Commit 51bb915e7e912762b45c0d33c83423eb3d3fe07a

Authored by Aurélio A. Heckert
1 parent c9eccb09

add .md extension on all descriptive files.

@@ -1,217 +0,0 @@ @@ -1,217 +0,0 @@
1 -If you are not listed here, but should be, please write to the noosfero mailing  
2 -list: http://listas.softwarelivre.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/noosfero-dev  
3 -(this list requires subscription to post, but since you are an author of  
4 -noosfero, that's not a problem).  
5 -  
6 -Developers  
7 -==========  
8 -  
9 -Alan Freihof Tygel <alantygel@gmail.com>  
10 -Alessandro Palmeira <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>  
11 -Alessandro Palmeira + Caio C. Salgado <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>  
12 -Alessandro Palmeira + Caio Salgado <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>  
13 -Alessandro Palmeira + Caio Salgado <caio.csalgado@gmail.com>  
14 -Alessandro Palmeira + Caio Salgado + Diego Araújo + João M. M. da Silva <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
15 -Alessandro Palmeira + Carlos Morais <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>  
16 -Alessandro Palmeira + Daniel Alves <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>  
17 -Alessandro Palmeira + Daniel Alves + Diego Araújo <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
18 -Alessandro Palmeira + Daniel Alves + Diego Araújo + Guilherme Rojas <danpaulalves@gmail.com>  
19 -Alessandro Palmeira + Diego Araujo <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>  
20 -Alessandro Palmeira + Diego Araújo <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>  
21 -Alessandro Palmeira + Diego Araujo + Daniela Feitosa <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>  
22 -Alessandro Palmeira + Diego Araujo <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
23 -Alessandro Palmeira + Diego Araújo <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
24 -Alessandro Palmeira + Diego Araujo + Eduardo Morais <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>  
25 -Alessandro Palmeira + Diego Araújo + João M. M. da Silva <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>  
26 -Alessandro Palmeira + Diego Araújo + João M. M. da Silva <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
27 -Alessandro Palmeira + Diego Araujo + João M. M. da Silva + Paulo Meirelles <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>  
28 -Alessandro Palmeira + Diego Araújo + Pedro Leal <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
29 -Alessandro Palmeira + Diego Araújo + Pedro Leal + João M. M. da Silva <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
30 -Alessandro Palmeira + Diego Araujo + Rafael Manzo <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>  
31 -Alessandro Palmeira + Eduardo Morais <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>  
32 -Alessandro Palmeira + Guilherme Rojas <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>  
33 -Alessandro Palmeira + Jefferson Fernandes <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>  
34 -Alessandro Palmeira + João M. M. da Silva <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>  
35 -Alessandro Palmeira + Joao M. M. da Silva + Diego Araujo <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>  
36 -Alessandro Palmeira + João M. M. da Silva + Renan Teruo <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>  
37 -Alessandro Palmeira + João M. M. Silva <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>  
38 -Alessandro Palmeira + Paulo Meirelles <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>  
39 -Alessandro Palmeira + Paulo Meirelles + João M. M. da Silva <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>  
40 -Alessandro Palmeira + Rafael Manzo <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>  
41 -Antonio Terceiro + Carlos Morais <terceiro@colivre.coop.br>  
42 -Antonio Terceiro + Paulo Meirelles <terceiro@colivre.coop.br>  
43 -Antonio Terceiro <terceiro@colivre.coop.br>  
44 -Aurelio A. Heckert <aurelio@colivre.coop.br>  
45 -Braulio Bhavamitra <brauliobo@gmail.com>  
46 -Bráulio Bhavamitra <brauliobo@gmail.com>  
47 -Braulio Bhavamitra <braulio@eita.org.br>  
48 -Caio <caio.csalgado@gmail.com>  
49 -Caio + Diego + Pedro + João <caio.csalgado@gmail.com>  
50 -Caio Formiga <caio.formiga@gmail.com>  
51 -Caio, Pedro <caio.csalgado@gmail.com>  
52 -Caio Salgado + Alessandro Palmeira <caio.csalgado@gmail.com>  
53 -Caio Salgado <caio.csalgado@gmail.com>  
54 -Caio Salgado + Carlos Morais + Diego Araújo + Pedro Leal <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
55 -Caio Salgado + Diego Araujo <caio.csalgado@gmail.com>  
56 -Caio Salgado + Diego Araújo <caio.csalgado@gmail.com>  
57 -Caio Salgado + Diego Araújo <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
58 -Caio Salgado + Diego Araújo + Jefferson Fernandes <caio.csalgado@gmail.com>  
59 -Caio Salgado + Diego Araújo + João M. M. da Silva <caio.csalgado@gmail.com>  
60 -Caio Salgado + Diego Araújo + Pedro Leal <caio.csalgado@gmail.com>  
61 -Caio Salgado + Diego Araújo + Pedro Leal <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
62 -Caio Salgado + Diego Araújo + Rafael Manzo <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
63 -Caio Salgado + Jefferson Fernandes <caio.csalgado@gmail.com>  
64 -Caio Salgado + Jefferson Fernandes <jeffs.fernandes@gmail.com>  
65 -Caio Salgado + Rafael Manzo <caio.csalgado@gmail.com>  
66 -Caio Salgado + Renan Teruo <caio.csalgado@gmail.com>  
67 -Caio Salgado + Renan Teruo <caio.salgado@gmail.com>  
68 -Caio Salgado + Renan Teruo + Jefferson Fernandes <jeffs.fernandes@gmail.com>  
69 -Caio Salgado + Renan Teruo <renanteruoc@gmail.com>  
70 -Caio SBA <caio@colivre.coop.br>  
71 -Carlos Morais <carlos88morais@gmail.com>  
72 -Carlos Morais + Diego Araújo <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
73 -Carlos Morais + Eduardo Morais <carlos88morais@gmail.com>  
74 -Carlos Morais + Paulo Meirelles <carlos88morais@gmail.com>  
75 -Carlos Morais + Pedro Leal <carlos88morais@gmail.com>  
76 -Daniel Alves + Diego Araújo <danpaulalves@gmail.com>  
77 -Daniel Alves + Diego Araújo <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
78 -Daniel Alves + Diego Araújo + Guilherme Rojas <danpaulalves@gmail.com>  
79 -Daniel Alves + Diego Araújo + Guilherme Rojas <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
80 -Daniel Alves + Diego Araújo + Guilherme Rojas <guilhermehrojas@gmail.com>  
81 -Daniel Alves + Guilherme Rojas <danpaulalves@gmail.com>  
82 -Daniel Alves + Rafael Manzo <rr.manzo@gmail.com>  
83 -Daniela Soares Feitosa <danielafeitosa@colivre.coop.br>  
84 -Daniel Cunha <daniel@colivre.coop.br>  
85 -diegoamc <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
86 -Diego Araújo + Alessandro Palmeira <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
87 -Diego Araújo + Alessandro Palmeira + João M. M. da Silva <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
88 -Diego Araújo + Alessandro Palmeira + Rafael Manzo <rr.manzo@gmail.com>  
89 -Diego Araujo + Caio Salgado <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
90 -Diego Araújo + Daniel Alves + Rafael Manzo <rr.manzo@gmail.com>  
91 -Diego Araújo <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
92 -Diego Araújo + Eduardo Morais + Paulo Meirelles <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
93 -Diego Araújo + Guilherme Rojas <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
94 -Diego Araújo + Jefferson Fernandes <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
95 -Diego Araujo + Jefferson Fernandes <jeffs.fernandes@gmail.com>  
96 -Diego Araújo + João Machini <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
97 -Diego Araújo + João Machini <digoamc90@gmail.com>  
98 -Diego Araújo + João M. M. da Silva + Alessandro Palmeira <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>  
99 -Diego Araújo + João M. M. da Silva <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
100 -Diego Araújo + João M. M. da Silva + João Machini <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
101 -Diego Araújo + João M. M. da Silva + Pedro Leal <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
102 -Diego Araújo + Paulo Meirelles <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
103 -Diego Araújo + Pedro Leal <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
104 -Diego Araujo + Rafael Manzo <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
105 -Diego Araújo + Rafael Manzo <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
106 -Diego Araújo + Renan Teruo + Alessandro Palmeira <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
107 -Diego Araújo + Renan Teruo <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
108 -Diego Araujo + Rodrigo Souto + Rafael Manzo <rr.manzo@gmail.com>  
109 -Diego + Jefferson <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
110 -Diego Martinez <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
111 -Diego Martinez <diego@diego-K55A.(none)>  
112 -Diego + Renan <renanteruoc@gmail.com>  
113 -Fernanda Lopes <nanda.listas+psl@gmail.com>  
114 -Francisco Marcelo A. Lima Júnior <francisco.lima-junior@serpro.gov.br>  
115 -Francisco Marcelo de Araujo Lima Junior <79350259591@serpro-1457614.(none)>  
116 -Grazieno Pellegrino <grazieno@gmail.com>  
117 -Isaac Canan <isaac@intelletto.com.br>  
118 -Italo Valcy <italo@dcc.ufba.br>  
119 -Jefferson Fernandes + Diego Araujo + Rafael Manzo <jeffs.fernandes@gmail.com>  
120 -Jefferson Fernandes + Joao M. M. da Silva <jeffs.fernandes@gmail.com>  
121 -Jefferson Fernandes + Joao M. M. Silva <jeffs.fernandes@gmail.com>  
122 -João da Silva <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>  
123 -João Marco Maciel da Silva + Rafael Manzo + Renan Teruo <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>  
124 -João M. M. da Silva + Alessandro Palmeira + Diego Araújo + Caio Salgado <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>  
125 -João M. M. da Silva + Alessandro Palmeira + Diego Araújo <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>  
126 -Joao M. M. da Silva + Alessandro Palmeira <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>  
127 -João M. M. da Silva + Alessandro Palmeira <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>  
128 -João M. M. da Silva + Alessandro Palmeira + João Machini <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>  
129 -João M. M. da Silva + Caio Salgado + Alessandro Palmeira <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>  
130 -João M. M. da Silva + Caio Salgado <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>  
131 -João M. M. da Silva + Carlos Morais <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>  
132 -João M. M. da Silva + Diego Araújo <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
133 -João M. M. da Silva + Diego Araújo <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>  
134 -João M. M. da Silva + Diego Araújo + Pedro Leal <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>  
135 -João M. M. da Silva <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>  
136 -Joao M. M. da Silva + Jefferson Fernandes <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>  
137 -João M. M. da Silva + Jefferson Fernandes <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>  
138 -João M. M. da Silva + João M. Miranda <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>  
139 -João M. M. da Silva + Paulo Meirelles <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>  
140 -João M. M. da Silva + Pedro Leal <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>  
141 -João M. M. da Silva + Rafael Manzo + Diego Araújo <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>  
142 -João M. M. da Silva + Rafael Manzo <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>  
143 -João M. M. da Silva + Renan Teruo <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>  
144 -João M. M. Silva + Caio Salgado <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>  
145 -João M. M. Silva + Diego Araújo <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>  
146 -Joao M. M. Silva + Jefferson Fernandes <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>  
147 -João M. M. Silva + Paulo Meirelles <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>  
148 -João M. M. Silva + Rafael Manzo <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>  
149 -João M. M. Silva + Renan Teruo <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>  
150 -Joenio Costa <joenio@colivre.coop.br>  
151 -Josef Spillner <josef.spillner@tu-dresden.de>  
152 -Junior Silva <juniorsilva1001@gmail.com>  
153 -Junior Silva <juniorsilva7@juniorsilva-Aspire-5750Z.(none)>  
154 -Keilla Menezes <keilla@colivre.coop.br>  
155 -Larissa Reis <larissa@colivre.coop.br>  
156 -Larissa Reis <reiss.larissa@gmail.com>  
157 -Leandro Nunes dos Santos <leandronunes@gmail.com>  
158 -Leandro Nunes dos Santos <leandro.santos@serpro.gov.br>  
159 -LinguÁgil 2010 <linguagil.bahia@gmail.com>  
160 -Lucas Melo <lucas@colivre.coop.br>  
161 -Lucas Melo <lucaspradomelo@gmail.com>  
162 -Luis David Aguilar Carlos <ludwig9003@gmail.com>  
163 -Martín Olivera <molivera@solar.org.ar>  
164 -Moises Machado <moises@colivre.coop.br>  
165 -Naíla Alves <naila@colivre.coop.br>  
166 -Nanda Lopes <nanda.listas+psl@gmail.com>  
167 -Paulo Meirelles + Alessandro Palmeira + João M. M. da Silva <paulo@softwarelivre.org>  
168 -Paulo Meirelles + Alessandro Palmeira <paulo@softwarelivre.org>  
169 -Paulo Meirelles + Carlos Morais <paulo@softwarelivre.org>  
170 -Paulo Meirelles + Diego Araújo <paulo@softwarelivre.org>  
171 -Paulo Meirelles + João M. M. da Silva <paulo@softwarelivre.org>  
172 -Paulo Meirelles <paulo@softwarelivre.org>  
173 -Paulo Meirelles + Rafael Manzo <paulo@softwarelivre.org>  
174 -Rafael Gomes <rafaelgomes@techfree.com.br>  
175 -Rafael Manzo + Alessandro Palmeira <rr.manzo@gmail.com>  
176 -Rafael Manzo + Daniel Alves <danpaulalves@gmail.com>  
177 -Rafael Manzo + Diego Araújo <rr.manzo@gmail.com>  
178 -Rafael Manzo + João M. M. Silva <rr.manzo@gmail.com>  
179 -Rafael Manzo + Paulo Meirelles <rr.manzo@gmail.com>  
180 -Rafael Martins <rmmartins@gmail.com>  
181 -Rafael Reggiani Manzo + Caio Salgado + Jefferson Fernandes <rr.manzo@gmail.com>  
182 -Rafael Reggiani Manzo + Diego Araujo <diegoamc90@gmail.com>  
183 -Rafael Reggiani Manzo + Diego Araujo <rr.manzo@gmail.com>  
184 -Rafael Reggiani Manzo + Diego Araújo <rr.manzo@gmail.com>  
185 -Rafael Reggiani Manzo + João M. M. da Silva <rr.manzo@gmail.com>  
186 -Rafael Reggiani Manzo <rr.manzo@gmail.com>  
187 -Raphaël Rousseau <raph@r4f.org>  
188 -Raquel Lira <raquel.lira@gmail.com>  
189 -Renan Teruo + Caio Salgado <renanteruoc@gmail.com>  
190 -Renan Teruoc + Diego Araujo <renanteruoc@gmail.com>  
191 -Renan Teruo + Diego Araujo <renanteruoc@gmail.com>  
192 -Renan Teruo + Diego Araújo <renanteruoc@gmail.com>  
193 -Renan Teruo + Paulo Meirelles <renanteruoc@gmail.com>  
194 -Renan Teruo + Rafael Manzo <renanteruoc@gmail.com>  
195 -Rodrigo Souto <diguliu@gmail.com>  
196 -Rodrigo Souto <rodrigo@colivre.coop.br>  
197 -Ronny Kursawe <kursawe.ronny@googlemail.com>  
198 -root <root@debian.sdr.serpro>  
199 -Samuel R. C. Vale <srcvale@holoscopio.com>  
200 -Valessio Brito <valessio@gmail.com>  
201 -vfcosta <vfcosta@gmail.com>  
202 -Victor Costa <vfcosta@gmail.com>  
203 -Vinicius Cubas Brand <viniciuscb@gmail.com>  
204 -Visita <visita@debian.(none)>  
205 -Yann Lugrin <yann.lugrin@liquid-concept.ch>  
206 -  
207 -Ideas, specifications and incentive  
208 -===================================  
209 -Daniel Tygel <dtygel@fbes.org.br>  
210 -Guilherme Rocha <guilherme@gf7.com.br>  
211 -Raphael Rousseau <raph@r4f.org>  
212 -Théo Bondolfi <move@cooperation.net>  
213 -Vicente Aguiar <vicenteaguiar@colivre.coop.br>  
214 -  
215 -Arts  
216 -===================================  
217 -Nara Oliveira <narananet@gmail.com>  
AUTHORS.md 0 → 100644
@@ -0,0 +1,217 @@ @@ -0,0 +1,217 @@
  1 +If you are not listed here, but should be, please write to the noosfero mailing
  2 +list: http://listas.softwarelivre.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/noosfero-dev
  3 +(this list requires subscription to post, but since you are an author of
  4 +noosfero, that's not a problem).
