERT,DELETE,UPDATE on laconica.*
283 TO 'lacuser'@'localhost'
284 IDENTIFIED BY 'lacpassword';
286 You should change 'lacuser' and 'lacpassword' to your preferred new
287 username and password. You may want to test logging in as this new
288 user and testing that you can SELECT from some of the tables in the
289 DB (use SHOW TABLES to see which ones are there).
291 7. Copy the config.php.sample in the Laconica directory to config.php.
293 8. Edit config.php to set the basic configuration for your system.
294 (See descriptions below for basic config options.) Note that there
295 are lots of options and if you try to do them all at once, you will
296 have a hard time making sure what's working and what's not. So,
297 stick with the basics at first. In particular, customizing the
298 'site' and 'db' settings will almost definitely be needed.
300 9. At this point, you should be able to navigate in a browser to your
301 microblog's main directory and see the "Public Timeline", which
302 will be empty. If not, magic has happened! You can now register a
303 new user, post some notices, edit your profile, etc. However, you
304 may want to wait to do that stuff if you think you can set up
305 "fancy URLs" (see below), since some URLs are stored in the database.
310 By default, Laconica will have big long sloppy URLs that are hard for
311 people to remember or use. For example, a user's home profile might be
314 http://example.org/mublog/index.php?action=showstream&nickname=fred
316 It's possible to configure the software so it looks like this instead:
318 http://example.org/mublog/fred
320 These "fancy URLs" are more readable and memorable for users. To use
321 fancy URLs, you must either have Apache 2.2.x with .htaccess enabled
322 and mod_redirect enabled, -OR- know how to configure "url redirection"
325 1. Copy the htaccess.sample file to .htaccess in your Laconica
326 directory. Note: if you have control of your server's httpd.conf or
327 similar configuration files, it can greatly improve performance to
328 import the .htaccess file into your conf file instead. If you're
329 not sure how to do it, you may save yourself a lot of headache by
330 just leaving the .htaccess file.
332 2. Change the "RewriteBase" in the new .htaccess file to be the URL path
333 to your Laconica installation on your server. Typically this will
334 be the path to your Laconica directory relative to your Web root.
336 3. Add or uncomment or change a line in your config.php file so it says:
338 $config['site']['fancy'] = true;
340 You should now be able to navigate to a "fancy" URL on your server,
343 http://example.net/mublog/main/register
345 If you changed your HTTP server configuration, you may need to restart
348 If you have problems with the .htaccess file on versions of Apache
349 earlier than 2.2.x, try changing the regular expressions in the
350 htaccess.sample file that use "\w" to just use ".".
355 To use a Sphinx server to search users and notices, you also need
356 to install, compile and enable the sphinx pecl extension for php on the
357 client side, which itself depends on the sphinx development files.
358 "pecl install sphinx" should take care of that. Add "extension=sphinx.so"
359 to your php.ini and reload apache to enable it.
361 You can update your MySQL or Postgresql databases to drop their fulltext
362 search indexes, since they're now provided by sphinx.
364 On the sphinx server side, a script reads the main database and build
365 the keyword index. A cron job reads the database and keeps the sphinx
366 indexes up to date. scripts/sphinx-cron.sh should be called by cron
367 every 5 minutes, for example. scripts/sphinx.sh is an init.d script
368 to start and stop the sphinx search daemon.
373 Laconica supports a cheap-and-dirty system for sending update messages
374 to mobile phones and for receiving updates from the mobile. Instead of
375 sending through the SMS network itself, which is costly and requires
376 buy-in from the wireless carriers, it simply piggybacks on the email
377 gateways that many carriers provide to their customers. So, SMS
378 configuration is essentially email configuration.
380 Each user sends to a made-up email address, which they keep a secret.
381 Incoming email that is "From" the user's SMS email address, and "To"
382 the users' secret email address on the site's domain, will be
383 converted to a message and stored in the DB.
385 For this to work, there *must* be a domain or sub-domain for which all
386 (or most) incoming email can pass through the incoming mail filter.