  5 +
  6 +Developers
  7 +==========
  8 +
  9 +Alan Freihof Tygel <alantygel@gmail.com>
  10 +Alessandro Palmeira <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>
  11 +Alessandro Palmeira + Caio C. Salgado <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>
  12 +Alessandro Palmeira + Caio Salgado <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>
  13 +Alessandro Palmeira + Caio Salgado <caio.csalgado@gmail.com>
  14 +Alessandro Palmeira + Caio Salgado + Diego Araújo + João M. M. da Silva <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  15 +Alessandro Palmeira + Carlos Morais <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>
  16 +Alessandro Palmeira + Daniel Alves <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>
  17 +Alessandro Palmeira + Daniel Alves + Diego Araújo <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  18 +Alessandro Palmeira + Daniel Alves + Diego Araújo + Guilherme Rojas <danpaulalves@gmail.com>
  19 +Alessandro Palmeira + Diego Araujo <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>
  20 +Alessandro Palmeira + Diego Araújo <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>
  21 +Alessandro Palmeira + Diego Araujo + Daniela Feitosa <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>
  22 +Alessandro Palmeira + Diego Araujo <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  23 +Alessandro Palmeira + Diego Araújo <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  24 +Alessandro Palmeira + Diego Araujo + Eduardo Morais <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>
  25 +Alessandro Palmeira + Diego Araújo + João M. M. da Silva <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>
  26 +Alessandro Palmeira + Diego Araújo + João M. M. da Silva <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  27 +Alessandro Palmeira + Diego Araujo + João M. M. da Silva + Paulo Meirelles <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>
  28 +Alessandro Palmeira + Diego Araújo + Pedro Leal <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  29 +Alessandro Palmeira + Diego Araújo + Pedro Leal + João M. M. da Silva <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  30 +Alessandro Palmeira + Diego Araujo + Rafael Manzo <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>
  31 +Alessandro Palmeira + Eduardo Morais <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>
  32 +Alessandro Palmeira + Guilherme Rojas <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>
  33 +Alessandro Palmeira + Jefferson Fernandes <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>
  34 +Alessandro Palmeira + João M. M. da Silva <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>
  35 +Alessandro Palmeira + Joao M. M. da Silva + Diego Araujo <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>
  36 +Alessandro Palmeira + João M. M. da Silva + Renan Teruo <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>
  37 +Alessandro Palmeira + João M. M. Silva <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>
  38 +Alessandro Palmeira + Paulo Meirelles <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>
  39 +Alessandro Palmeira + Paulo Meirelles + João M. M. da Silva <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>
  40 +Alessandro Palmeira + Rafael Manzo <alessandro.palmeira@gmail.com>
  41 +Antonio Terceiro + Carlos Morais <terceiro@colivre.coop.br>
  42 +Antonio Terceiro + Paulo Meirelles <terceiro@colivre.coop.br>
  43 +Antonio Terceiro <terceiro@colivre.coop.br>
  44 +Aurelio A. Heckert <aurelio@colivre.coop.br>
  45 +Braulio Bhavamitra <brauliobo@gmail.com>
  46 +Bráulio Bhavamitra <brauliobo@gmail.com>
  47 +Braulio Bhavamitra <braulio@eita.org.br>
  48 +Caio <caio.csalgado@gmail.com>
  49 +Caio + Diego + Pedro + João <caio.csalgado@gmail.com>
  50 +Caio Formiga <caio.formiga@gmail.com>
  51 +Caio, Pedro <caio.csalgado@gmail.com>
  52 +Caio Salgado + Alessandro Palmeira <caio.csalgado@gmail.com>
  53 +Caio Salgado <caio.csalgado@gmail.com>
  54 +Caio Salgado + Carlos Morais + Diego Araújo + Pedro Leal <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  55 +Caio Salgado + Diego Araujo <caio.csalgado@gmail.com>
  56 +Caio Salgado + Diego Araújo <caio.csalgado@gmail.com>
  57 +Caio Salgado + Diego Araújo <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  58 +Caio Salgado + Diego Araújo + Jefferson Fernandes <caio.csalgado@gmail.com>
  59 +Caio Salgado + Diego Araújo + João M. M. da Silva <caio.csalgado@gmail.com>
  60 +Caio Salgado + Diego Araújo + Pedro Leal <caio.csalgado@gmail.com>
  61 +Caio Salgado + Diego Araújo + Pedro Leal <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  62 +Caio Salgado + Diego Araújo + Rafael Manzo <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  63 +Caio Salgado + Jefferson Fernandes <caio.csalgado@gmail.com>
  64 +Caio Salgado + Jefferson Fernandes <jeffs.fernandes@gmail.com>
  65 +Caio Salgado + Rafael Manzo <caio.csalgado@gmail.com>
  66 +Caio Salgado + Renan Teruo <caio.csalgado@gmail.com>
  67 +Caio Salgado + Renan Teruo <caio.salgado@gmail.com>
  68 +Caio Salgado + Renan Teruo + Jefferson Fernandes <jeffs.fernandes@gmail.com>
  69 +Caio Salgado + Renan Teruo <renanteruoc@gmail.com>
  70 +Caio SBA <caio@colivre.coop.br>
  71 +Carlos Morais <carlos88morais@gmail.com>
  72 +Carlos Morais + Diego Araújo <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  73 +Carlos Morais + Eduardo Morais <carlos88morais@gmail.com>
  74 +Carlos Morais + Paulo Meirelles <carlos88morais@gmail.com>
  75 +Carlos Morais + Pedro Leal <carlos88morais@gmail.com>
  76 +Daniel Alves + Diego Araújo <danpaulalves@gmail.com>
  77 +Daniel Alves + Diego Araújo <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  78 +Daniel Alves + Diego Araújo + Guilherme Rojas <danpaulalves@gmail.com>
  79 +Daniel Alves + Diego Araújo + Guilherme Rojas <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  80 +Daniel Alves + Diego Araújo + Guilherme Rojas <guilhermehrojas@gmail.com>
  81 +Daniel Alves + Guilherme Rojas <danpaulalves@gmail.com>
  82 +Daniel Alves + Rafael Manzo <rr.manzo@gmail.com>
  83 +Daniela Soares Feitosa <danielafeitosa@colivre.coop.br>
  84 +Daniel Cunha <daniel@colivre.coop.br>
  85 +diegoamc <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  86 +Diego Araújo + Alessandro Palmeira <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  87 +Diego Araújo + Alessandro Palmeira + João M. M. da Silva <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  88 +Diego Araújo + Alessandro Palmeira + Rafael Manzo <rr.manzo@gmail.com>
  89 +Diego Araujo + Caio Salgado <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  90 +Diego Araújo + Daniel Alves + Rafael Manzo <rr.manzo@gmail.com>
  91 +Diego Araújo <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  92 +Diego Araújo + Eduardo Morais + Paulo Meirelles <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  93 +Diego Araújo + Guilherme Rojas <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  94 +Diego Araújo + Jefferson Fernandes <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  95 +Diego Araujo + Jefferson Fernandes <jeffs.fernandes@gmail.com>
  96 +Diego Araújo + João Machini <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  97 +Diego Araújo + João Machini <digoamc90@gmail.com>
  98 +Diego Araújo + João M. M. da Silva + Alessandro Palmeira <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>
  99 +Diego Araújo + João M. M. da Silva <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  100 +Diego Araújo + João M. M. da Silva + João Machini <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  101 +Diego Araújo + João M. M. da Silva + Pedro Leal <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  102 +Diego Araújo + Paulo Meirelles <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  103 +Diego Araújo + Pedro Leal <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  104 +Diego Araujo + Rafael Manzo <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  105 +Diego Araújo + Rafael Manzo <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  106 +Diego Araújo + Renan Teruo + Alessandro Palmeira <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  107 +Diego Araújo + Renan Teruo <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  108 +Diego Araujo + Rodrigo Souto + Rafael Manzo <rr.manzo@gmail.com>
  109 +Diego + Jefferson <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  110 +Diego Martinez <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  111 +Diego Martinez <diego@diego-K55A.(none)>
  112 +Diego + Renan <renanteruoc@gmail.com>
  113 +Fernanda Lopes <nanda.listas+psl@gmail.com>
  114 +Francisco Marcelo A. Lima Júnior <francisco.lima-junior@serpro.gov.br>
  115 +Francisco Marcelo de Araujo Lima Junior <79350259591@serpro-1457614.(none)>
  116 +Grazieno Pellegrino <grazieno@gmail.com>
  117 +Isaac Canan <isaac@intelletto.com.br>
  118 +Italo Valcy <italo@dcc.ufba.br>
  119 +Jefferson Fernandes + Diego Araujo + Rafael Manzo <jeffs.fernandes@gmail.com>
  120 +Jefferson Fernandes + Joao M. M. da Silva <jeffs.fernandes@gmail.com>
  121 +Jefferson Fernandes + Joao M. M. Silva <jeffs.fernandes@gmail.com>
  122 +João da Silva <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>
  123 +João Marco Maciel da Silva + Rafael Manzo + Renan Teruo <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>
  124 +João M. M. da Silva + Alessandro Palmeira + Diego Araújo + Caio Salgado <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>
  125 +João M. M. da Silva + Alessandro Palmeira + Diego Araújo <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>
  126 +Joao M. M. da Silva + Alessandro Palmeira <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>
  127 +João M. M. da Silva + Alessandro Palmeira <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>
  128 +João M. M. da Silva + Alessandro Palmeira + João Machini <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>
  129 +João M. M. da Silva + Caio Salgado + Alessandro Palmeira <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>
  130 +João M. M. da Silva + Caio Salgado <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>
  131 +João M. M. da Silva + Carlos Morais <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>
  132 +João M. M. da Silva + Diego Araújo <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  133 +João M. M. da Silva + Diego Araújo <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>
  134 +João M. M. da Silva + Diego Araújo + Pedro Leal <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>
  135 +João M. M. da Silva <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>
  136 +Joao M. M. da Silva + Jefferson Fernandes <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>
  137 +João M. M. da Silva + Jefferson Fernandes <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>
  138 +João M. M. da Silva + João M. Miranda <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>
  139 +João M. M. da Silva + Paulo Meirelles <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>
  140 +João M. M. da Silva + Pedro Leal <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>
  141 +João M. M. da Silva + Rafael Manzo + Diego Araújo <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>
  142 +João M. M. da Silva + Rafael Manzo <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>
  143 +João M. M. da Silva + Renan Teruo <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>
  144 +João M. M. Silva + Caio Salgado <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>
  145 +João M. M. Silva + Diego Araújo <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>
  146 +Joao M. M. Silva + Jefferson Fernandes <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>
  147 +João M. M. Silva + Paulo Meirelles <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>
  148 +João M. M. Silva + Rafael Manzo <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>
  149 +João M. M. Silva + Renan Teruo <jaodsilv@linux.ime.usp.br>
  150 +Joenio Costa <joenio@colivre.coop.br>
  151 +Josef Spillner <josef.spillner@tu-dresden.de>
  152 +Junior Silva <juniorsilva1001@gmail.com>
  153 +Junior Silva <juniorsilva7@juniorsilva-Aspire-5750Z.(none)>
  154 +Keilla Menezes <keilla@colivre.coop.br>
  155 +Larissa Reis <larissa@colivre.coop.br>
  156 +Larissa Reis <reiss.larissa@gmail.com>
  157 +Leandro Nunes dos Santos <leandronunes@gmail.com>
  158 +Leandro Nunes dos Santos <leandro.santos@serpro.gov.br>
  159 +LinguÁgil 2010 <linguagil.bahia@gmail.com>
  160 +Lucas Melo <lucas@colivre.coop.br>
  161 +Lucas Melo <lucaspradomelo@gmail.com>
  162 +Luis David Aguilar Carlos <ludwig9003@gmail.com>
  163 +Martín Olivera <molivera@solar.org.ar>
  164 +Moises Machado <moises@colivre.coop.br>
  165 +Naíla Alves <naila@colivre.coop.br>
  166 +Nanda Lopes <nanda.listas+psl@gmail.com>
  167 +Paulo Meirelles + Alessandro Palmeira + João M. M. da Silva <paulo@softwarelivre.org>
  168 +Paulo Meirelles + Alessandro Palmeira <paulo@softwarelivre.org>
  169 +Paulo Meirelles + Carlos Morais <paulo@softwarelivre.org>
  170 +Paulo Meirelles + Diego Araújo <paulo@softwarelivre.org>
  171 +Paulo Meirelles + João M. M. da Silva <paulo@softwarelivre.org>
  172 +Paulo Meirelles <paulo@softwarelivre.org>
  173 +Paulo Meirelles + Rafael Manzo <paulo@softwarelivre.org>
  174 +Rafael Gomes <rafaelgomes@techfree.com.br>
  175 +Rafael Manzo + Alessandro Palmeira <rr.manzo@gmail.com>
  176 +Rafael Manzo + Daniel Alves <danpaulalves@gmail.com>
  177 +Rafael Manzo + Diego Araújo <rr.manzo@gmail.com>
  178 +Rafael Manzo + João M. M. Silva <rr.manzo@gmail.com>
  179 +Rafael Manzo + Paulo Meirelles <rr.manzo@gmail.com>
  180 +Rafael Martins <rmmartins@gmail.com>
  181 +Rafael Reggiani Manzo + Caio Salgado + Jefferson Fernandes <rr.manzo@gmail.com>
  182 +Rafael Reggiani Manzo + Diego Araujo <diegoamc90@gmail.com>
  183 +Rafael Reggiani Manzo + Diego Araujo <rr.manzo@gmail.com>
  184 +Rafael Reggiani Manzo + Diego Araújo <rr.manzo@gmail.com>
  185 +Rafael Reggiani Manzo + João M. M. da Silva <rr.manzo@gmail.com>
  186 +Rafael Reggiani Manzo <rr.manzo@gmail.com>
  187 +Raphaël Rousseau <raph@r4f.org>
  188 +Raquel Lira <raquel.lira@gmail.com>
  189 +Renan Teruo + Caio Salgado <renanteruoc@gmail.com>
  190 +Renan Teruoc + Diego Araujo <renanteruoc@gmail.com>
  191 +Renan Teruo + Diego Araujo <renanteruoc@gmail.com>
  192 +Renan Teruo + Diego Araújo <renanteruoc@gmail.com>
  193 +Renan Teruo + Paulo Meirelles <renanteruoc@gmail.com>
  194 +Renan Teruo + Rafael Manzo <renanteruoc@gmail.com>
  195 +Rodrigo Souto <diguliu@gmail.com>
  196 +Rodrigo Souto <rodrigo@colivre.coop.br>
  197 +Ronny Kursawe <kursawe.ronny@googlemail.com>
  198 +root <root@debian.sdr.serpro>
  199 +Samuel R. C. Vale <srcvale@holoscopio.com>
  200 +Valessio Brito <valessio@gmail.com>
  201 +vfcosta <vfcosta@gmail.com>
  202 +Victor Costa <vfcosta@gmail.com>
  203 +Vinicius Cubas Brand <viniciuscb@gmail.com>
  204 +Visita <visita@debian.(none)>
  205 +Yann Lugrin <yann.lugrin@liquid-concept.ch>
  206 +
  207 +Ideas, specifications and incentive
  208 +===================================
  209 +Daniel Tygel <dtygel@fbes.org.br>
  210 +Guilherme Rocha <guilherme@gf7.com.br>
  211 +Raphael Rousseau <raph@r4f.org>
  212 +Théo Bondolfi <move@cooperation.net>
  213 +Vicente Aguiar <vicenteaguiar@colivre.coop.br>
  214 +
  215 +Arts
  216 +===================================
  217 +Nara Oliveira <narananet@gmail.com>
@@ -1,63 +0,0 @@ @@ -1,63 +0,0 @@
1 -= Noosfero instructions for developers  
2 -  
3 -== A work about your the development platform  
4 -  
5 -These instructions are tested and known to work on Debian stable, which is the  
6 -system that the Noosfero core developers use to work on Noosfero.  
7 -  
8 -If you want to use another OS, read "Instructions for other systems" below.  
9 -  
10 -== Instructions for Debian stable  
11 -  
12 -Download the source code:  
13 -  
14 - $ git clone git://gitorious.org/noosfero/noosfero.git  
15 - $ cd noosfero  
16 -  
17 -Run the quick start script:  
18 -  
19 - $ ./script/quick-start  
20 -  
21 -Now you can execute the development server with:  
22 -  
23 - $ ./script/development  
24 -  
25 -You will be able to access Noosfero at http://localhost:3000/  
26 -  
27 -If you want to use a different port than 3000, pass `-p <PORT>` to  
28 -./script/development  
29 -  
30 -== Instructions for other systems  
31 -  
32 -On other OS, you have 2 options:  
33 -  
34 -1) using a chroot or a VM with Debian stable (easier)  
35 -  
36 -Use a chroot (http://wiki.debian.org/Schroot) or a Virtual Machine (e.g. with  
37 -VirtualBox) with a Debian stable system and follow the instructions above for  
38 -Debian stable.  
39 -  
40 -2) Installing dependencies on other OS (harder)  
41 -  
42 -If you want to setup a development environment in another OS, you can create a  
43 -file under script/install-dependencies/, called <OS>-<CODENAME>.sh, which  
44 -installed the dependencies for your system. With this script in place,  
45 -./script/quick-start will call it at the point of installing the required  
46 -packages for Noosfero development.  
47 -  
48 -You can check script/install-dependencies/debian-squeeze.sh to have an idea of  
49 -what kind of stuff that script has to do.  
50 -  
51 -If you write such script for your own OS, *please* share it with us at the  
52 -development mailing list so that we can include it in the official repository.  
53 -This way other people using the same OS will have to put less effort to develop  
54 -Noosfero.  
55 -  
56 -== Submitting your changes back  
57 -  
58 -For now please read:  
59 -  
60 -- Coding conventions  
61 - http://noosfero.org/Development/CodingConventions  
62 -- Patch guidelines  
63 - http://noosfero.org/Development/PatchGuidelines  
HACKING.md 0 → 100644
@@ -0,0 +1,63 @@ @@ -0,0 +1,63 @@
  1 += Noosfero instructions for developers
  2 +
  3 +== A work about your the development platform
  4 +
  5 +These instructions are tested and known to work on Debian stable, which is the
  6 +system that the Noosfero core developers use to work on Noosfero.
  7 +
  8 +If you want to use another OS, read "Instructions for other systems" below.