388 1. Run the SQL script carrier.sql in your Laconica database. This will
391 mysql -u "lacuser" --password="lacpassword" laconica < db/carrier.sql
393 This will populate your database with a list of wireless carriers
394 that support email SMS gateways.
396 2. Make sure the maildaemon.php file is executable:
398 chmod +x scripts/maildaemon.php
400 Note that "daemon" is kind of a misnomer here; the script is more
401 of a filter than a daemon.
403 2. Edit /etc/aliases on your mail server and add the following line:
405 *: /path/to/laconica/scripts/maildaemon.php
407 3. Run whatever code you need to to update your aliases database. For
408 many mail servers (Postfix, Exim, Sendmail), this should work:
412 You may need to restart your mail server for the new database to
415 4. Set the following in your config.php file:
417 $config['mail']['domain'] = 'yourdomain.example.net';
419 At this point, post-by-email and post-by-SMS-gateway should work. Note
420 that if your mail server is on a different computer from your email
421 server, you'll need to have a full installation of Laconica, a working
422 config.php, and access to the Laconica database from the mail server.
427 XMPP (eXtended Message and Presence Protocol, http://xmpp.org/) is the
428 instant-messenger protocol that drives Jabber and GTalk IM. You can
429 distribute messages via XMPP using the system below; however, you
430 need to run the XMPP incoming daemon to allow incoming messages as
433 1. You may want to strongly consider setting up your own XMPP server.
434 Ejabberd, OpenFire, and JabberD are all Open Source servers.
435 Jabber, Inc. provides a high-performance commercial server.
437 2. You must register a Jabber ID (JID) with your new server. It helps
438 to choose a name like "update@example.com" or "notice" or something
439 similar. Alternately, your "update JID" can be registered on a
440 publicly-available XMPP service, like jabber.org or GTalk.
442 Laconica will not register the JID with your chosen XMPP server;
443 you need to do this manually, with an XMPP client like Gajim,
444 Telepathy, or Pidgin.im.
446 3. Configure your site's XMPP variables, as described below in the
447 configuration section.
449 On a default installation, your site can broadcast messages using
450 XMPP. Users won't be able to post messages using XMPP unless you've
451 got the XMPP daemon running. See 'Queues and daemons' below for how
452 to set that up. Also, once you have a sizable number of users, sending
453 a lot of SMS, OMB, and XMPP messages whenever someone posts a message
454 can really slow down your site; it may cause posting to timeout.
456 NOTE: stream_select(), a crucial function for network programming, is
457 broken on PHP 5.2.x less than 5.2.6 on amd64-based servers. We don't
458 work around this bug in Laconica; current recommendation is to move
459 off of amd64 to another server.
464 You can send *all* messages from your microblogging site to a
465 third-party service using XMPP. This can be useful for providing
466 search, indexing, bridging, or other cool services.
468 To configure a downstream site to receive your public stream, add
469 their "JID" (Jabber ID) to your config.php as follows:
471 $config['xmpp']['public'][] = 'downstream@example.net';
473 (Don't miss those square brackets at the end.) Note that your XMPP
474 broadcasting must be configured as mentioned above. Although you can
475 send out messages at "Web time", high-volume sites should strongly
476 consider setting up queues and daemons.
481 Some activities that Laconica needs to do, like broadcast OMB, SMS,
482 and XMPP messages, can be 'queued' and done by off-line bots instead.
483 For this to work, you must be able to run long-running offline
484 processes, either on your main Web server or on another server you
485 control. (Your other server will still need all the above
486 prerequisites, with the exception of Apache.) Installing on a separate
487 server is probably a good idea for high-volume sites.
489 1. You'll need the "CLI" (command-line interface) version of PHP
490 installed on whatever server you use.
492 2. If you're using a separate server for queues, install Laconica
493 somewhere on the server. You don't need to worry about the
494 .htaccess file, but make sure that your config.php file is close
495 to, or identical to, your Web server's version.
497 3. In your config.php files (both the Web server and the queues
498 server!), set the following variable:
500 $config['queue']['enabled'] = true;
502 You may also want to look at the 'daemon' section of this file for
503 more daemon options. Note that if you set the 'user' and/or 'group'
504 options, you'll need to create that user and/or group by hand.
505 They're not created automatically.
507 4. On the queues server, run the command scripts/startdaemons.sh. It
508 needs as a parameter the install path; if you run it from the
509 Laconica dir, "." should suffice.
511 This will run six (for now) queue handlers:
513 * xmppdaemon.php - listens for new XMPP messages from users and stores
514 them as notices in the database.
515 * jabberqueuehandler.php - sends queued notices in the database to
516 registered users who should receive them.
517 * publicqueuehandler.php - sends queued notices in the database to
518 public feed listeners.
519 * ombqueuehandler.php - sends queued notices to OpenMicroBlogging
520 recipients on foreign servers.
521 * smsqueuehandler.php - sends queued notices to SMS-over-email addresses
523 * xmppconfirmhandler.php - sends confirmation messages to registered
526 Note that these queue daemons are pretty raw, and need your care. In
527 particular, they leak memory, and you may want to restart them on a
528 regular (daily or so) basis with a cron job. Also, if they lose
529 the connection to the XMPP server for too long, they'll simply die. It
530 may be a good idea to use a daemon-monitoring service, like 'monit',
531 to check their status and keep them running.
533 All the daemons write their process IDs (pids) to /var/run/ by
534 default. This can be useful for starting, stopping, and monitoring the
537 Twitter Friends Syncing
538 -----------------------
540 As of Laconica 0.6.3, users may set a flag in their settings ("Subscribe
541 to my Twitter friends here" under the Twitter tab) to have Laconica
542 attempt to locate and subscribe to "friends" (people they "follow") on
543 Twitter who also have accounts on your Laconica system, and who have
544 previously set up a link for automatically posting notices to Twitter.
546 Optionally, there is a script (./scripts/synctwitterfriends.php), meant
547 to be run periodically from a job scheduler (e.g.: cron under Unix), to
548 look for new additions to users' friends lists. Note that the friends
549 syncing only subscribes users to each other, it does not unsubscribe
550 users when they stop following each other on Twitter.
554 # Update Twitter friends subscriptions every half hour
555 0,30 * * * * /path/to/php /path/to/laconica/scripts/synctwitterfriends.php>&/dev/null
560 Sitemap files (http://sitemaps.org/) are a very nice way of telling
561 search engines and other interested bots what's available on your site
562 and what's changed recently. You can generate sitemap files for your
565 1. Choose your sitemap URL layout. Laconica creates a number of
566 sitemap XML files for different parts of your site. You may want to
567 put these in a sub-directory of your Laconica directory to avoid
568 clutter. The sitemap index file tells the search engines and other
569 bots where to find all the sitemap files; it *must* be in the main
570 installation directory or higher. Both types of file must be
571 available through HTTP.
573 2. To generate your sitemaps, run the following command on your server:
575 php scripts/sitemap.php -f index-file-path -d sitemap-directory -u URL-prefix-for-sitemaps
577 Here, index-file-path is the full path to the sitemap index file,
578 like './sitemapindex.xml'. sitemap-directory is the directory where
579 you want the sitemaps stored, like './sitemaps/' (make sure the dir
580 exists). URL-prefix-for-sitemaps is the full URL for the sitemap dir,
581 typically something like 'http://example.net/mublog/sitemaps/'.
583 You can use several methods for submitting your sitemap index to
584 search engines to get your site indexed. One is to add a line like the
585 following to your robots.txt file:
587 Sitemap: /mublog/sitemapindex.xml
589 This is a good idea for letting *all* Web spiders know about your
590 sitemap. You can also submit sitemap files to major search engines
591 using their respective "Webmaster centres"; see sitemaps.org for links
597 There are two themes shipped with this version of Laconica: "stoica",
598 which is what the Identi.ca site uses, and "default", which is a good
599 basis for other sites.