  9 +
  10 +== Instructions for Debian stable
  11 +
  12 +Download the source code:
  13 +
  14 + $ git clone git://gitorious.org/noosfero/noosfero.git
  15 + $ cd noosfero
  16 +
  17 +Run the quick start script:
  18 +
  19 + $ ./script/quick-start
  20 +
  21 +Now you can execute the development server with:
  22 +
  23 + $ ./script/development
  24 +
  25 +You will be able to access Noosfero at http://localhost:3000/
  26 +
  27 +If you want to use a different port than 3000, pass `-p <PORT>` to
  28 +./script/development
  29 +
  30 +== Instructions for other systems
  31 +
  32 +On other OS, you have 2 options:
  33 +
  34 +1) using a chroot or a VM with Debian stable (easier)
  35 +
  36 +Use a chroot (http://wiki.debian.org/Schroot) or a Virtual Machine (e.g. with
  37 +VirtualBox) with a Debian stable system and follow the instructions above for
  38 +Debian stable.
  39 +
  40 +2) Installing dependencies on other OS (harder)
  41 +
  42 +If you want to setup a development environment in another OS, you can create a
  43 +file under script/install-dependencies/, called <OS>-<CODENAME>.sh, which
  44 +installed the dependencies for your system. With this script in place,
  45 +./script/quick-start will call it at the point of installing the required
  46 +packages for Noosfero development.
  47 +
  48 +You can check script/install-dependencies/debian-squeeze.sh to have an idea of
  49 +what kind of stuff that script has to do.
  50 +
  51 +If you write such script for your own OS, *please* share it with us at the
  52 +development mailing list so that we can include it in the official repository.
  53 +This way other people using the same OS will have to put less effort to develop
  54 +Noosfero.
  55 +
  56 +== Submitting your changes back
  57 +
  58 +For now please read:
  59 +
  60 +- Coding conventions
  61 + http://noosfero.org/Development/CodingConventions
  62 +- Patch guidelines
  63 + http://noosfero.org/Development/PatchGuidelines
@@ -1,417 +0,0 @@ @@ -1,417 +0,0 @@
1 -= Noosfero installation instructions from source for production environments  
2 -  
3 -The instructions below can be used for setting up a Noosfero production  
4 -environment from the Noosfero sources.  
5 -  
6 -Before you start installing Noosfero manually, see the information about the  
7 -Noosfero Debian package at http://noosfero.org/Development/DebianPackage. Using  
8 -the Debian packages on a Debian stable system is the recommended method for  
9 -installing production environments.  
10 -  
11 -If you want to setup a development environment instead of a production one,  
12 -stop reading this file right now and read the file HACKING instead.  
13 -  
14 -For a complete installation guide, please see the following web page:  
15 -http://noosfero.org/Development/HowToInstall  
16 -  
17 -If you have problems with the setup, please feel free to ask questions in the  
18 -development mailing list.  
19 -  
20 -== Requirements  
21 -  
22 -DISCLAIMER: this installation procedure is tested with Debian stable, which is  
23 -currently the only recommended operating system for production usage. It is  
24 -possible that you can install it on other systems, and if you do so, please  
25 -report it on one of the Noosfero mailing lists, and please send a patch  
26 -updating these instructions.  
27 -  
28 -Noosfero is written in Ruby with the "Rails  
29 -framework":http://www.rubyonrails.org, so the process of setting it up is  
30 -pretty similar to other Rails applications.  
31 -  
32 -You need to install some packages Noosfero depends on. On Debian GNU/Linux or  
33 -Debian-based systems, all of these packages are available through the Debian  
34 -archive. You can install them with the following command:  
35 -  
36 - # apt-get install ruby rake po4a libgettext-ruby-util libgettext-ruby1.8 libsqlite3-ruby rcov librmagick-ruby libredcloth-ruby libwill-paginate-ruby iso-codes libfeedparser-ruby libdaemons-ruby thin tango-icon-theme libhpricot-ruby  
37 -  
38 -On other systems, they may or may not be available through your regular package  
39 -management system. Below are the links to their homepages.  
40 -  
41 -* Ruby: http://www.ruby-lang.org/  
42 -* Rake: http://rake.rubyforge.org/  
43 -* po4a: http://po4a.alioth.debian.org/  
44 -* Ruby-sqlite3: http://rubyforge.org/projects/sqlite-ruby  
45 -* rcov: http://eigenclass.org/hiki/rcov  
46 -* RMagick: http://rmagick.rubyforge.org/  
47 -* RedCloth: http://redcloth.org/  
48 -* will_paginate: http://github.com/mislav/will_paginate/wikis  
49 -* iso-codes: http://pkg-isocodes.alioth.debian.org/  
50 -* feedparser: http://packages.debian.org/sid/libfeedparser-ruby  
51 -* Daemons - http://daemons.rubyforge.org/  
52 -* Thin: http://code.macournoyer.com/thin/  
53 -* tango-icon-theme: http://tango.freedesktop.org/Tango_Icon_Library  
54 -* Hpricot: http://hpricot.com/  
55 -  
56 -If you manage to install Noosfero successfully on other systems than Debian,  
57 -please feel free to contact the Noosfero development mailing with the  
58 -instructions for doing so, and we'll include it here.  
59 -  
60 -As root user  
61 -============  
62 -  
63 -Install memcached. On Debian:  
64 -  
65 -# apt-get install memcached  
66 -  
67 -Study whether you need to raise the ammount of memory it uses for caching,  
68 -depending on the demand you expect for your site. If you are going to run a  
69 -high-traffic site, you will want to raise the ammount of memory reserved for  
70 -caching.  
71 -  
72 -It is recommended that you run noosfero with its own user account. To create  
73 -such an account, please do the following:  
74 -  
75 -# adduser --system --group noosfero --shell /bin/sh --home /var/lib/noosfero  
76 -  
77 -(note that you can change the $HOME directory of the user if you wish, here we  
78 -are using /var/lib/noosfero)  
79 -  
80 -The --system option will tell adduser to create a system user, i.e. this user  
81 -will not have a password and cannot login to the system directly. To become  
82 -this user, you have to use sudo:  
83 -  
84 -# sudo -u noosfero -i  
85 -  
86 -or  
87 -  
88 -# su - noosfero  
89 -  
90 -As noosfero user  
91 -================  
92 -  
93 -downloading from git  
94 ---------------------  
95 -  
96 -Here we are cloning the noosfero repository from git. Note: you will need to  
97 -install git before.  
98 -  
99 -$ git clone git://gitorious.org/noosfero/noosfero.git current  
100 -$ cd current  
101 -$ git checkout -b stable origin/stable  
102 -  
103 -downloading tarball  
104 --------------------  
105 -  
106 -Note: replace 0.39.0 below from the latest stable version.  
107 -  
108 -$ wget http://noosfero.org/pub/Development/NoosferoVersion00x39x00/noosfero-0.39.0.tar.gz  
109 -$ tar -zxvf noosfero-0.39.0.tar.gz  
110 -$ ln -s noosfero-0.39.0 current  
111 -$ cd current  
112 -  
113 -Create the thin configuration file:  
114 -  
115 -$ thin -C config/thin.yml -e production config  
116 -  
117 -Edit config/thin.yml to suit your needs. Make sure your apache  
118 -configuration matches the thin cluster configuration, specially in respect  
119 -to the ports and numbers of thin instances.  
120 -  
121 -Note: currently Noosfero only supports Rails 2.3.5, which is the version in  
122 -Debian Squeeze. If you have a Rails version newer than that, Noosfero will  
123 -probably not work. You can install Rails 2.3.5 into your Noosfero installation  
124 -with the following procedure:  
125 -  
126 -$ cd /var/lib/noosfero/current/vendor  
127 -$ wget http://ftp.de.debian.org/debian/pool/main/r/rails/rails_2.3.5.orig.tar.gz  
128 -$ tar xzf rails_2.3.5.orig.tar.gz  
129 -$ ln -s rails-2.3.5 rails  
130 -  
131 -As root user  
132 -============  
133 -  
134 -Setup Noosfero log and tmp directories:  
135 -  
136 -# cd /var/lib/noosfero/current  
137 -# ./etc/init.d/noosfero setup  
138 -  
139 -Now it's time to setup the database. In this example we are using PostgreSQL,  
140 -so if you are planning to use a different database this steps won't apply.  
141 -  
142 -# apt-get install postgresql libpgsql-ruby  
143 -# su postgres -c 'createuser noosfero -S -d -R'  
144 -  
145 -By default Rails will try to connect on postgresql through 5432 port,  
146 -you can check it on /etc/postgresql/8.4/main/postgresql.conf file.  
147 -  
148 -Restart postgresql:  
149 -  
150 -# invoke-rc.d postgresql restart  
151 -  
152 -Noosfero needs a functional e-mail setup to work: the local mail system should  
153 -be able to deliver e-mail to the internet, either directly or through an  
154 -external SMTP server. Please check the documentation at the INSTALL.email file.  
155 -  
156 -As noosfero user  
157 -================  
158 -  
159 -Now create the databases:  
160 -  
161 -$ cd /var/lib/noosfero/current  
162 -$ createdb noosfero_production  
163 -$ createdb noosfero_development  
164 -$ createdb noosfero_test  
165 -  
166 -The development and test databases are actually optional. If you are creating a  
167 -stricly production server, you will probably not need them.  
168 -  
169 -Now we want to configure Noosfero for accessing the database we just created.  
170 -To do that, you can 1) copy config/database.yml.pgsql to config/database.yml,  
171 -or create config/database.yml from scratch with the following content:  
172 -  
173 - production:  
174 - adapter: postgresql  
175 - encoding: unicode  
176 - database: noosfero_production  
177 - username: noosfero  
178 -  
179 -Now, to test the database access, you can fire the Rails database console:  
180 -  
181 -$ ./script/dbconsole production  
182 -  
183 -If it connects to your database, then everything is fine. If you got an error  
184 -message, then you have to check your database configuration.  
185 -  
186 -Create the database structure:  
187 -  
188 -$ RAILS_ENV=production rake db:schema:load  
189 -  
190 -Compile the translations:  
191 -  
192 -$ RAILS_ENV=production rake noosfero:translations:compile  
193 -  
194 -Now we must create some initial data. To create your default environment  
195 -(the first one), run the command below:  
196 -  
197 -$ RAILS_ENV=production ./script/runner 'Environment.create!(:name => "My environment", :is_default => true)'  
198 -  
199 -(of course, replace "My environment" with your environment's name!)  
200 -  
201 -And now you have to add the domain name you will be using for your noosfero  
202 -site to the list of domains of that default environment you just created:  
203 -  
204 -$ RAILS_ENV=production ./script/runner "Environment.default.domains << Domain.new(:name => 'your.domain.com')"  
205 -  
206 -(replace "your.domain.com" with your actual domain name)  
207 -  
208 -Add at least one user as admin of environment:  
209 -  
210 -$ RAILS_ENV=production ./script/runner "User.create(:login => 'adminuser', :email => 'admin@example.com', :password => 'admin', :password_confirmation => 'admin', :environment => Environment.default, :activated_at => Time.new)"  
211 -  
212 -(replace "adminuser", "admin@example.com", "admin" with the login, email  
213 -and password of your environment administrator)  
214 -  
215 -To start the Noosfero application servers:  
216 -  
217 -$ ./script/production start  
218 -  
219 -At this point you have a functional Noosfero installation running, the only  
220 -thing left is to configure your webserver as a reverse proxy to pass requests  
221 -to them.  
222 -  
223 -  
224 -==================  
225 -Apache instalation  
226 -==================  
227 -  
228 -# apt-get install apache2  
229 -  
230 -Apache configuration  
231 ---------------------  
232 -  
233 -First you have to enable the following some apache modules:  
234 -  
235 - deflate  
236 - expires  
237 - proxy  
238 - proxy_balancer  
239 - proxy_http  
240 - rewrite  
241 -  
242 -On Debian GNU/Linux system, these modules can be enabled with the following  
243 -command line, as root:  
244 -  
245 -# a2enmod deflate expires proxy proxy_balancer proxy_http rewrite  
246 -  
247 -In other systems the way by which you enable apache modules may be different.  
248 -  
249 -Now with the Apache configuration. You can use the template below, replacing  
250 -/var/lib/noosfero/current with the directory in which your noosfero  
251 -installation is, your.domain.com with the domain name of your noosfero site.  
252 -We are assuming that you are running two thin instances on ports 3000 and  
253 -3001. If your setup is different you'll need to adjust <Proxy> section. If you  
254 -don't understand something in the configuration, please refer to the apache  
255 -documentation.  
256 -  
257 -Add a file called "mysite" (or whatever name you want to give to your noosfero  
258 -site) to /etc/apache2/sites-available with the following content, and customize  
259 -as needed (as usual, make sure you replace "your.domain.com" with you actual  
260 -domain name, and "/var/lib/noosfero/current" with the directory where Noosfero  
261 -is installed):  
262 -  
263 - <VirtualHost *:80>  
264 - ServerName your.domain.com  
265 -  
266 - DocumentRoot "/var/lib/noosfero/current/public"  
267 - <Directory "/var/lib/noosfero/current/public">  
268 - Options FollowSymLinks  
269 - AllowOverride None  
270 - Order Allow,Deny  
271 - Allow from all  
272 - </Directory>  
273 -  
274 - RewriteEngine On  
275 -  
276 - # Rewrite index to check for static index.html  
277 - RewriteRule ^/$ /index.html [QSA]  
278 -  
279 - # Rewrite to check for Rails cached page  
280 - RewriteRule ^([^.]+)$ $1.html [QSA]  
281 -  
282 - RewriteCond %{DOCUMENT_ROOT}/%{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f  
283 - RewriteRule ^.*$ balancer://noosfero%{REQUEST_URI} [P,QSA,L]  
284 -  
285 - ErrorDocument 503 /503.html  
286 -  
287 - ErrorLog /var/log/apache2/noosfero.log  
288 - LogLevel warn  
289 - CustomLog /var/log/apache2/noosfero.access.log combined  
290 -  
291 - Include /var/lib/noosfero/current/etc/noosfero/apache/cache.conf  
292 -  
293 - </VirtualHost>  
294 -  
295 - <Proxy balancer://noosfero>  
296 - BalancerMember http://127.0.0.1:3000  
297 - BalancerMember http://127.0.0.1:3001  
298 - Order Allow,Deny  
299 - Allow from All  
300 - </Proxy>  
301 -  
302 -The cache.conf file included in the end of the <VirtualHost> section is  
303 -important, since it will tell apache to pass expiration and cache headers to  
304 -clients so that the site feels faster for users. Do we need to say that using  
305 -that configuration is strongly recommended?  
306 -  
307 -Enable that site with (as root, replace "mysite" with the actual name you gave  
308 -to your site configuration):  
309 -  
310 -# a2ensite mysite  
311 -  
312 -Now restart your apache server (as root):  
313 -  
314 -# invoke-rc.d apache2 restart  
315 -  
316 -  
317 -Enabling exception notifications  
318 -================================  
319 -  
320 -This is an optional step. You will need it only if you want to receive e-mail  
321 -notifications when some exception occurs on Noosfero.  
322 -  
323 -First, install this version of the gem.  
324 -Others versions may not be compatible with Noosfero:  
325 -  
326 -# gem install exception_notification -v 1.0.20090728  
327 -  
328 -You can configure the e-mails that will receive the notifications.  
329 -Change the file config/noosfero.yml as the following example, replacing the  
330 -e-mails by real ones:  
331 -  
332 - production:  
333 - exception_recipients: [admin@example.com, you@example.com]  
334 -  
335 -  
336 -============  
337 -Maintainance  
338 -============  
339 -  
340 -To ease the maintainance, install a symbolic link for the Noosfero startup  
341 -script in your server and add it to the system initialization and shutdown  
342 -sequences (as root):  
343 -  
344 -# ln -s /var/lib/noosfero/current/etc/init.d/noosfero /etc/init.d/noosfero  
345 -# update-rc.d noosfero defaults  
346 - Adding system startup for /etc/init.d/noosfero ...  
347 - /etc/rc0.d/K20noosfero -> ../init.d/noosfero  
348 - /etc/rc1.d/K20noosfero -> ../init.d/noosfero  
349 - /etc/rc6.d/K20noosfero -> ../init.d/noosfero  
350 - /etc/rc2.d/S20noosfero -> ../init.d/noosfero  
351 - /etc/rc3.d/S20noosfero -> ../init.d/noosfero  
352 - /etc/rc4.d/S20noosfero -> ../init.d/noosfero  
353 - /etc/rc5.d/S20noosfero -> ../init.d/noosfero  
354 -  
355 -Now to start Noosfero, you do as root:  
356 -  
357 -# invoke-rc.d noosfero start  
358 -  
359 -To stop Noosfero:  
360 -  
361 -# invoke-rc.d noosfero start  
362 -  
363 -To restart Noosfero:  
364 -  
365 -# invoke-rc.d noosfero restart  
366 -  
367 -Noosfero will be automatically started during system boot, and automatically  
368 -stopped if the system shuts down for some reason (or during the shutdown part  
369 -of a reboot).  
370 -  
371 -=============  
372 -Rotating logs  
373 -=============  
374 -  
375 -Noosfero provides an example logrotate configuation to rotate its logs. To use  
376 -it, create a symbolic link in /etc/logrotate.d/:  
377 -  
378 -# cd /etc/logrotate.d/  
379 -# ln -s /var/lib/noosfero/current/etc/logrotate.d/noosfero  
380 -  
381 -Note that the provided file assumes Noosfero logging is being done in  
382 -/var/log/noosfero (which is the case if you followed the instructions above  
383 -correctly). If the logs are stored elsewhere, it's recommended that you copy  
384 -the file over to /etc/logrotate.d/ and modify it to point to your local log  
385 -directly.  