601 As of right now, your ability to change the theme is site-wide; users
602 can't choose their own theme. Additionally, the only thing you can
603 change in the theme is CSS stylesheets and some image files; you can't
604 change the HTML output, like adding or removing menu items.
606 You can choose a theme using the $config['site']['theme'] element in
607 the config.php file. See below for details.
609 You can add your own theme by making a sub-directory of the 'theme'
610 subdirectory with the name of your theme. Each theme can have the
613 display.css: a CSS2 file for "default" styling for all browsers.
614 ie6.css: a CSS2 file for override styling for fixing up Internet
616 ie7.css: a CSS2 file for override styling for fixing up Internet
618 logo.png: a logo image for the site.
619 default-avatar-profile.png: a 96x96 pixel image to use as the avatar for
620 users who don't upload their own.
621 default-avatar-stream.png: Ditto, but 48x48. For streams of notices.
622 default-avatar-mini.png: Ditto ditto, but 24x24. For subscriptions
623 listing on profile pages.
625 You may want to start by copying the files from the default theme to
631 Translations in Laconica use the gettext system (http://www.gnu.org/software/gettext/).
632 Theoretically, you can add your own sub-directory to the locale/
633 subdirectory to add a new language to your system. You'll need to
634 compile the ".po" files into ".mo" files, however.
636 Contributions of translation information to Laconica are very easy:
637 you can use the Web interface at http://laconi.ca/entrans/ to add one
638 or a few or lots of new translations -- or even new languages. You can
639 also download more up-to-date .po files there, if you so desire.
644 There is no built-in system for doing backups in Laconica. You can make
645 backups of a working Laconica system by backing up the database and
646 the Web directory. To backup the database use mysqldump (http://ur1.ca/7xo)
647 and to backup the Web directory, try tar.
652 The administrator can set the "private" flag for a site so that it's
653 not visible to non-logged-in users. This might be useful for
654 workgroups who want to share a microblogging site for project
655 management, but host it on a public server.
657 Note that this is an experimental feature; total privacy is not
658 guaranteed or ensured. Also, privacy is all-or-nothing for a site; you
659 can't have some accounts or notices private, and others public.
660 Finally, the interaction of private sites with OpenMicroBlogging is
661 undefined. Remote users won't be able to subscribe to users on a
662 private site, but users of the private site may be able to subscribe
663 to users on a remote site. (Or not... it's not well tested.) The
664 "proper behaviour" hasn't been defined here, so handle with care.
669 If you've been using Laconica 0.6, 0.5 or lower, or if you've been
670 tracking the "git" version of the software, you will probably want
671 to upgrade and keep your existing data. There is no automated upgrade
672 procedure in Laconica 0.6.4. Try these step-by-step instructions; read
673 to the end first before trying them.
675 0. Download Laconica and set up all the prerequisites as if you were
677 1. Make backups of both your database and your Web directory. UNDER NO
678 CIRCUMSTANCES should you try to do an upgrade without a known-good
679 backup. You have been warned.
680 2. Shut down Web access to your site, either by turning off your Web
681 server or by redirecting all pages to a "sorry, under maintenance"
683 3. Shut down XMPP access to your site, typically by shutting down the
684 xmppdaemon.php process and all other daemons that you're running.
685 If you've got "monit" or "cron" automatically restarting your
686 daemons, make sure to turn that off, too.
687 4. Shut down SMS and email access to your site. The easy way to do
688 this is to comment out the line piping incoming email to your
689 maildaemon.php file, and running something like "newaliases".
690 5. Once all writing processes to your site are turned off, make a
691 final backup of the Web directory and database.
692 6. Move your Laconica directory to a backup spot, like "mublog.bak".
693 7. Unpack your Laconica 0.6 tarball and move it to "mublog" or
694 wherever your code used to be.
695 8. Copy the config.php file and avatar directory from your old
696 directory to your new directory.
697 9. Copy htaccess.sample to .htaccess in the new directory. Change the
698 RewriteBase to use the correct path.
699 10. Rebuild the database. Go to your Laconica directory and run the
700 rebuilddb.sh script like this:
702 ./scripts/rebuilddb.sh rootuser rootpassword database db/laconica.sql
704 Here, rootuser and rootpassword are the username and password for a
705 user who can drop and create databases as well as tables; typically
706 that's _not_ the user Laconica runs as.
707 11. Use mysql client to log into your database and make sure that the
708 notice, user, profile, subscription etc. tables are non-empty.
709 12. Turn back on the Web server, and check that things still work.
710 13. Turn back on XMPP bots and email maildaemon. Note that the XMPP
711 bots have changed since version 0.5; see above for details.
713 If you're upgrading from very old versions, you may want to look at
714 the fixup_* scripts in the scripts directories. These will store some
715 precooked data in the DB. All upgraders should check out the inboxes
718 NOTE: the database definition file, stoica.ini, has been renamed to
719 laconica.ini (since this is the recommended database name). If you
720 have a line in your config.php pointing to the old name, you'll need
726 Before version 0.6.2, the page showing all notices from people the
727 user is subscribed to ("so-and-so with friends") was calculated at run
728 time. Starting with 0.6.2, we have a new data structure for holding a
729 user's "notice inbox". (Note: distinct from the "message inbox", which
730 is the "inbox" tab in the UI. The notice inbox appears under the
733 Notices are added to the inbox when they're created. This speeds up
734 the query considerably, and also allows us the opportunity, in the
735 future, to add different kind of notices to an inbox -- like @-replies
736 or subscriptions to search terms or hashtags.
738 Notice inboxes are enabled by default for new installations. If you
739 are upgrading an existing site, this means that your users will see
740 empty "Personal" pages. The following steps will help you fix the
743 0. $config['inboxes']['enabled'] can be set to one of three values. If
744 you set it to 'false', the site will work as before. Support for this
745 will probably be dropped in future versions.
746 1. Setting the flag to 'transitional' means that you're in transition.
747 In this mode, the code will run the "new query" or the "old query"
748 based on whether the user's inbox has been updated.
749 2. After setting the flag to "transitional", you can run the
750 fixup_inboxes.php script to create the inboxes. You may want to set
751 the memory limit high. You can re-run it without ill effect.
752 3. When fixup_inboxes is finished, you can set the enabled flag to
755 Configuration options
756 =====================
758 The sole configuration file for Laconica (excepting configurations for
759 dependency software) is config.php in your Laconica directory. If you
760 edit any other file in the directory, like lib/common.php (where most
761 of the defaults are defined), you will lose your configuration options
762 in any upgrade, and you will wish that you had been more careful.
764 Almost all configuration options are made through a two-dimensional
765 associative array, cleverly named $config. A typical configuration
768 $config['section']['option'] = value;
770 For brevity, the following documentation describes each section and
776 This section is a catch-all for site-wide variables.
778 name: the name of your site, like 'YourCompany Microblog'.
779 server: the server part of your site's URLs, like 'example.net'.
780 path: The path part of your site's URLs, like 'mublog' or '/'
782 fancy: whether or not your site uses fancy URLs (see Fancy URLs
783 section above). Default is false.
784 logfile: full path to a file for Laconica to save logging
785 information to. You may want to use this if you don't have
787 locale_path: full path to the directory for locale data. Unless you
788 store all your locale data in one place, you probably
789 don't need to use this.
790 language: default language for your site. Defaults to US English.
791 languages: A list of languages supported on your site. Typically you'd
792 only change this if you wanted to disable support for one
794 "unset($config['site']['languages']['de'])" will disable
796 theme: Theme for your site (see Theme section). Two themes are
797 provided by default: 'default' and 'stoica' (the one used by
798 Identi.ca). It's appreciated if you don't use the 'stoica' theme
799 except as the basis for your own.
800 email: contact email address for your site. By default, it's extracted
801 from your Web server environment; you may want to customize it.