386 -  
387 -=========  
388 -Upgrading  
389 -=========  
390 -  
391 -If you followed the steps in this document and installed Noosfero from the git  
392 -repository, then upgrading is easy. First, you need to allow the noosfero user  
393 -to restart the memcached server with sudo, by adding the following line in  
394 -/etc/sudoers:  
395 -  
396 -noosfero ALL=NOPASSWD: /etc/init.d/memcached  
397 -  
398 -Then, to perform an upgrade, do the following as the noosfero user:  
399 -  
400 -$ cd /var/lib/noosfero/current  
401 -$ ./script/git-upgrade  
402 -  
403 -The git-upgrade script will take care of everything for you. It will first stop  
404 -the service, then fetch the current source code, upgrade database, compile  
405 -translations, and then start the service again.  
406 -  
407 -Note 1: make sure your local git repository is following the "stable" branch,  
408 -just like the instructions above. The "master" branch is not recommended for  
409 -use in production environments.  
410 -  
411 -Note 2: always read the release notes before upgrading. Sometimes there will be  
412 -steps that must be performed manually. If that is the case, you can invoke the  
413 -git-upgrade script with the special parameter "--shell" that will give you a  
414 -shell after the upgrade, which you can use to perform any manual steps  
415 -required:  
416 -  
417 -$ ./script/git-upgrade --shell  
INSTALL.awstats
@@ -1,78 +0,0 @@ @@ -1,78 +0,0 @@
1 -= AWStats setup for Noosfero  
2 -  
3 -AWStats is a free powerful and featureful tool that generates advanced web,  
4 -streaming, ftp or mail server statistics, graphically.  
5 -  
6 -See http://awstats.sourceforge.net/  
7 -  
8 -This guide supposes that the Noosfero server is running GNU/Linux Debian Squeeze.  
9 -  
10 -1. Install AWStats  
11 -  
12 -# apt-get install awstats libgeo-ip-perl geoip-database  
13 -  
14 -2. Basic setup  
15 -  
16 -Create AWStats config file:  
17 -  
18 - * /etc/awstats/awstats.<domain>.conf  
19 -  
20 -Include "/etc/awstats/awstats.conf"  
21 -Include "/etc/noosfero/awstats-noosfero.conf"  
22 -SiteDomain="<domain>"  
23 -HostAliases="<domain-aliases>"  
24 -  
25 -<domain> should be the domain used in your Noosfero server (eg.:  
26 -softwarelivre.org) and the <domain-aliases> should be a list with all aliases  
27 -that you configured in apache (eg.: www.softwarelivre.org  
28 -www2.softwarelivre.org etc).  
29 -  
30 -This setup is considering that the Noosfero server is running varnish (see  
31 -INSTALL.varnish) and varnishncsa-vhost [1].  
32 -  
33 -[1] http://gitorious.org/varnisnncsa-vhost  
34 -  
35 -3. Running AWStats for the first time  
36 -  
37 -Run awstats by hand via command line:  
38 -  
39 -# /usr/lib/cgi-bin/awstats.pl -config=<domain>  
40 -  
41 -You should see something as below as output of this command:  
42 -  
43 -# /usr/lib/cgi-bin/awstats.pl -config=softwarelivre.org  
44 -Create/Update database for config "/etc/awstats/awstats.softwarelivre.org.conf" by AWStats version 6.7 (build 1.892)  
45 -From data in log file "/var/log/varnish/varnishncsa-vhost.log"...  
46 -Phase 1 : First bypass old records, searching new record...  
47 -Searching new records from beginning of log file...  
48 -Phase 2 : Now process new records (Flush history on disk after 20000 hosts)...  
49 -Jumped lines in file: 0  
50 -Parsed lines in file: 452  
51 - Found 0 dropped records,  
52 - Found 0 corrupted records,  
53 - Found 0 old records,  
54 - Found 452 new qualified records.  
55 -  
56 -4. Setup frontend  
57 -  
58 -You should create a new subdomain to have access to the AWStats, usually  
59 -something like tools.<domain> (eg.: tools.softwarelivre.org). Don't include  
60 -this subdomain in HostAliases in the AWStats neither in SiteAlias in the  
61 -Apache.  
62 -  
63 -# cp /usr/share/doc/awstats/examples/apache.conf /etc/apache2/conf.d/awstats.conf  
64 -# invoke-rc.d apache2 restart  
65 -  
66 -ps.: Don't forget to change the port /etc/apache/sites-enabled/000-default to  
67 -8080.  
68 -  
69 -Try: http://tools.<domain>/cgi-bin/awstats.pl?config=<domain>  
70 -(eg.: http://tools.softwarelivre.org/cgi-bin/awstats.pl?config=softwarelivre.org).  
71 -  
72 -5. Schedule AWStats in crontab  
73 -  
74 - * /etc/cron.d/awstats  
75 -  
76 -0,10,20,30,40,50 * * * * www-data [ -x /usr/lib/cgi-bin/awstats.pl -a -f /etc/awstats/awstats.<domain>.conf -a -r /var/log/apache/access.log ] && /usr/lib/cgi-bin/awstats.pl -config=<domain> -update >/dev/null  
77 -  
78 -Done, check the AWStats frontend after one or two days to see if everything is working properly.  
INSTALL.awstats.md 0 → 100644
@@ -0,0 +1,78 @@ @@ -0,0 +1,78 @@
  1 += AWStats setup for Noosfero
  2 +
  3 +AWStats is a free powerful and featureful tool that generates advanced web,
  4 +streaming, ftp or mail server statistics, graphically.
  5 +
  6 +See http://awstats.sourceforge.net/
  7 +
  8 +This guide supposes that the Noosfero server is running GNU/Linux Debian Squeeze.
  9 +
  10 +1. Install AWStats
  11 +
  12 +# apt-get install awstats libgeo-ip-perl geoip-database
  13 +
  14 +2. Basic setup
  15 +
  16 +Create AWStats config file:
  17 +
  18 + * /etc/awstats/awstats.<domain>.conf
  19 +
  20 +Include "/etc/awstats/awstats.conf"
  21 +Include "/etc/noosfero/awstats-noosfero.conf"
  22 +SiteDomain="<domain>"
  23 +HostAliases="<domain-aliases>"
  24 +
  25 +<domain> should be the domain used in your Noosfero server (eg.:
  26 +softwarelivre.org) and the <domain-aliases> should be a list with all aliases
  27 +that you configured in apache (eg.: www.softwarelivre.org
  28 +www2.softwarelivre.org etc).
  29 +
  30 +This setup is considering that the Noosfero server is running varnish (see
  31 +INSTALL.varnish) and varnishncsa-vhost [1].
  32 +
  33 +[1] http://gitorious.org/varnisnncsa-vhost
  34 +
  35 +3. Running AWStats for the first time
  36 +
  37 +Run awstats by hand via command line:
  38 +
  39 +# /usr/lib/cgi-bin/awstats.pl -config=<domain>
  40 +
  41 +You should see something as below as output of this command:
  42 +
  43 +# /usr/lib/cgi-bin/awstats.pl -config=softwarelivre.org
  44 +Create/Update database for config "/etc/awstats/awstats.softwarelivre.org.conf" by AWStats version 6.7 (build 1.892)
  45 +From data in log file "/var/log/varnish/varnishncsa-vhost.log"...
  46 +Phase 1 : First bypass old records, searching new record...
  47 +Searching new records from beginning of log file...
  48 +Phase 2 : Now process new records (Flush history on disk after 20000 hosts)...
  49 +Jumped lines in file: 0
  50 +Parsed lines in file: 452
  51 + Found 0 dropped records,
  52 + Found 0 corrupted records,
  53 + Found 0 old records,
  54 + Found 452 new qualified records.
  55 +
  56 +4. Setup frontend
  57 +
  58 +You should create a new subdomain to have access to the AWStats, usually
  59 +something like tools.<domain> (eg.: tools.softwarelivre.org). Don't include
  60 +this subdomain in HostAliases in the AWStats neither in SiteAlias in the
  61 +Apache.
  62 +
  63 +# cp /usr/share/doc/awstats/examples/apache.conf /etc/apache2/conf.d/awstats.conf
  64 +# invoke-rc.d apache2 restart
  65 +
  66 +ps.: Don't forget to change the port /etc/apache/sites-enabled/000-default to
  67 +8080.
  68 +
  69 +Try: http://tools.<domain>/cgi-bin/awstats.pl?config=<domain>
  70 +(eg.: http://tools.softwarelivre.org/cgi-bin/awstats.pl?config=softwarelivre.org).
  71 +
  72 +5. Schedule AWStats in crontab
  73 +
  74 + * /etc/cron.d/awstats
  75 +
  76 +0,10,20,30,40,50 * * * * www-data [ -x /usr/lib/cgi-bin/awstats.pl -a -f /etc/awstats/awstats.<domain>.conf -a -r /var/log/apache/access.log ] && /usr/lib/cgi-bin/awstats.pl -config=<domain> -update >/dev/null
  77 +
  78 +Done, check the AWStats frontend after one or two days to see if everything is working properly.
INSTALL.chat
@@ -1,258 +0,0 @@ @@ -1,258 +0,0 @@
1 -== XMPP/Chat Client Setup  
2 -  
3 -To configure XMPP/BOSH in Noosfero you need:  
4 -  
5 -* REST Client - http://github.com/archiloque/rest-client  
6 -* SystemTimer - http://ph7spot.com/musings/system-timer  
7 -* Pidgin data files - http://www.pidgin.im/  
8 -  
9 -If you use Debian 6.0 (squeeze):  
10 -  
11 -# apt-get install librestclient-ruby pidgin-data ruby1.8-dev  
12 -# gem install SystemTimer  
13 -  
14 -The samples of config file to configure a XMPP/BOSH server with  
15 -ejabberd, postgresql and apache2 can be found at util/chat directory.  
16 -  
17 -== XMPP/Chat Server Setup  
18 -  
19 -This is a step-by-step guide to get a XMPP service working, in a Debian system.  
20 -  
21 -1. Install the required packages  
22 -  
23 -# apt-get install ejabberd odbc-postgresql  
24 -  
25 -2. Ejabberd configuration  
26 -  
27 -All the following changes must be done in config file:  
28 -  
29 - /etc/ejabberd/ejabberd.cfg  
30 -  
31 - 2.1. Set the default admin user  
32 -  
33 -{ acl, admin, { user, "john", "www.example.com" } }.  
34 -{ acl, admin, { user, "bart", "www.example.com" } }.  
35 -  
36 - 2.2. Set the default host  
37 -  
38 -{ hosts, [ "www.example.com" ] }.  
39 -  
40 - 2.3. Http-Bind activation  
41 -  
42 -{ 5280, ejabberd_http, [  
43 - http_bind,  
44 - web_admin  
45 - ]  
46 -}  
47 -  
48 -(...)  
49 -  
50 -{ modules, [  
51 - {mod_http_bind, []},  
52 - ...  
53 -] }.  
54 -  
55 -Ejabberd creates semi-anonymous rooms by default, but Noosfero's Jabber client  
56 -needs non-anonymous room, then we need to change default params of creation  
57 -rooms in ejabberd to create non-anonymous rooms.  
58 -  
59 -In non-anonymous rooms the jabber service sends the new occupant's full JID to  
60 -all occupants in the room[1].  
61 -  
62 -Add option "{default_room_options, [{anonymous, false}]}" to  
63 -/etc/ejabberd/ejabberd.cfg in mod_muc session. See below:  
64 -  
65 -{ mod_muc, [  
66 - %%{host, "conference.@HOST@"},  
67 - {access, muc},  
68 - {access_create, muc},  
69 - {access_persistent, muc},  
70 - {access_admin, muc_admin},  
71 - {max_users, 500},  
72 - {default_room_options, [{anonymous, false}]}  
73 -]},  
74 -  
75 -[1] - http://xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0045.html#enter-nonanon  
76 -  
77 -  
78 - 2.4. Authentication method  
79 -  
80 -To use Postgresql through ODBC, the following modifications must be done:  
81 -  
82 - * Disable the default method:  
83 -  
84 -{auth_method, internal}.  
85 -  
86 - * Enable autheticantion through ODBC:  
87 -  
88 -{auth_method, odbc}.  
89 -  
90 - * Set database server name  
91 -  
92 -{odbc_server, "DSN=PostgreSQLEjabberdNoosfero"}.  
93 -  
94 -  
95 - 2.5. Increase the shaper traffic limit  
96 -  
97 -{ shaper, normal, { maxrate, 10000000 } }.  
98 -  
99 -  
100 - 2.6. Disable unused modules  
101 -  
102 -Unused modules can be disabled, for example:  
103 -  
104 - * s2s  
105 - * web_admin  
106 - * mod_pubsub  
107 - * mod_irc  
108 - * mod_offline  
109 - * mod_admin_extra  
110 - * mod_register  
111 -  
112 -  
113 - 2.7. Enable ODBC modules  
114 -  
115 - * mod_privacy -> mod_privacy_odbc  
116 - * mod_private -> mod_private_odbc  
117 - * mod_roster -> mod_roster_odbc  
118 -  
119 -3. Configuring Postgresql  
120 -  
121 -Login as noosfero user, and execute:  
122 -  
123 - $ psql noosfero < /path/to/noosfero/util/chat/postgresql/ejabberd.sql  
124 -  
125 -Where 'noosfero' may need to be replace by the name of the database used for  
126 -Noosfero.  
127 -  
128 -This will create a new schema inside the noosfero database, called 'ejabberd'.  
129 -  
130 -Note 'noosfero' user should have permission to create Postgresql schemas. Also,  
131 -there should be at least one domain with 'is_default = true' in 'domains'  
132 -table, otherwise people won't be able to see their friends online.  
133 -  
134 -  
135 -4. ODBC configuration  
136 -  
137 -The following files must be created:  
138 -  
139 - * /etc/odbc.ini  
140 -  
141 -[PostgreSQLEjabberdNoosfero]  
142 -Description = PostgreSQL Noosfero ejabberd database  
143 -Driver = PostgreSQL Unicode  
144 -Trace = No  
145 -TraceFile = /tmp/psqlodbc.log  
146 -Database = noosfero  
147 -Servername = localhost  
148 -UserName = <DBUSER>  
149 -Password = <DBPASS>  
150 -Port =  
151 -ReadOnly = No  
152 -RowVersioning = No  
153 -ShowSystemTables = No  
154 -ShowOidColumn = No  
155 -FakeOidIndex = No  
156 -ConnSettings = SET search_path TO ejabberd  
157 -  
158 - * /etc/odbcinst.ini  
159 -  
160 -[PostgreSQL Unicode]  
161 -Description = PostgreSQL ODBC driver (Unicode version)  
162 -Driver = /usr/lib/odbc/psqlodbcw.so  
163 -Setup = /usr/lib/odbc/libodbcpsqlS.so  
164 -Debug = 0  
165 -CommLog = 1  
166 -UsageCount = 3  
167 -  
168 - 4.1 testing all:  
169 -  
170 -# isql 'PostgreSQLEjabberdNoosfero'  
171 -  
172 -If the configuration was done right, the message "Connected!"  
173 -will be displayed.  
174 -  
175 -  
176 -5. Enabling kernel polling and SMP in /etc/default/ejabberd  
177 -  
178 -POLL=true  
179 -SMP=auto  
180 -  
181 -  
182 -6. Increase the file descriptors limit for user ejabberd  
183 -  
184 - 6.1. Uncomment this line in file /etc/pam.d/su:  
185 -  
186 -session required pam_limits.so  
187 -  
188 -  
189 - 6.2. Add this lines to file /etc/security/limits.conf:  
190 -  
191 -ejabberd hard nofile 65536  
192 -ejabberd soft nofile 65536  
193 -  
194 -Now, test the configuration:  
195 -  
196 -# cat /proc/<EJABBERD_BEAM_PROCESS_PID>/limits  
197 -  
198 -  
199 -7. Apache Configuration  
200 -  
201 -Apache server must be configurated as follow:  
202 -  
203 - * /etc/apache2/sites-enabled/noosfero  
204 -  
205 -RewriteEngine On  
206 -Include /usr/share/noosfero/util/chat/apache/xmpp.conf  
207 -  
208 - * /etc/apache2/apache2.conf:  
209 -  
210 -<IfModule mpm_worker_module>  
211 - StartServers 8  
212 - MinSpareThreads 25  
213 - MaxSpareThreads 75  
214 - ThreadLimit 128  
215 - ThreadsPerChild 128  
216 - MaxClients 2048  
217 - MaxRequestsPerChild 0  
218 -</IfModule>  
219 -  
220 -Note: module proxy_http must be enabled:  
221 -  
222 -# a2enmod proxy_http  
223 -  
224 -8. DNS configuration  
225 -  
226 -For this point, we assume you are using BIND as your DNS server. You need to  
227 -add the following entries to the DNS zone file corresponding to the domain  
228 -of your noosfero site:  
229 -  
230 -_xmpp-client._tcp SRV 5 100 5222 master  
231 -conference CNAME master  
232 -_xmpp-client._tcp.conference SRV 5 100 5222 master  
233 -  
234 -If you are running a DNS server other than BIND, you will have to figure out  
235 -how to create equivalente rules for your zone file. Patches to this  
236 -documentation are welcome.  
237 -  
238 -9. Testing this Setup  
239 -  
240 -Adjust shell limits to proceed with some benchmarks and load tests:  
241 -  
242 -# ulimit −s 256  
243 -# ulimit −n 8192  
244 -# echo 10 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_syn_retries  
245 -  
246 -To measure the bandwidth between server and client:  
247 -  
248 - * at server side:  
249 -  
250 -# iperf −s  
251 -  
252 - * at client side:  
253 -  
254 -# iperf −c server_ip  
255 -  
256 -For heavy load tests, clone and use this software:  
257 -  
258 -git clone http://git.holoscopio.com/git/metal/tester.git  
INSTALL.chat.md 0 → 100644
@@ -0,0 +1,258 @@ @@ -0,0 +1,258 @@
  1 +== XMPP/Chat Client Setup
  2 +
  3 +To configure XMPP/BOSH in Noosfero you need:
  4 +
  5 +* REST Client - http://github.com/archiloque/rest-client
  6 +* SystemTimer - http://ph7spot.com/musings/system-timer
  7 +* Pidgin data files - http://www.pidgin.im/
  8 +
  9 +If you use Debian 6.0 (squeeze):
  10 +
  11 +# apt-get install librestclient-ruby pidgin-data ruby1.8-dev
  12 +# gem install SystemTimer
  13 +
  14 +The samples of config file to configure a XMPP/BOSH server with
  15 +ejabberd, postgresql and apache2 can be found at util/chat directory.
  16 +
  17 +== XMPP/Chat Server Setup
  18 +
  19 +This is a step-by-step guide to get a XMPP service working, in a Debian system.
  20 +
  21 +1. Install the required packages
  22 +
  23 +# apt-get install ejabberd odbc-postgresql
  24 +
  25 +2. Ejabberd configuration
  26 +
  27 +All the following changes must be done in config file:
  28 +
  29 + /etc/ejabberd/ejabberd.cfg
  30 +
  31 + 2.1. Set the default admin user
  32 +
  33 +{ acl, admin, { user, "john", "www.example.com" } }.
  34 +{ acl, admin, { user, "bart", "www.example.com" } }.
  35 +
  36 + 2.2. Set the default host
  37 +
  38 +{ hosts, [ "www.example.com" ] }.
  39 +
  40 + 2.3. Http-Bind activation
  41 +
  42 +{ 5280, ejabberd_http, [
  43 + http_bind,
  44 + web_admin
  45 + ]
  46 +}
  47 +
  48 +(...)
  49 +
  50 +{ modules, [
  51 + {mod_http_bind, []},
  52 + ...
  53 +] }.
  54 +
  55 +Ejabberd creates semi-anonymous rooms by default, but Noosfero's Jabber client
  56 +needs non-anonymous room, then we need to change default params of creation
  57 +rooms in ejabberd to create non-anonymous rooms.
  58 +
  59 +In non-anonymous rooms the jabber service sends the new occupant's full JID to
  60 +all occupants in the room[1].
  61 +
  62 +Add option "{default_room_options, [{anonymous, false}]}" to
  63 +/etc/ejabberd/ejabberd.cfg in mod_muc session. See below:
  64 +
  65 +{ mod_muc, [
  66 + %%{host, "conference.@HOST@"},
  67 + {access, muc},
  68 + {access_create, muc},
  69 + {access_persistent, muc},
  70 + {access_admin, muc_admin},
  71 + {max_users, 500},
  72 + {default_room_options, [{anonymous, false}]}
  73 +]},
  74 +
  75 +[1] - http://xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0045.html#enter-nonanon
  76 +
  77 +
  78 + 2.4. Authentication method
  79 +
  80 +To use Postgresql through ODBC, the following modifications must be done:
  81 +
  82 + * Disable the default method:
  83 +
  84 +{auth_method, internal}.
  85 +
  86 + * Enable autheticantion through ODBC:
  87 +
  88 +{auth_method, odbc}.
  89 +
  90 + * Set database server name
  91 +
  92 +{odbc_server, "DSN=PostgreSQLEjabberdNoosfero"}.
  93 +
  94 +
  95 + 2.5. Increase the shaper traffic limit
  96 +
  97 +{ shaper, normal, { maxrate, 10000000 } }.
  98 +
  99 +
  100 + 2.6. Disable unused modules
  101 +
  102 +Unused modules can be disabled, for example:
  103 +
  104 + * s2s
  105 + * web_admin
  106 + * mod_pubsub
  107 + * mod_irc
  108 + * mod_offline
  109 + * mod_admin_extra
  110 + * mod_register
  111 +
  112 +
  113 + 2.7. Enable ODBC modules
  114 +
  115 + * mod_privacy -> mod_privacy_odbc
  116 + * mod_private -> mod_private_odbc
  117 + * mod_roster -> mod_roster_odbc
  118 +
  119 +3. Configuring Postgresql
  120 +
  121 +Login as noosfero user, and execute:
  122 +
  123 + $ psql noosfero < /path/to/noosfero/util/chat/postgresql/ejabberd.sql
  124 +
  125 +Where 'noosfero' may need to be replace by the name of the database used for
  126 +Noosfero.
  127 +
  128 +This will create a new schema inside the noosfero database, called 'ejabberd'.
  129 +
  130 +Note 'noosfero' user should have permission to create Postgresql schemas. Also,
  131 +there should be at least one domain with 'is_default = true' in 'domains'
  132 +table, otherwise people won't be able to see their friends online.
  133 +
  134 +
  135 +4. ODBC configuration
  136 +
  137 +The following files must be created:
  138 +
  139 + * /etc/odbc.ini
  140 +
  141 +[PostgreSQLEjabberdNoosfero]
  142 +Description = PostgreSQL Noosfero ejabberd database
  143 +Driver = PostgreSQL Unicode
  144 +Trace = No
  145 +TraceFile = /tmp/psqlodbc.log
  146 +Database = noosfero
  147 +Servername = localhost
  148 +UserName = <DBUSER>
  149 +Password = <DBPASS>
  150 +Port =
  151 +ReadOnly = No
  152 +RowVersioning = No
  153 +ShowSystemTables = No
  154 +ShowOidColumn = No
  155 +FakeOidIndex = No
  156 +ConnSettings = SET search_path TO ejabberd
  157 +
  158 + * /etc/odbcinst.ini
  159 +
  160 +[PostgreSQL Unicode]
  161 +Description = PostgreSQL ODBC driver (Unicode version)
  162 +Driver = /usr/lib/odbc/psqlodbcw.so
  163 +Setup = /usr/lib/odbc/libodbcpsqlS.so
  164 +Debug = 0
  165 +CommLog = 1
  166 +UsageCount = 3
  167 +
  168 + 4.1 testing all:
  169 +
  170 +# isql 'PostgreSQLEjabberdNoosfero'
  171 +
  172 +If the configuration was done right, the message "Connected!"
  173 +will be displayed.
  174 +
  175 +
  176 +5. Enabling kernel polling and SMP in /etc/default/ejabberd
  177 +
  178 +POLL=true
  179 +SMP=auto
  180 +
  181 +
  182 +6. Increase the file descriptors limit for user ejabberd
  183 +
  184 + 6.1. Uncomment this line in file /etc/pam.d/su:
  185 +
  186 +session required pam_limits.so
  187 +
  188 +
  189 + 6.2. Add this lines to file /etc/security/limits.conf:
  190 +
  191 +ejabberd hard nofile 65536
  192 +ejabberd soft nofile 65536
  193 +
  194 +Now, test the configuration:
  195 +
  196 +# cat /proc/<EJABBERD_BEAM_PROCESS_PID>/limits
  197 +
  198 +
  199 +7. Apache Configuration
  200 +
  201 +Apache server must be configurated as follow:
  202 +
  203 + * /etc/apache2/sites-enabled/noosfero
  204 +
  205 +RewriteEngine On
  206 +Include /usr/share/noosfero/util/chat/apache/xmpp.conf
  207 +
  208 + * /etc/apache2/apache2.conf:
  209 +
  210 +<IfModule mpm_worker_module>
  211 + StartServers 8
  212 + MinSpareThreads 25
  213 + MaxSpareThreads 75
  214 + ThreadLimit 128
  215 + ThreadsPerChild 128
  216 + MaxClients 2048
  217 + MaxRequestsPerChild 0
  218 +</IfModule>
  219 +
  220 +Note: module proxy_http must be enabled:
  221 +
  222 +# a2enmod proxy_http
  223 +
  224 +8. DNS configuration
  225 +
  226 +For this point, we assume you are using BIND as your DNS server. You need to
  227 +add the following entries to the DNS zone file corresponding to the domain
  228 +of your noosfero site:
  229 +
  230 +_xmpp-client._tcp SRV 5 100 5222 master
  231 +conference CNAME master
  232 +_xmpp-client._tcp.conference SRV 5 100 5222 master
  233 +
  234 +If you are running a DNS server other than BIND, you will have to figure out
  235 +how to create equivalente rules for your zone file. Patches to this
  236 +documentation are welcome.
  237 +
  238 +9. Testing this Setup
  239 +
  240 +Adjust shell limits to proceed with some benchmarks and load tests:
  241 +
  242 +# ulimit −s 256
  243 +# ulimit −n 8192
  244 +# echo 10 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_syn_retries
  245 +
  246 +To measure the bandwidth between server and client:
  247 +
  248 + * at server side:
  249 +
  250 +# iperf −s
  251 +
  252 + * at client side:
  253 +
  254 +# iperf −c server_ip
  255 +
  256 +For heavy load tests, clone and use this software:
  257 +
  258 +git clone http://git.holoscopio.com/git/metal/tester.git
INSTALL.email
@@ -1,43 +0,0 @@ @@ -1,43 +0,0 @@
1 -= Noosfero email setup  
2 -  
3 -If you know mail systems well, you just need to make sure that the local MTA,  
4 -listening on localhost:25, is able to deliver e-mails to the internet. Any mail  
5 -server will do it. You can stop reading now.  
6 -  
7 -If you are not an email specialist, then follow the instructions below. We  
8 -suggest that you use the Postfix mail server, since it is easy to configure and  
9 -very reliable. Just follow the instructions below.  
10 -  
11 -To install Postfix:  
12 -  
13 -# apt-get install postfix  
14 -  
15 -During the installation process, you will be asked a few questions. Your answer  
16 -to them will vary in 2 cases:  
17 -  
18 -Case 1: you can send e-mails directly to the internet. This will be the case  
19 -for most commercial private servers. Your answers should be:  
20 -  
21 - General type of mail configuration: Internet site  
22 - System mail name: the name of your domain, e.g. "mysocialnetwork.com"  
23 -  
24 -Case 2: you cannot, or don't want to, send e-mail directly to the internet.  
25 -This happens for example if your server is not allowed to make outbound  
26 -connections on port 25, or if you want to concentrate all your outbound mail  
27 -through a single SMTP server. Your answers in this case should be:  
28 -  
29 - General type of mail configuration: Internet with smarthost  
30 - System mail name: the name of your domain, e.g. "mysocialnetwork.com"  
31 - SMTP relay host: smtp.yourprovider.com  
32 -  
33 -Note that smtp.yourprovider.com must allow your server to deliver e-mails  
34 -through it. You should probably ask your servive provider about this.  
35 -  
36 -There is another possibility: if you are installing on a shared server, and  
37 -don't have permission to configure the local MTA, you can instruct Noosfero to  
38 -send e-mails directly through an external server. Please note that this should  
39 -be your last option, since contacting an external SMTP server directly may slow  
40 -down your Noosfero application server. To configure Noosfero to send e-mails  
41 -through an external SMTP server, follow the instructions on  
42 -http://noosfero.org/Development/SMTPMailSending  
43 -  
INSTALL.email.md 0 → 100644
@@ -0,0 +1,43 @@ @@ -0,0 +1,43 @@
  1 += Noosfero email setup
  2 +
  3 +If you know mail systems well, you just need to make sure that the local MTA,
  4 +listening on localhost:25, is able to deliver e-mails to the internet. Any mail
  5 +server will do it. You can stop reading now.
  6 +
  7 +If you are not an email specialist, then follow the instructions below. We
  8 +suggest that you use the Postfix mail server, since it is easy to configure and
  9 +very reliable. Just follow the instructions below.
  10 +
  11 +To install Postfix:
  12 +
  13 +# apt-get install postfix
  14 +
  15 +During the installation process, you will be asked a few questions. Your answer
  16 +to them will vary in 2 cases:
  17 +
  18 +Case 1: you can send e-mails directly to the internet. This will be the case
  19 +for most commercial private servers. Your answers should be:
  20 +
  21 + General type of mail configuration: Internet site
  22 + System mail name: the name of your domain, e.g. "mysocialnetwork.com"
  23 +
  24 +Case 2: you cannot, or don't want to, send e-mail directly to the internet.
  25 +This happens for example if your server is not allowed to make outbound
  26 +connections on port 25, or if you want to concentrate all your outbound mail
  27 +through a single SMTP server. Your answers in this case should be:
  28 +
  29 + General type of mail configuration: Internet with smarthost
  30 + System mail name: the name of your domain, e.g. "mysocialnetwork.com"
  31 + SMTP relay host: smtp.yourprovider.com
  32 +
  33 +Note that smtp.yourprovider.com must allow your server to deliver e-mails
  34 +through it. You should probably ask your servive provider about this.
  35 +
  36 +There is another possibility: if you are installing on a shared server, and
  37 +don't have permission to configure the local MTA, you can instruct Noosfero to
  38 +send e-mails directly through an external server. Please note that this should
  39 +be your last option, since contacting an external SMTP server directly may slow
  40 +down your Noosfero application server. To configure Noosfero to send e-mails
  41 +through an external SMTP server, follow the instructions on
  42 +http://noosfero.org/Development/SMTPMailSending
  43 +
INSTALL.md 0 → 100644
@@ -0,0 +1,417 @@ @@ -0,0 +1,417 @@
  1 += Noosfero installation instructions from source for production environments
  2 +
  3 +The instructions below can be used for setting up a Noosfero production
  4 +environment from the Noosfero sources.
  5 +
  6 +Before you start installing Noosfero manually, see the information about the
  7 +Noosfero Debian package at http://noosfero.org/Development/DebianPackage. Using
  8 +the Debian packages on a Debian stable system is the recommended method for
  9 +installing production environments.
  10 +
  11 +If you want to setup a development environment instead of a production one,
  12 +stop reading this file right now and read the file HACKING instead.
  13 +
  14 +For a complete installation guide, please see the following web page:
  15 +http://noosfero.org/Development/HowToInstall
  16 +
  17 +If you have problems with the setup, please feel free to ask questions in the
  18 +development mailing list.
  19 +
  20 +== Requirements
  21 +
  22 +DISCLAIMER: this installation procedure is tested with Debian stable, which is
  23 +currently the only recommended operating system for production usage. It is
  24 +possible that you can install it on other systems, and if you do so, please
  25 +report it on one of the Noosfero mailing lists, and please send a patch
  26 +updating these instructions.
  27 +
  28 +Noosfero is written in Ruby with the "Rails
  29 +framework":http://www.rubyonrails.org, so the process of setting it up is
  30 +pretty similar to other Rails applications.
  31 +
  32 +You need to install some packages Noosfero depends on. On Debian GNU/Linux or
  33 +Debian-based systems, all of these packages are available through the Debian
  34 +archive. You can install them with the following command:
  35 +
  36 + # apt-get install ruby rake po4a libgettext-ruby-util libgettext-ruby1.8 libsqlite3-ruby rcov librmagick-ruby libredcloth-ruby libwill-paginate-ruby iso-codes libfeedparser-ruby libdaemons-ruby thin tango-icon-theme libhpricot-ruby
  37 +
  38 +On other systems, they may or may not be available through your regular package
  39 +management system. Below are the links to their homepages.
  40 +
  41 +* Ruby: http://www.ruby-lang.org/
  42 +* Rake: http://rake.rubyforge.org/
  43 +* po4a: http://po4a.alioth.debian.org/
  44 +* Ruby-sqlite3: http://rubyforge.org/projects/sqlite-ruby
  45 +* rcov: http://eigenclass.org/hiki/rcov
  46 +* RMagick: http://rmagick.rubyforge.org/
  47 +* RedCloth: http://redcloth.org/
  48 +* will_paginate: http://github.com/mislav/will_paginate/wikis
  49 +* iso-codes: http://pkg-isocodes.alioth.debian.org/
  50 +* feedparser: http://packages.debian.org/sid/libfeedparser-ruby
  51 +* Daemons - http://daemons.rubyforge.org/
  52 +* Thin: http://code.macournoyer.com/thin/
  53 +* tango-icon-theme: http://tango.freedesktop.org/Tango_Icon_Library
  54 +* Hpricot: http://hpricot.com/
  55 +
  56 +If you manage to install Noosfero successfully on other systems than Debian,
  57 +please feel free to contact the Noosfero development mailing with the
  58 +instructions for doing so, and we'll include it here.
  59 +
  60 +As root user
  61 +============
  62 +
  63 +Install memcached. On Debian:
  64 +
  65 +# apt-get install memcached
  66 +
  67 +Study whether you need to raise the ammount of memory it uses for caching,
  68 +depending on the demand you expect for your site. If you are going to run a
  69 +high-traffic site, you will want to raise the ammount of memory reserved for
  70 +caching.
  71 +
  72 +It is recommended that you run noosfero with its own user account. To create
  73 +such an account, please do the following:
  74 +
  75 +# adduser --system --group noosfero --shell /bin/sh --home /var/lib/noosfero
  76 +
  77 +(note that you can change the $HOME directory of the user if you wish, here we
  78 +are using /var/lib/noosfero)
  79 +
  80 +The --system option will tell adduser to create a system user, i.e. this user
  81 +will not have a password and cannot login to the system directly. To become
  82 +this user, you have to use sudo:
  83 +
  84 +# sudo -u noosfero -i
  85 +
  86 +or
  87 +
  88 +# su - noosfero
  89 +
  90 +As noosfero user
  91 +================
  92 +
  93 +downloading from git
  94 +--------------------
  95 +
  96 +Here we are cloning the noosfero repository from git. Note: you will need to
  97 +install git before.