802 broughtbyurl: name of an organization or individual who provides the
803 service. Each page will include a link to this name in the
804 footer. A good way to link to the blog, forum, wiki,
805 corporate portal, or whoever is making the service available.
806 broughtby: text used for the "brought by" link.
807 timezone: default timezone for message display. Users can set their
808 own time zone. Defaults to 'UTC', which is a pretty good default.
809 closed: If set to 'true', will disallow registration on your site.
810 This is a cheap way to restrict accounts to only one
811 individual or group; just register the accounts you want on
812 the service, *then* set this variable to 'true'.
813 inviteonly: If set to 'true', will only allow registration if the user
814 was invited by an existing user.
815 private: If set to 'true', anonymous users will be redirected to the
816 'login' page. Also, API methods that normally require no
817 authentication will require it. Note that this does not turn
818 off registration; use 'closed' or 'inviteonly' for the
824 This section is a reference to the configuration options for
825 DB_DataObject (see http://ur1.ca/7xp). The ones that you may want to
826 set are listed below for clarity.
828 database: a DSN (Data Source Name) for your Laconica database. This is
829 in the format 'protocol://username:password@hostname/databasename',
830 where 'protocol' is 'mysql' or 'mysqli' (or possibly 'postgresql', if you
831 really know what you're doing), 'username' is the username,
832 'password' is the password, and etc.
833 ini_yourdbname: if your database is not named 'laconica', you'll need
834 to set this to point to the location of the
835 laconica.ini file. Note that the real name of your database
836 should go in there, not literally 'yourdbname'.
837 db_driver: You can try changing this to 'MDB2' to use the other driver
838 type for DB_DataObject, but note that it breaks the OpenID
839 libraries, which only support PEAR::DB.
840 debug: On a database error, you may get a message saying to set this
841 value to 5 to see debug messages in the browser. This breaks
842 just about all pages, and will also expose the username and
844 quote_identifiers: Set this to true if you're using postgresql.
845 type: either 'mysql' or 'postgresql' (used for some bits of
846 database-type-specific SQL in the code). Defaults to mysql.
847 mirror: you can set this to an array of DSNs, like the above
848 'database' value. If it's set, certain read-only actions will
849 use a random value out of this array for the database, rather
850 than the one in 'database' (actually, 'database' is overwritten).
851 You can offload a busy DB server by setting up MySQL replication
852 and adding the slaves to this array. Note that if you want some
853 requests to go to the 'database' (master) server, you'll need
854 to include it in this array, too.
859 By default, Laconica sites log error messages to the syslog facility.
860 (You can override this using the 'logfile' parameter described above).
862 appname: The name that Laconica uses to log messages. By default it's
863 "laconica", but if you have more than one installation on the
864 server, you may want to change the name for each instance so
865 you can track log messages more easily.
870 You can configure the software to queue time-consuming tasks, like
871 sending out SMS email or XMPP messages, for off-line processing. See
872 'Queues and daemons' above for how to set this up.
874 enabled: Whether to uses queues. Defaults to false.
879 The default license to use for your users notices. The default is the
880 Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 license, which is probably the right
881 choice for any public site. Note that some other servers will not
882 accept notices if you apply a stricter license than this.
884 url: URL of the license, used for links.
885 title: Title for the license, like 'Creative Commons Attribution 3.0'.
886 image: A button shown on each page for the license.
891 This is for configuring out-going email. We use PEAR's Mail module,
892 see: http://pear.php.net/manual/en/package.mail.mail.factory.php
894 backend: the backend to use for mail, one of 'mail', 'sendmail', and
895 'smtp'. Defaults to PEAR's default, 'mail'.
896 params: if the mail backend requires any parameters, you can provide
897 them in an associative array.
902 This is for configuring nicknames in the service.
904 blacklist: an array of strings for usernames that may not be
905 registered. A default array exists for strings that are
906 used by Laconica (e.g. 'doc', 'main', 'avatar', 'theme')
907 but you may want to add others if you have other software
908 installed in a subdirectory of Laconica or if you just
909 don't want certain words used as usernames.