  98 +
  99 +$ git clone git://gitorious.org/noosfero/noosfero.git current
  100 +$ cd current
  101 +$ git checkout -b stable origin/stable
  102 +
  103 +downloading tarball
  104 +-------------------
  105 +
  106 +Note: replace 0.39.0 below from the latest stable version.
  107 +
  108 +$ wget http://noosfero.org/pub/Development/NoosferoVersion00x39x00/noosfero-0.39.0.tar.gz
  109 +$ tar -zxvf noosfero-0.39.0.tar.gz
  110 +$ ln -s noosfero-0.39.0 current
  111 +$ cd current
  112 +
  113 +Create the thin configuration file:
  114 +
  115 +$ thin -C config/thin.yml -e production config
  116 +
  117 +Edit config/thin.yml to suit your needs. Make sure your apache
  118 +configuration matches the thin cluster configuration, specially in respect
  119 +to the ports and numbers of thin instances.
  120 +
  121 +Note: currently Noosfero only supports Rails 2.3.5, which is the version in
  122 +Debian Squeeze. If you have a Rails version newer than that, Noosfero will
  123 +probably not work. You can install Rails 2.3.5 into your Noosfero installation
  124 +with the following procedure:
  125 +
  126 +$ cd /var/lib/noosfero/current/vendor
  127 +$ wget http://ftp.de.debian.org/debian/pool/main/r/rails/rails_2.3.5.orig.tar.gz
  128 +$ tar xzf rails_2.3.5.orig.tar.gz
  129 +$ ln -s rails-2.3.5 rails
  130 +
  131 +As root user
  132 +============
  133 +
  134 +Setup Noosfero log and tmp directories:
  135 +
  136 +# cd /var/lib/noosfero/current
  137 +# ./etc/init.d/noosfero setup
  138 +
  139 +Now it's time to setup the database. In this example we are using PostgreSQL,
  140 +so if you are planning to use a different database this steps won't apply.
  141 +
  142 +# apt-get install postgresql libpgsql-ruby
  143 +# su postgres -c 'createuser noosfero -S -d -R'
  144 +
  145 +By default Rails will try to connect on postgresql through 5432 port,
  146 +you can check it on /etc/postgresql/8.4/main/postgresql.conf file.
  147 +
  148 +Restart postgresql:
  149 +
  150 +# invoke-rc.d postgresql restart
  151 +
  152 +Noosfero needs a functional e-mail setup to work: the local mail system should
  153 +be able to deliver e-mail to the internet, either directly or through an
  154 +external SMTP server. Please check the documentation at the INSTALL.email file.
  155 +
  156 +As noosfero user
  157 +================
  158 +
  159 +Now create the databases:
  160 +
  161 +$ cd /var/lib/noosfero/current
  162 +$ createdb noosfero_production
  163 +$ createdb noosfero_development
  164 +$ createdb noosfero_test
  165 +
  166 +The development and test databases are actually optional. If you are creating a
  167 +stricly production server, you will probably not need them.
  168 +
  169 +Now we want to configure Noosfero for accessing the database we just created.
  170 +To do that, you can 1) copy config/database.yml.pgsql to config/database.yml,
  171 +or create config/database.yml from scratch with the following content:
  172 +
  173 + production:
  174 + adapter: postgresql
  175 + encoding: unicode
  176 + database: noosfero_production
  177 + username: noosfero
  178 +
  179 +Now, to test the database access, you can fire the Rails database console:
  180 +
  181 +$ ./script/dbconsole production
  182 +
  183 +If it connects to your database, then everything is fine. If you got an error
  184 +message, then you have to check your database configuration.
  185 +
  186 +Create the database structure:
  187 +
  188 +$ RAILS_ENV=production rake db:schema:load
  189 +
  190 +Compile the translations:
  191 +
  192 +$ RAILS_ENV=production rake noosfero:translations:compile
  193 +
  194 +Now we must create some initial data. To create your default environment
  195 +(the first one), run the command below:
  196 +
  197 +$ RAILS_ENV=production ./script/runner 'Environment.create!(:name => "My environment", :is_default => true)'
  198 +
  199 +(of course, replace "My environment" with your environment's name!)
  200 +
  201 +And now you have to add the domain name you will be using for your noosfero
  202 +site to the list of domains of that default environment you just created:
  203 +
  204 +$ RAILS_ENV=production ./script/runner "Environment.default.domains << Domain.new(:name => 'your.domain.com')"
  205 +
  206 +(replace "your.domain.com" with your actual domain name)
  207 +
  208 +Add at least one user as admin of environment:
  209 +
  210 +$ RAILS_ENV=production ./script/runner "User.create(:login => 'adminuser', :email => 'admin@example.com', :password => 'admin', :password_confirmation => 'admin', :environment => Environment.default, :activated_at => Time.new)"
  211 +
  212 +(replace "adminuser", "admin@example.com", "admin" with the login, email
  213 +and password of your environment administrator)
  214 +
  215 +To start the Noosfero application servers:
  216 +
  217 +$ ./script/production start
  218 +
  219 +At this point you have a functional Noosfero installation running, the only
  220 +thing left is to configure your webserver as a reverse proxy to pass requests
  221 +to them.
  222 +
  223 +
  224 +==================
  225 +Apache instalation
  226 +==================
  227 +
  228 +# apt-get install apache2
  229 +
  230 +Apache configuration
  231 +--------------------
  232 +
  233 +First you have to enable the following some apache modules:
  234 +
  235 + deflate
  236 + expires
  237 + proxy
  238 + proxy_balancer
  239 + proxy_http
  240 + rewrite
  241 +
  242 +On Debian GNU/Linux system, these modules can be enabled with the following
  243 +command line, as root:
  244 +
  245 +# a2enmod deflate expires proxy proxy_balancer proxy_http rewrite
  246 +
  247 +In other systems the way by which you enable apache modules may be different.
  248 +
  249 +Now with the Apache configuration. You can use the template below, replacing
  250 +/var/lib/noosfero/current with the directory in which your noosfero
  251 +installation is, your.domain.com with the domain name of your noosfero site.
  252 +We are assuming that you are running two thin instances on ports 3000 and
  253 +3001. If your setup is different you'll need to adjust <Proxy> section. If you
  254 +don't understand something in the configuration, please refer to the apache
  255 +documentation.
  256 +
  257 +Add a file called "mysite" (or whatever name you want to give to your noosfero
  258 +site) to /etc/apache2/sites-available with the following content, and customize
  259 +as needed (as usual, make sure you replace "your.domain.com" with you actual
  260 +domain name, and "/var/lib/noosfero/current" with the directory where Noosfero
  261 +is installed):
  262 +
  263 + <VirtualHost *:80>
  264 + ServerName your.domain.com
  265 +
  266 + DocumentRoot "/var/lib/noosfero/current/public"
  267 + <Directory "/var/lib/noosfero/current/public">
  268 + Options FollowSymLinks
  269 + AllowOverride None
  270 + Order Allow,Deny
  271 + Allow from all
  272 + </Directory>
  273 +
  274 + RewriteEngine On
  275 +
  276 + # Rewrite index to check for static index.html
  277 + RewriteRule ^/$ /index.html [QSA]
  278 +
  279 + # Rewrite to check for Rails cached page
  280 + RewriteRule ^([^.]+)$ $1.html [QSA]
  281 +
  282 + RewriteCond %{DOCUMENT_ROOT}/%{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f
  283 + RewriteRule ^.*$ balancer://noosfero%{REQUEST_URI} [P,QSA,L]
  284 +
  285 + ErrorDocument 503 /503.html
  286 +
  287 + ErrorLog /var/log/apache2/noosfero.log
  288 + LogLevel warn
  289 + CustomLog /var/log/apache2/noosfero.access.log combined
  290 +
  291 + Include /var/lib/noosfero/current/etc/noosfero/apache/cache.conf
  292 +
  293 + </VirtualHost>
  294 +
  295 + <Proxy balancer://noosfero>
  296 + BalancerMember http://127.0.0.1:3000
  297 + BalancerMember http://127.0.0.1:3001
  298 + Order Allow,Deny
  299 + Allow from All
  300 + </Proxy>
  301 +
  302 +The cache.conf file included in the end of the <VirtualHost> section is
  303 +important, since it will tell apache to pass expiration and cache headers to
  304 +clients so that the site feels faster for users. Do we need to say that using
  305 +that configuration is strongly recommended?
  306 +
  307 +Enable that site with (as root, replace "mysite" with the actual name you gave
  308 +to your site configuration):
  309 +
  310 +# a2ensite mysite
  311 +
  312 +Now restart your apache server (as root):
  313 +
  314 +# invoke-rc.d apache2 restart
  315 +
  316 +
  317 +Enabling exception notifications
  318 +================================
  319 +
  320 +This is an optional step. You will need it only if you want to receive e-mail
  321 +notifications when some exception occurs on Noosfero.
  322 +
  323 +First, install this version of the gem.
  324 +Others versions may not be compatible with Noosfero:
  325 +
  326 +# gem install exception_notification -v 1.0.20090728
  327 +
  328 +You can configure the e-mails that will receive the notifications.
  329 +Change the file config/noosfero.yml as the following example, replacing the
  330 +e-mails by real ones:
  331 +
  332 + production:
  333 + exception_recipients: [admin@example.com, you@example.com]
  334 +
  335 +
  336 +============
  337 +Maintainance
  338 +============
  339 +
  340 +To ease the maintainance, install a symbolic link for the Noosfero startup
  341 +script in your server and add it to the system initialization and shutdown
  342 +sequences (as root):
  343 +
  344 +# ln -s /var/lib/noosfero/current/etc/init.d/noosfero /etc/init.d/noosfero
  345 +# update-rc.d noosfero defaults
  346 + Adding system startup for /etc/init.d/noosfero ...
  347 + /etc/rc0.d/K20noosfero -> ../init.d/noosfero
  348 + /etc/rc1.d/K20noosfero -> ../init.d/noosfero
  349 + /etc/rc6.d/K20noosfero -> ../init.d/noosfero
  350 + /etc/rc2.d/S20noosfero -> ../init.d/noosfero
  351 + /etc/rc3.d/S20noosfero -> ../init.d/noosfero
  352 + /etc/rc4.d/S20noosfero -> ../init.d/noosfero
  353 + /etc/rc5.d/S20noosfero -> ../init.d/noosfero
  354 +
  355 +Now to start Noosfero, you do as root:
  356 +
  357 +# invoke-rc.d noosfero start
  358 +
  359 +To stop Noosfero:
  360 +
  361 +# invoke-rc.d noosfero start
  362 +
  363 +To restart Noosfero:
  364 +
  365 +# invoke-rc.d noosfero restart
  366 +
  367 +Noosfero will be automatically started during system boot, and automatically
  368 +stopped if the system shuts down for some reason (or during the shutdown part
  369 +of a reboot).
  370 +
  371 +=============
  372 +Rotating logs
  373 +=============
  374 +
  375 +Noosfero provides an example logrotate configuation to rotate its logs. To use
  376 +it, create a symbolic link in /etc/logrotate.d/:
  377 +
  378 +# cd /etc/logrotate.d/
  379 +# ln -s /var/lib/noosfero/current/etc/logrotate.d/noosfero
  380 +
  381 +Note that the provided file assumes Noosfero logging is being done in
  382 +/var/log/noosfero (which is the case if you followed the instructions above
  383 +correctly). If the logs are stored elsewhere, it's recommended that you copy
  384 +the file over to /etc/logrotate.d/ and modify it to point to your local log
  385 +directly.
  386 +
  387 +=========
  388 +Upgrading
  389 +=========
  390 +
  391 +If you followed the steps in this document and installed Noosfero from the git
  392 +repository, then upgrading is easy. First, you need to allow the noosfero user
  393 +to restart the memcached server with sudo, by adding the following line in
  394 +/etc/sudoers:
  395 +
  396 +noosfero ALL=NOPASSWD: /etc/init.d/memcached
  397 +
  398 +Then, to perform an upgrade, do the following as the noosfero user:
  399 +
  400 +$ cd /var/lib/noosfero/current
  401 +$ ./script/git-upgrade
  402 +
  403 +The git-upgrade script will take care of everything for you. It will first stop
  404 +the service, then fetch the current source code, upgrade database, compile
  405 +translations, and then start the service again.
  406 +
  407 +Note 1: make sure your local git repository is following the "stable" branch,
  408 +just like the instructions above. The "master" branch is not recommended for
  409 +use in production environments.
  410 +
  411 +Note 2: always read the release notes before upgrading. Sometimes there will be
  412 +steps that must be performed manually. If that is the case, you can invoke the
  413 +git-upgrade script with the special parameter "--shell" that will give you a
  414 +shell after the upgrade, which you can use to perform any manual steps
  415 +required:
  416 +
  417 +$ ./script/git-upgrade --shell
INSTALL.multitenancy
@@ -1,163 +0,0 @@ @@ -1,163 +0,0 @@
1 -== Multitenancy support  
2 -  
3 -Multitenancy refers to a principle in software architecture where a  
4 -single instance of the software runs on a server, serving multiple  
5 -client organizations (tenants). Multitenancy is contrasted with a  
6 -multi-instance architecture where separate software instances (or  
7 -hardware systems) are set up for different client organizations. With  
8 -a multitenant architecture, a software application is designed to  
9 -virtually partition its data and configuration, and each client  
10 -organization works with a customized virtual application instance.  
11 -  
12 -Today this feature is available only for PostgreSQL databases.  
13 -  
14 -This document assumes that you have a new fully PostgresSQL default Noosfero  
15 -installation as explained at the INSTALL file.  
16 -  
17 -== Separated data  
18 -  
19 -The items below are separated for each hosted environment:  
20 -  
21 -* Uploaded files  
22 -* Database  
23 -* Solr index  
24 -* ActiveRecord#cache_key  
25 -* Feed updater  
26 -* Delayed Job Workers  
27 -  
28 -== Database configuration file  
29 -  
30 -The file config/database.yml must follow a structure in order to  
31 -achieve multitenancy support. In this example, we will set 3  
32 -different environments: env1, env2 and env3.  
33 -  
34 -Each "hosted" environment must have an entry like this:  
35 -  
36 -env1_production:  
37 - adapter: postgresql  
38 - encoding: unicode  
39 - database: noosfero  
40 - schema_search_path: public  
41 - username: noosfero  
42 - domains:  
43 - - env1.com  
44 - - env1.org  
45 -  
46 -env2_production:  
47 - adapter: postgresql  
48 - encoding: unicode  
49 - database: noosfero  
50 - schema_search_path: env2  
51 - username: noosfero  
52 - domains:  
53 - - env2.com  
54 - - env2.org  
55 -  
56 -env3_production:  
57 - adapter: postgresql  
58 - encoding: unicode  
59 - database: noosfero  
60 - schema_search_path: env3  
61 - username: noosfero  
62 - domains:  
63 - - env3.com  
64 - - env3.net  
65 -  
66 -The "hosted" environments define, besides the schema_search_path, a  
67 -list of domains that, when accessed, tells which database the  
68 -application should use. Also, the environment name must end with  
69 -'_hosting', where 'hosting' is the name of the hosting environment.  
70 -  
71 -You must also tell the application which is the default environment.  
72 -  
73 -production:  
74 - env1_production  
75 -  
76 -On the example above there are only three hosted environments, but it  
77 -can be more than three. The schemas 'env2' and 'env3' must already  
78 -exist in the same database of the hosting environment. As postgres  
79 -user, you can create them typing:  
80 -  
81 -$ psql database_name -c "CREATE SCHEMA env2 AUTHORIZATION database_user"  
82 -$ psql database_name -c "CREATE SCHEMA env3 AUTHORIZATION database_user"  
83 -  
84 -Replace database_name and database_user above with your stuff.  
85 -  
86 -So, yet on this same example, when a user accesses http://env2.com or  
87 -http://env2.org, the Noosfero application running on production will  
88 -turn the database schema to 'env2'. When the access is from domains  
89 -http://env3.com or http://env3.net, the schema to be loaded will be  
90 -'env3'.  
91 -  
92 -There is an example of this file in config/database.yml.multitenancy  
93 -  
94 -== Preparing the database  
95 -  
96 -Now create the environments:  
97 -  
98 -$ RAILS_ENV=production rake multitenancy:create  
99 -  
100 -This command above will create the hosted environment files equal to  
101 -their hosting environment, here called 'production'.  
102 -  
103 -Run db:schema:load for each other environment:  
104 -  
105 -$ RAILS_ENV=env2_production rake db:schema:load  
106 -$ RAILS_ENV=env3_production rake db:schema:load  
107 -  
108 -Then run the migrations for the hosting environment, and it will  
109 -run for each of its hosted environments:  
110 -  
111 -RAILS_ENV=production rake db:migrate  
112 -  
113 -== Start Noosfero  
114 -  
115 -Run Noosfero init file as root:  
116 -  
117 -# invoke-rc.d noosfero start  
118 -  
119 -== Solr  
120 -  
121 -It's necessary to run only one instance of Solr. Don't worry  
122 -about this, Noosfero initializer had already done this for you.  
123 -  
124 -== Feed updater & Delayed job  
125 -  
126 -Just for your information, a daemon of feed-updater and delayed_job  
127 -must be running for each environment. Noosfero initializer do this,  
128 -relax.  
129 -  
130 -== Uploaded files  
131 -  
132 -When running with PostgreSQL, Noosfero uploads stuff to a folder named  
133 -the same way as the running schema. Inside the upload folder root, for  
134 -example, will be public/image_uploads/env2 and public/image_uploads/env3.  