910 featured: an array of nicknames of 'featured' users of the site.
911 Can be useful to draw attention to well-known users, or
912 interesting people, or whatever.
917 For configuring avatar access.
919 server: If set, defines another server where avatars are stored in the
920 root directory. Note that the 'avatar' subdir still has to be
921 writeable. You'd typically use this to split HTTP requests on
922 the client to speed up page loading, either with another
923 virtual server or with an NFS or SAMBA share. Clients
924 typically only make 2 connections to a single server at a
925 time (http://ur1.ca/6ih), so this can parallelize the job.
931 For configuring the public stream.
933 localonly: If set to true, only messages posted by users of this
934 service (rather than other services, filtered through OMB)
935 are shown in the public stream. Default true.
936 blacklist: An array of IDs of users to hide from the public stream.
937 Useful if you have someone making excessive Twitterfeed posts
938 to the site, other kinds of automated posts, testing bots, etc.
943 server: Like avatars, you can speed up page loading by pointing the
944 theme file lookup to another server (virtual or real). The
945 theme server's root path should map to the Laconica "theme"
946 subdirectory. Defaults to NULL.
951 For configuring the XMPP sub-system.
953 enabled: Whether to accept and send messages by XMPP. Default false.
954 server: server part of XMPP ID for update user.
955 port: connection port for clients. Default 5222, which you probably
956 shouldn't need to change.
957 user: username for the client connection. Users will receive messages
958 from 'user'@'server'.
959 resource: a unique identifier for the connection to the server. This
960 is actually used as a prefix for each XMPP component in the system.
961 password: password for the user account.
962 host: some XMPP domains are served by machines with a different
963 hostname. (For example, @gmail.com GTalk users connect to
964 talk.google.com). Set this to the correct hostname if that's the
965 case with your server.
966 encryption: Whether to encrypt the connection between Laconica and the
967 XMPP server. Defaults to true, but you can get
968 considerably better performance turning it off if you're
969 connecting to a server on the same machine or on a
971 debug: if turned on, this will make the XMPP library blurt out all of
972 the incoming and outgoing messages as XML stanzas. Use as a
973 last resort, and never turn it on if you don't have queues
974 enabled, since it will spit out sensitive data to the browser.
975 public: an array of JIDs to send _all_ notices to. This is useful for
976 participating in third-party search and archiving services.
981 Miscellaneous tagging stuff.
983 dropoff: Decay factor for tag listing, in seconds.
984 Defaults to exponential decay over ten days; you can twiddle
985 with it to try and get better results for your site.
990 For daemon processes.
992 piddir: directory that daemon processes should write their PID file
993 (process ID) to. Defaults to /var/run/, which is where this
994 stuff should usually go on Unix-ish systems.
995 user: If set, the daemons will try to change their effective user ID
996 to this user before running. Probably a good idea, especially if
997 you start the daemons as root. Note: user name, like 'daemon',
999 group: If set, the daemons will try to change their effective group ID
1000 to this named group. Again, a name, not a numerical ID.
1005 You can get a significant boost in performance by caching some
1006 database data in memcached (http://www.danga.com/memcached/).
1008 enabled: Set to true to enable. Default false.
1009 server: a string with the hostname of the memcached server. Can also
1010 be an array of hostnames, if you've got more than one server.
1015 You can get a significant boost in performance using Sphinx Search
1016 instead of your database server to search for users and notices.
1017 (http://sphinxsearch.com/).
1019 enabled: Set to true to enable. Default false.
1020 server: a string with the hostname of the sphinx server.
1021 port: an integer with the port number of the sphinx server.
1026 A catch-all for integration with other systems.
1028 source: The name to use for the source of posts to Twitter. Defaults
1029 to 'laconica', but if you request your own source name from
1030 Twitter (http://twitter.com/help/request_source), you can use
1031 that here instead. Status updates on Twitter will then have
1039 enabled: A three-valued flag for whether to use notice inboxes (see
1040 upgrading info above for notes about this change). Can be
1041 'false', 'true', or '"transitional"'.
1046 For notice-posting throttles.
1048 enabled: Whether to throttle posting. Defaults to false.
1049 count: Each user can make this many posts in 'timespan' seconds. So, if count
1050 is 100 and timespan is 3600, then there can be only 100 posts
1051 from a user every hour.
1052 timespan: see 'count'.
1059 banned: an array of usernames and/or profile IDs of 'banned' profiles.
1060 The site will reject any notices by these users -- they will
1061 not be accepted at all. (Compare with blacklisted users above,
1062 whose posts just won't show up in the public stream.)
1067 The primary output for Laconica is syslog, unless you configured a
1068 separate logfile. This is probably the first place to look if you're
1069 getting weird behaviour from Laconica.
1071 If you're tracking the unstable version of Laconica in the git
1072 repository (see below), and you get a compilation error ("unexpected
1073 T_STRING") in the browser, check to see that you don't have any
1074 conflicts in your code.
1076 If you upgraded to Laconica 0.6.4 without reading the "Notice inboxes"
1077 section above, and all your users' 'Personal' tabs are empty, read the
1078 "Notice inboxes" section above.
1083 These are some myths you may see on the Web about Laconica.
1084 Documentation from the core team about Laconica has been pretty
1085 sparse, so some backtracking and guesswork resulted in some incorrect
1088 - "Set $config['db']['debug'] = 5 to debug the database." This is an
1089 extremely bad idea. It's a tool built into DB_DataObject that will
1090 emit oodles of print lines directly to the browser of your users.
1091 Among these lines will be your database username and password. Do
1092 not enable this option on a production Web site for any reason.
1094 - "Edit dataobject.ini with the following settings..." dataobject.ini
1095 is a development file for the DB_DataObject framework and is not
1096 used by the running software. It was removed from the Laconica
1097 distribution because its presence was confusing. Do not bother
1098 configuring dataobject.ini, and do not put your database username
1099 and password into the file on a production Web server; unscrupulous
1100 persons may try to read it to get your passwords.
1105 If you're adventurous or impatient, you may want to install the
1106 development version of Laconica. To get it, use the git version
1107 control tool (http://git-scm.com/) like so:
1109 git clone http://laconi.ca/software/laconica.git
1111 To keep it up-to-date, use 'git pull'. Watch for conflicts!
1116 There are several ways to get more information about Laconica.
1118 * There is a mailing list for Laconica developers and admins at
1119 http://mail.laconi.ca/mailman/listinfo/laconica-dev
1120 * The #laconica IRC channel on freenode.net (http://www.freenode.net/).
1121 * The Laconica wiki, http://laconi.ca/trac/
1126 * Microblogging messages to http://identi.ca/evan are very welcome.
1127 * Laconica's Trac server has a bug tracker for any defects you may find,
1128 or ideas for making things better. http://laconi.ca/trac/
1129 * e-mail to evan@identi.ca will usually be read and responded to very
1130 quickly, unless the question is really hard.
1135 The following is an incomplete list of developers who've worked on
1136 Laconi.ca. Apologies for any oversight; please let evan@identi.ca know
1137 if anyone's been overlooked in error.
1139 * Evan Prodromou, founder and lead developer, Control Yourself, Inc.
1140 * Zach Copley, Control Yourself, Inc.
1141 * Earle Martin, Control Yourself, Inc.
1142 * Marie-Claude Doyon, designer, Control Yourself, Inc.
1143 * Sarven Capadisli, Control Yourself, Inc.
1144 * Robin Millette, Control Yourself, Inc.
1155 * Ken Sheppardson (Trac server, man-about-town)
1156 * Tiago 'gouki' Faria (entrans)
1157 * Tryggvi Björgvinsson
1159 Thanks also to the developers of our upstream library code and to the
1160 thousands of people who have tried out Identi.ca, installed Laconi.ca,
1161 told their friends, and built the Open Microblogging network to what