135 -  
136 -== Adding multitenancy support to an existing Noosfero environment  
137 -  
138 -If you already have a Noosfero environment, you can turn it multitenant  
139 -by following the steps below in addition to the previous steps:  
140 -  
141 -1. Reindex your database  
142 -  
143 -Rebuild the Solr index by running the following task just  
144 -for your hosting environment, do this as noosfero user:  
145 -  
146 -$ RAILS_ENV=production rake multitenancy:reindex  
147 -  
148 -2. Move the uploaded files to the right place  
149 -  
150 -Add a directory with the same name as your schema name (by default this  
151 -name is 'public') in the root of each upload directory, for example,  
152 -public/articles/0000 will be moved to public/articles/public/0000. Do this  
153 -with the directories public/image_uploads, public/articles and public/thumbnails.  
154 -  
155 -3. Fix paths on activities  
156 -  
157 -The profile activities store static paths to the images, so it's necessary to fix  
158 -these paths. You can do this easily by setting an alias on your webserver.  
159 -On Apache you can add the three rules below, where 'public' is the schema name:  
160 -  
161 - RewriteRule ^/articles(.+) /articles/public$1  
162 - RewriteRule ^/image_uploads(.+) /image_uploads/public$1  
163 - RewriteRule ^/thumbnails(.+) /thumbnails/public$1  
INSTALL.multitenancy.md 0 → 100644
@@ -0,0 +1,163 @@ @@ -0,0 +1,163 @@
  1 +== Multitenancy support
  2 +
  3 +Multitenancy refers to a principle in software architecture where a
  4 +single instance of the software runs on a server, serving multiple
  5 +client organizations (tenants). Multitenancy is contrasted with a
  6 +multi-instance architecture where separate software instances (or
  7 +hardware systems) are set up for different client organizations. With
  8 +a multitenant architecture, a software application is designed to
  9 +virtually partition its data and configuration, and each client
  10 +organization works with a customized virtual application instance.
  11 +
  12 +Today this feature is available only for PostgreSQL databases.
  13 +
  14 +This document assumes that you have a new fully PostgresSQL default Noosfero
  15 +installation as explained at the INSTALL file.
  16 +
  17 +== Separated data
  18 +
  19 +The items below are separated for each hosted environment:
  20 +
  21 +* Uploaded files
  22 +* Database
  23 +* Solr index
  24 +* ActiveRecord#cache_key
  25 +* Feed updater
  26 +* Delayed Job Workers
  27 +
  28 +== Database configuration file
  29 +
  30 +The file config/database.yml must follow a structure in order to
  31 +achieve multitenancy support. In this example, we will set 3
  32 +different environments: env1, env2 and env3.
  33 +
  34 +Each "hosted" environment must have an entry like this:
  35 +
  36 +env1_production:
  37 + adapter: postgresql
  38 + encoding: unicode
  39 + database: noosfero
  40 + schema_search_path: public
  41 + username: noosfero
  42 + domains:
  43 + - env1.com
  44 + - env1.org
  45 +
  46 +env2_production:
  47 + adapter: postgresql
  48 + encoding: unicode
  49 + database: noosfero
  50 + schema_search_path: env2
  51 + username: noosfero
  52 + domains:
  53 + - env2.com
  54 + - env2.org
  55 +
  56 +env3_production:
  57 + adapter: postgresql
  58 + encoding: unicode
  59 + database: noosfero
  60 + schema_search_path: env3
  61 + username: noosfero
  62 + domains:
  63 + - env3.com
  64 + - env3.net
  65 +
  66 +The "hosted" environments define, besides the schema_search_path, a
  67 +list of domains that, when accessed, tells which database the
  68 +application should use. Also, the environment name must end with
  69 +'_hosting', where 'hosting' is the name of the hosting environment.
  70 +
  71 +You must also tell the application which is the default environment.
  72 +
  73 +production:
  74 + env1_production
  75 +
  76 +On the example above there are only three hosted environments, but it
  77 +can be more than three. The schemas 'env2' and 'env3' must already
  78 +exist in the same database of the hosting environment. As postgres
  79 +user, you can create them typing:
  80 +
  81 +$ psql database_name -c "CREATE SCHEMA env2 AUTHORIZATION database_user"
  82 +$ psql database_name -c "CREATE SCHEMA env3 AUTHORIZATION database_user"
  83 +
  84 +Replace database_name and database_user above with your stuff.
  85 +
  86 +So, yet on this same example, when a user accesses http://env2.com or
  87 +http://env2.org, the Noosfero application running on production will
  88 +turn the database schema to 'env2'. When the access is from domains
  89 +http://env3.com or http://env3.net, the schema to be loaded will be
  90 +'env3'.
  91 +
  92 +There is an example of this file in config/database.yml.multitenancy
  93 +
  94 +== Preparing the database
  95 +
  96 +Now create the environments:
  97 +
  98 +$ RAILS_ENV=production rake multitenancy:create
  99 +
  100 +This command above will create the hosted environment files equal to
  101 +their hosting environment, here called 'production'.
  102 +
  103 +Run db:schema:load for each other environment:
  104 +
  105 +$ RAILS_ENV=env2_production rake db:schema:load
  106 +$ RAILS_ENV=env3_production rake db:schema:load
  107 +
  108 +Then run the migrations for the hosting environment, and it will
  109 +run for each of its hosted environments:
  110 +
  111 +RAILS_ENV=production rake db:migrate
  112 +
  113 +== Start Noosfero
  114 +
  115 +Run Noosfero init file as root:
  116 +
  117 +# invoke-rc.d noosfero start
  118 +
  119 +== Solr
  120 +
  121 +It's necessary to run only one instance of Solr. Don't worry
  122 +about this, Noosfero initializer had already done this for you.
  123 +
  124 +== Feed updater & Delayed job
  125 +
  126 +Just for your information, a daemon of feed-updater and delayed_job
  127 +must be running for each environment. Noosfero initializer do this,
  128 +relax.
  129 +
  130 +== Uploaded files
  131 +
  132 +When running with PostgreSQL, Noosfero uploads stuff to a folder named
  133 +the same way as the running schema. Inside the upload folder root, for
  134 +example, will be public/image_uploads/env2 and public/image_uploads/env3.
  135 +
  136 +== Adding multitenancy support to an existing Noosfero environment
  137 +
  138 +If you already have a Noosfero environment, you can turn it multitenant
  139 +by following the steps below in addition to the previous steps:
  140 +
  141 +1. Reindex your database
  142 +
  143 +Rebuild the Solr index by running the following task just
  144 +for your hosting environment, do this as noosfero user:
  145 +
  146 +$ RAILS_ENV=production rake multitenancy:reindex
  147 +
  148 +2. Move the uploaded files to the right place
  149 +
  150 +Add a directory with the same name as your schema name (by default this
  151 +name is 'public') in the root of each upload directory, for example,
  152 +public/articles/0000 will be moved to public/articles/public/0000. Do this
  153 +with the directories public/image_uploads, public/articles and public/thumbnails.
  154 +
  155 +3. Fix paths on activities
  156 +
  157 +The profile activities store static paths to the images, so it's necessary to fix
  158 +these paths. You can do this easily by setting an alias on your webserver.
  159 +On Apache you can add the three rules below, where 'public' is the schema name:
  160 +
  161 + RewriteRule ^/articles(.+) /articles/public$1
  162 + RewriteRule ^/image_uploads(.+) /image_uploads/public$1
  163 + RewriteRule ^/thumbnails(.+) /thumbnails/public$1
INSTALL.varnish
@@ -1,71 +0,0 @@ @@ -1,71 +0,0 @@
1 -= Setting up Varnish for your Noosfero site  
2 -  
3 -Varnish is a HTTP caching server, and using it together with Noosfero is highly  
4 -recommended. See http://www.varnish-cache.org/ for more information on Varnish.  
5 -  
6 -Varnish can be set up to use with Noosfero with the following steps:  
7 -  
8 -1) setup Noosfero with apache according to the INSTALL file. If you used the  
9 -Debian package to install noosfero, you don't need to do anything about this.  
10 -  
11 -2) install Varnish  
12 -  
13 - # apt-get install varnish  
14 -  
15 -Install the RPAF apache module (or skip this step if not using apache):  
16 -  
17 - # apt-get install libapache2-mod-rpaf  
18 -  
19 -3) Change Apache to listen on port 8080 instead of 80  
20 -  
21 -3a) Edit /etc/apache2/ports.conf, and:  
22 -  
23 - * change 'NameVirtualHost *:80' to 'NameVirtualHost *:8080'  
24 - * change 'Listen 80' to 'Listen 127.0.0.1:8080'  
25 -  
26 -3b) Edit /etc/apache2/sites-enabled/*, and change '<VirtualHost *:80>' to  
27 -'<VirtualHost *:8080>'  
28 -  
29 -3c) Restart apache  
30 -  
31 - # invoke-rc.d apache2 restart  
32 -  
33 -4) Varnish configuration  
34 -  
35 -4a) Edit /etc/default/varnish  
36 -  
37 - * change the line that says "START=no" to say "START=yes"  
38 - * change '-a :6081' to '-a :80'  
39 -  
40 -4b) Edit /etc/varnish/default.vcl and add the following lines at the end:  
41 -  
42 - include "/etc/noosfero/varnish-noosfero.vcl";  
43 - include "/etc/noosfero/varnish-accept-language.vcl";  
44 -  
45 -On manual installations, change "/etc/noosfero/*" to  
46 -"{Rails.root}/etc/noosfero/*"  
47 -  
48 -NOTE: it is very important that the *.vcl files are included in that order,  
49 -i.e. *first* include "varnish-noosfero.vcl", and *after*  
50 -"noosfero-accept-language.cvl".  
51 -  
52 -4c) Restart Varnish  
53 -  
54 - # invoke-rc.d varnish restart  
55 -  
56 -5) Enable varnish logging:  
57 -  
58 -5a) Edit /etc/default/varnishncsa and uncomment the line that contains:  
59 -  
60 -VARNISHNCSA_ENABLED=1  
61 -  
62 -The varnish log will be written to /var/log/varnish/varnishncsa.log in an  
63 -apache-compatible format. You should change your statistics generation software  
64 -(e.g. awstats) to use that instead of apache logs.  
65 -  
66 -5b) Restart Varnish Logging service  
67 -  
68 - # invoke-rc.d varnishncsa restart  
69 -  
70 -Thanks to Cosimo Streppone for varnish-accept-language. See  
71 -http://github.com/cosimo/varnish-accept-language for more information.  
INSTALL.varnish.md 0 → 100644
@@ -0,0 +1,71 @@ @@ -0,0 +1,71 @@
  1 += Setting up Varnish for your Noosfero site
  2 +
  3 +Varnish is a HTTP caching server, and using it together with Noosfero is highly
  4 +recommended. See http://www.varnish-cache.org/ for more information on Varnish.
  5 +
  6 +Varnish can be set up to use with Noosfero with the following steps:
  7 +
  8 +1) setup Noosfero with apache according to the INSTALL file. If you used the
  9 +Debian package to install noosfero, you don't need to do anything about this.
  10 +
  11 +2) install Varnish
  12 +
  13 + # apt-get install varnish
  14 +
  15 +Install the RPAF apache module (or skip this step if not using apache):
  16 +
  17 + # apt-get install libapache2-mod-rpaf
  18 +
  19 +3) Change Apache to listen on port 8080 instead of 80
  20 +
  21 +3a) Edit /etc/apache2/ports.conf, and:
  22 +
  23 + * change 'NameVirtualHost *:80' to 'NameVirtualHost *:8080'
  24 + * change 'Listen 80' to 'Listen 127.0.0.1:8080'
  25 +
  26 +3b) Edit /etc/apache2/sites-enabled/*, and change '<VirtualHost *:80>' to
  27 +'<VirtualHost *:8080>'
  28 +
  29 +3c) Restart apache
  30 +
  31 + # invoke-rc.d apache2 restart
  32 +
  33 +4) Varnish configuration
  34 +
  35 +4a) Edit /etc/default/varnish
  36 +
  37 + * change the line that says "START=no" to say "START=yes"
  38 + * change '-a :6081' to '-a :80'
  39 +
  40 +4b) Edit /etc/varnish/default.vcl and add the following lines at the end:
  41 +
  42 + include "/etc/noosfero/varnish-noosfero.vcl";
  43 + include "/etc/noosfero/varnish-accept-language.vcl";
  44 +
  45 +On manual installations, change "/etc/noosfero/*" to
  46 +"{Rails.root}/etc/noosfero/*"
  47 +
  48 +NOTE: it is very important that the *.vcl files are included in that order,
  49 +i.e. *first* include "varnish-noosfero.vcl", and *after*
  50 +"noosfero-accept-language.cvl".
  51 +
  52 +4c) Restart Varnish
  53 +
  54 + # invoke-rc.d varnish restart
  55 +
  56 +5) Enable varnish logging:
  57 +
  58 +5a) Edit /etc/default/varnishncsa and uncomment the line that contains:
  59 +
  60 +VARNISHNCSA_ENABLED=1
  61 +
  62 +The varnish log will be written to /var/log/varnish/varnishncsa.log in an
  63 +apache-compatible format. You should change your statistics generation software
  64 +(e.g. awstats) to use that instead of apache logs.
  65 +
  66 +5b) Restart Varnish Logging service
  67 +
  68 + # invoke-rc.d varnishncsa restart
  69 +
  70 +Thanks to Cosimo Streppone for varnish-accept-language. See
  71 +http://github.com/cosimo/varnish-accept-language for more information.
@@ -1,33 +0,0 @@ @@ -1,33 +0,0 @@
1 -Noosfero - a web-based social platform  
2 -======================================  
3 -  
4 -http://www.noosfero.org/  
5 -  
6 -Documentation  
7 --------------  
8 -  
9 -The following documentation is available:  
10 -  
11 -File Purpose  
12 -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~  
13 -INSTALL install instructions  
14 -INSTALL.awstats install instructions - access statistics service  
15 -INSTALL.chat install instructions - chat service  
16 -INSTALL.email install instructions - email service  
17 -INSTALL.multitenancy install instructions - multiple sites  
18 -INSTALL.varnish install instructions - varnish HTTP caching (recommended)  
19 -HACKING development instruction  
20 -RELEASING instructions for doing releases  
21 -doc/noosfero/* user documentation (available through the app itself)  
22 -  
23 -  
24 -Authors and copyright  
25 ----------------------  
26 -  
27 -Authorship and copyright information is available in the files listed below.  
28 -  
29 -File Purpose  
30 -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~  
31 -AUTHORS list of authors (updated at each release)  
32 -COPYRIGHT Copyright statement for the project  
33 -COPYING Full text of the project license  
README.md 0 → 100644
@@ -0,0 +1,33 @@ @@ -0,0 +1,33 @@
  1 +Noosfero - a web-based social platform
  2 +======================================
  3 +
  4 +http://www.noosfero.org/
  5 +
  6 +Documentation
  7 +-------------
  8 +
  9 +The following documentation is available:
  10 +
  11 +File Purpose
  12 +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  13 +INSTALL install instructions
  14 +INSTALL.awstats install instructions - access statistics service
  15 +INSTALL.chat install instructions - chat service
  16 +INSTALL.email install instructions - email service
  17 +INSTALL.multitenancy install instructions - multiple sites
  18 +INSTALL.varnish install instructions - varnish HTTP caching (recommended)
  19 +HACKING development instruction
  20 +RELEASING instructions for doing releases
  21 +doc/noosfero/* user documentation (available through the app itself)
  22 +
  23 +
  24 +Authors and copyright
  25 +---------------------
  26 +
  27 +Authorship and copyright information is available in the files listed below.
  28 +
  29 +File Purpose
  30 +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  31 +AUTHORS list of authors (updated at each release)
  32 +COPYRIGHT Copyright statement for the project
  33 +COPYING Full text of the project license
README.rails
@@ -1,183 +0,0 @@ @@ -1,183 +0,0 @@
1 -== Welcome to Rails  
2 -  
3 -Rails is a web-application and persistence framework that includes everything  
4 -needed to create database-backed web-applications according to the  
5 -Model-View-Control pattern of separation. This pattern splits the view (also  
6 -called the presentation) into "dumb" templates that are primarily responsible  
7 -for inserting pre-built data in between HTML tags. The model contains the  
8 -"smart" domain objects (such as Account, Product, Person, Post) that holds all  
9 -the business logic and knows how to persist themselves to a database. The  
10 -controller handles the incoming requests (such as Save New Account, Update  
11 -Product, Show Post) by manipulating the model and directing data to the view.  
12 -  
13 -In Rails, the model is handled by what's called an object-relational mapping  
14 -layer entitled Active Record. This layer allows you to present the data from  
15 -database rows as objects and embellish these data objects with business logic  
16 -methods. You can read more about Active Record in  
17 -link:files/vendor/rails/activerecord/README.html.  
18 -  
19 -The controller and view are handled by the Action Pack, which handles both  
20 -layers by its two parts: Action View and Action Controller. These two layers  
21 -are bundled in a single package due to their heavy interdependence. This is  
22 -unlike the relationship between the Active Record and Action Pack that is much  
23 -more separate. Each of these packages can be used independently outside of  
24 -Rails. You can read more about Action Pack in  
25 -link:files/vendor/rails/actionpack/README.html.  
26 -  
27 -  
28 -== Getting started  
29 -  
30 -1. Start the web server: <tt>ruby script/server</tt> (run with --help for options)  
31 -2. Go to http://localhost:3000/ and get "Welcome aboard: You’re riding the Rails!"  
32 -3. Follow the guidelines to start developing your application  
33 -  
34 -  
35 -== Web servers  
36 -  
37 -Rails uses the built-in web server in Ruby called WEBrick by default, so you don't  
38 -have to install or configure anything to play around.  
39 -  
40 -If you have lighttpd installed, though, it'll be used instead when running script/server.  
41 -It's considerably faster than WEBrick and suited for production use, but requires additional  
42 -installation and currently only works well on OS X/Unix (Windows users are encouraged  
43 -to start with WEBrick). We recommend version 1.4.11 and higher. You can download it from  
44 -http://www.lighttpd.net.  
45 -  
46 -If you want something that's halfway between WEBrick and lighttpd, we heartily recommend  
47 -Mongrel. It's a Ruby-based web server with a C-component (so it requires compilation) that  
48 -also works very well with Windows. See more at http://mongrel.rubyforge.org/.  
49 -  
50 -But of course its also possible to run Rails with the premiere open source web server Apache.  
51 -To get decent performance, though, you'll need to install FastCGI. For Apache 1.3, you want  
52 -to use mod_fastcgi. For Apache 2.0+, you want to use mod_fcgid.  
53 -  
54 -See http://wiki.rubyonrails.com/rails/pages/FastCGI for more information on FastCGI.  
55 -  
56 -== Example for Apache conf  
57 -  
58 - <VirtualHost *:80>  
59 - ServerName rails  
60 - DocumentRoot /path/application/public/  
61 - ErrorLog /path/application/log/server.log  
62 -  
63 - <Directory /path/application/public/>  
64 - Options ExecCGI FollowSymLinks  
65 - AllowOverride all  
66 - Allow from all  
67 - Order allow,deny  
68 - </Directory>  
69 - </VirtualHost>  
70 -  
71 -NOTE: Be sure that CGIs can be executed in that directory as well. So ExecCGI  
72 -should be on and ".cgi" should respond. All requests from 127.0.0.1 go  
73 -through CGI, so no Apache restart is necessary for changes. All other requests  
74 -go through FCGI (or mod_ruby), which requires a restart to show changes.  
75 -  
76 -  
77 -== Debugging Rails  
78 -  
79 -Have "tail -f" commands running on both the server.log, production.log, and  
80 -test.log files. Rails will automatically display debugging and runtime  
81 -information to these files. Debugging info will also be shown in the browser  
82 -on requests from 127.0.0.1.  
83 -  
84 -  
85 -== Breakpoints  
86 -  
87 -Breakpoint support is available through the script/breakpointer client. This  
88 -means that you can break out of execution at any point in the code, investigate  
89 -and change the model, AND then resume execution! Example:  
90 -  
91 - class WeblogController < ActionController::Base  
92 - def index  
93 - @posts = Post.find_all  
94 - breakpoint "Breaking out from the list"  
95 - end  
96 - end  
97 -  
98 -So the controller will accept the action, run the first line, then present you  
99 -with a IRB prompt in the breakpointer window. Here you can do things like:  
100 -  
101 -Executing breakpoint "Breaking out from the list" at .../webrick_server.rb:16 in 'breakpoint'  
102 -  
103 - >> @posts.inspect  
104 - => "[#<Post:0x14a6be8 @attributes={\"title\"=>nil, \"body\"=>nil, \"id\"=>\"1\"}>,  
105 - #<Post:0x14a6620 @attributes={\"title\"=>\"Rails you know!\", \"body\"=>\"Only ten..\", \"id\"=>\"2\"}>]"  
106 - >> @posts.first.title = "hello from a breakpoint"  
107 - => "hello from a breakpoint"  
108 -  
109 -...and even better is that you can examine how your runtime objects actually work:  
110 -  
111 - >> f = @posts.first  
112 - => #<Post:0x13630c4 @attributes={"title"=>nil, "body"=>nil, "id"=>"1"}>  
113 - >> f.  
114 - Display all 152 possibilities? (y or n)  
115 -  
116 -Finally, when you're ready to resume execution, you press CTRL-D  
117 -  
118 -  
119 -== Console  
120 -  
121 -You can interact with the domain model by starting the console through script/console.  
122 -Here you'll have all parts of the application configured, just like it is when the  
123 -application is running. You can inspect domain models, change values, and save to the  
124 -database. Starting the script without arguments will launch it in the development environment.  
125 -Passing an argument will specify a different environment, like <tt>script/console production</tt>.  
126 -  
127 -To reload your controllers and models after launching the console run <tt>reload!</tt>  
128 -  
129 -  
130 -  
131 -== Description of contents  
132 -  
133 -app  
134 - Holds all the code that's specific to this particular application.  
135 -  
136 -app/controllers  
137 - Holds controllers that should be named like weblog_controller.rb for  
138 - automated URL mapping. All controllers should descend from  
139 - ActionController::Base.  
140 -  
141 -app/models  
142 - Holds models that should be named like post.rb.  
143 - Most models will descend from ActiveRecord::Base.  
144 -  
145 -app/views  
146 - Holds the template files for the view that should be named like  
147 - weblog/index.rhtml for the WeblogController#index action. All views use eRuby  
148 - syntax. This directory can also be used to keep stylesheets, images, and so on  
149 - that can be symlinked to public.  
150 -  
151 -app/helpers  
152 - Holds view helpers that should be named like weblog_helper.rb.  
153 -  
154 -app/apis  
155 - Holds API classes for web services.  
156 -  
157 -config  
158 - Configuration files for the Rails environment, the routing map, the database, and other dependencies.  
159 -  
160 -components  
161 - Self-contained mini-applications that can bundle together controllers, models, and views.  
162 -  
163 -db  
164 - Contains the database schema in schema.rb. db/migrate contains all  
165 - the sequence of Migrations for your schema.  
166 -  
167 -lib  
168 - Application specific libraries. Basically, any kind of custom code that doesn't  
169 - belong under controllers, models, or helpers. This directory is in the load path.  
170 -  
171 -public  
172 - The directory available for the web server. Contains subdirectories for images, stylesheets,  
173 - and javascripts. Also contains the dispatchers and the default HTML files.  
174 -  
175 -script  
176 - Helper scripts for automation and generation.  
177 -  
178 -test  
179 - Unit and functional tests along with fixtures.  
180 -  
181 -vendor  
182 - External libraries that the application depends on. Also includes the plugins subdirectory.  
183 - This directory is in the load path.  
README.rails.md 0 → 100644
@@ -0,0 +1,183 @@ @@ -0,0 +1,183 @@
  1 +== Welcome to Rails
  2 +
  3 +Rails is a web-application and persistence framework that includes everything
  4 +needed to create database-backed web-applications according to the
  5 +Model-View-Control pattern of separation. This pattern splits the view (also
  6 +called the presentation) into "dumb" templates that are primarily responsible
  7 +for inserting pre-built data in between HTML tags. The model contains the
  8 +"smart" domain objects (such as Account, Product, Person, Post) that holds all
  9 +the business logic and knows how to persist themselves to a database. The
  10 +controller handles the incoming requests (such as Save New Account, Update
  11 +Product, Show Post) by manipulating the model and directing data to the view.
  12 +
  13 +In Rails, the model is handled by what's called an object-relational mapping
  14 +layer entitled Active Record. This layer allows you to present the data from
  15 +database rows as objects and embellish these data objects with business logic
  16 +methods. You can read more about Active Record in
  17 +link:files/vendor/rails/activerecord/README.html.
  18 +
  19 +The controller and view are handled by the Action Pack, which handles both
  20 +layers by its two parts: Action View and Action Controller. These two layers
  21 +are bundled in a single package due to their heavy interdependence. This is
  22 +unlike the relationship between the Active Record and Action Pack that is much
  23 +more separate. Each of these packages can be used independently outside of
  24 +Rails. You can read more about Action Pack in
  25 +link:files/vendor/rails/actionpack/README.html.
  26 +
  27 +
  28 +== Getting started
  29 +
  30 +1. Start the web server: <tt>ruby script/server</tt> (run with --help for options)
  31 +2. Go to http://localhost:3000/ and get "Welcome aboard: You’re riding the Rails!"
  32 +3. Follow the guidelines to start developing your application
  33 +
  34 +
  35 +== Web servers
  36 +
  37 +Rails uses the built-in web server in Ruby called WEBrick by default, so you don't
  38 +have to install or configure anything to play around.
  39 +
  40 +If you have lighttpd installed, though, it'll be used instead when running script/server.
  41 +It's considerably faster than WEBrick and suited for production use, but requires additional
  42 +installation and currently only works well on OS X/Unix (Windows users are encouraged
  43 +to start with WEBrick). We recommend version 1.4.11 and higher. You can download it from
  44 +http://www.lighttpd.net.
  45 +
  46 +If you want something that's halfway between WEBrick and lighttpd, we heartily recommend
  47 +Mongrel. It's a Ruby-based web server with a C-component (so it requires compilation) that
  48 +also works very well with Windows. See more at http://mongrel.rubyforge.org/.
  49 +
  50 +But of course its also possible to run Rails with the premiere open source web server Apache.
  51 +To get decent performance, though, you'll need to install FastCGI. For Apache 1.3, you want
  52 +to use mod_fastcgi. For Apache 2.0+, you want to use mod_fcgid.
  53 +
  54 +See http://wiki.rubyonrails.com/rails/pages/FastCGI for more information on FastCGI.
  55 +
  56 +== Example for Apache conf
  57 +
  58 + <VirtualHost *:80>
  59 + ServerName rails
  60 + DocumentRoot /path/application/public/
  61 + ErrorLog /path/application/log/server.log
  62 +
  63 + <Directory /path/application/public/>
  64 + Options ExecCGI FollowSymLinks
  65 + AllowOverride all
  66 + Allow from all
  67 + Order allow,deny
  68 + </Directory>
  69 + </VirtualHost>
  70 +
  71 +NOTE: Be sure that CGIs can be executed in that directory as well. So ExecCGI
  72 +should be on and ".cgi" should respond. All requests from 127.0.0.1 go
  73 +through CGI, so no Apache restart is necessary for changes. All other requests
  74 +go through FCGI (or mod_ruby), which requires a restart to show changes.
  75 +
  76 +
  77 +== Debugging Rails
  78 +
  79 +Have "tail -f" commands running on both the server.log, production.log, and
  80 +test.log files. Rails will automatically display debugging and runtime
  81 +information to these files. Debugging info will also be shown in the browser
  82 +on requests from 127.0.0.1.
  83 +
  84 +
  85 +== Breakpoints
  86 +
  87 +Breakpoint support is available through the script/breakpointer client. This
  88 +means that you can break out of execution at any point in the code, investigate
  89 +and change the model, AND then resume execution! Example:
  90 +
  91 + class WeblogController < ActionController::Base
  92 + def index
  93 + @posts = Post.find_all
  94 + breakpoint "Breaking out from the list"
  95 + end
  96 + end
  97 +
  98 +So the controller will accept the action, run the first line, then present you
  99 +with a IRB prompt in the breakpointer window. Here you can do things like:
  100 +
  101 +Executing breakpoint "Breaking out from the list" at .../webrick_server.rb:16 in 'breakpoint'
  102 +
  103 + >> @posts.inspect
  104 + => "[#<Post:0x14a6be8 @attributes={\"title\"=>nil, \"body\"=>nil, \"id\"=>\"1\"}>,
  105 + #<Post:0x14a6620 @attributes={\"title\"=>\"Rails you know!\", \"body\"=>\"Only ten..\", \"id\"=>\"2\"}>]"
  106 + >> @posts.first.title = "hello from a breakpoint"
  107 + => "hello from a breakpoint"
  108 +
  109 +...and even better is that you can examine how your runtime objects actually work:
  110 +
  111 + >> f = @posts.first
  112 + => #<Post:0x13630c4 @attributes={"title"=>nil, "body"=>nil, "id"=>"1"}>
  113 + >> f.
  114 + Display all 152 possibilities? (y or n)
  115 +
  116 +Finally, when you're ready to resume execution, you press CTRL-D
  117 +
  118 +
  119 +== Console
  120 +
  121 +You can interact with the domain model by starting the console through script/console.
  122 +Here you'll have all parts of the application configured, just like it is when the
  123 +application is running. You can inspect domain models, change values, and save to the
  124 +database. Starting the script without arguments will launch it in the development environment.
  125 +Passing an argument will specify a different environment, like <tt>script/console production</tt>.
  126 +
  127 +To reload your controllers and models after launching the console run <tt>reload!</tt>
  128 +
  129 +
  130 +
  131 +== Description of contents
  132 +
  133 +app
  134 + Holds all the code that's specific to this particular application.
  135 +
  136 +app/controllers
  137 + Holds controllers that should be named like weblog_controller.rb for
  138 + automated URL mapping. All controllers should descend from
  139 + ActionController::Base.
  140 +
  141 +app/models
  142 + Holds models that should be named like post.rb.
  143 + Most models will descend from ActiveRecord::Base.
  144 +
  145 +app/views
  146 + Holds the template files for the view that should be named like
  147 + weblog/index.rhtml for the WeblogController#index action. All views use eRuby
  148 + syntax. This directory can also be used to keep stylesheets, images, and so on
  149 + that can be symlinked to public.
  150 +
  151 +app/helpers
  152 + Holds view helpers that should be named like weblog_helper.rb.
  153 +
  154 +app/apis
  155 + Holds API classes for web services.
  156 +
  157 +config
  158 + Configuration files for the Rails environment, the routing map, the database, and other dependencies.
  159 +
  160 +components
  161 + Self-contained mini-applications that can bundle together controllers, models, and views.
  162 +
  163 +db
  164 + Contains the database schema in schema.rb. db/migrate contains all
  165 + the sequence of Migrations for your schema.
  166 +
  167 +lib
  168 + Application specific libraries. Basically, any kind of custom code that doesn't
  169 + belong under controllers, models, or helpers. This directory is in the load path.
  170 +
  171 +public
  172 + The directory available for the web server. Contains subdirectories for images, stylesheets,
  173 + and javascripts. Also contains the dispatchers and the default HTML files.
  174 +
  175 +script
  176 + Helper scripts for automation and generation.
  177 +
  178 +test
  179 + Unit and functional tests along with fixtures.
  180 +
  181 +vendor
  182 + External libraries that the application depends on. Also includes the plugins subdirectory.
  183 + This directory is in the load path.
RELEASING
@@ -1,40 +0,0 @@ @@ -1,40 +0,0 @@
1 -= Noosfero release tasks  
2 -  
3 -This file documents release-related activities.  
4 -  
5 -== Working with translations  
6 -  
7 -* Update translation files: <tt>rake updatepo</tt>. Then <tt>git commit</tt> them.  
8 -* Send the PO files to the translators.  
9 -* Get the PO files back from translators, put in po/ under the correct language  
10 - name (e.,g. po/pt_BR/) and <tt>git commit</tt>.  
11 -* test translations: <tt>rake makemo</tt> and browse the application on the web.  
12 -  
13 -== Releasing noosfero  
14 -  
15 -Considering you are on a Debian GNU/Linux or Debian-based system  
16 - # apt-get install devscripts debhelper  
17 -  
18 -To prepare a release of noosfero, you must follow the steps below:  
19 -  
20 -* Finish all requirements and bugs assigned to the to-be-released version  
21 -* Make sure all tests pass  
22 -* Write release notes at the version's wiki topic  
23 -* Generate packages with <tt>rake noosfero:release[(stable|test)]</tt>. This task will:  
24 - * Update the version in lib/noosfero.rb and debian/changelog.  
25 - * Create the tarbal and the deb pkg under pkg/ directory.  
26 - * Create a git tag and push it.  
27 - * Upload the pkg to the configured repository (if configured) on ~/.dput.cf.  
28 -* Test that the tarball and deb package are ok  
29 -* Go to the version's wiki topic and edit it to reflect the new reality  
30 -* Edit the topic WebPreferences and update DEBIAN_REPOSITORY_TOPICS setting  
31 -* Attach the generated packages to that topic. Before attaching calculate the  
32 - sha1 of the package (with sha1sum and paste the SHA1 hash as comment in the  
33 - attachment form)  
34 -* Download the attached and verify the MD5 hash  
35 -* Update an eventual demonstration version that you run.  
36 -* Write an announcement e-mail to the relevant mailing lists pointing to the  
37 - release notes, and maybe to the demonstration version.  
38 -  
39 -If you had any problem during these steps, you can do <tt>rake clobber_package</tt> to  
40 -completely delete the generated packages and start the process again.  
RELEASING.md 0 → 100644
@@ -0,0 +1,40 @@ @@ -0,0 +1,40 @@
  1 += Noosfero release tasks
  2 +
  3 +This file documents release-related activities.
  4 +
  5 +== Working with translations
  6 +
  7 +* Update translation files: <tt>rake updatepo</tt>. Then <tt>git commit</tt> them.
  8 +* Send the PO files to the translators.
  9 +* Get the PO files back from translators, put in po/ under the correct language
  10 + name (e.,g. po/pt_BR/) and <tt>git commit</tt>.
  11 +* test translations: <tt>rake makemo</tt> and browse the application on the web.
  12 +
  13 +== Releasing noosfero
  14 +
  15 +Considering you are on a Debian GNU/Linux or Debian-based system
  16 + # apt-get install devscripts debhelper
  17 +
  18 +To prepare a release of noosfero, you must follow the steps below:
  19 +
  20 +* Finish all requirements and bugs assigned to the to-be-released version
  21 +* Make sure all tests pass
  22 +* Write release notes at the version's wiki topic
  23 +* Generate packages with <tt>rake noosfero:release[(stable|test)]</tt>. This task will:
  24 + * Update the version in lib/noosfero.rb and debian/changelog.
  25 + * Create the tarbal and the deb pkg under pkg/ directory.
  26 + * Create a git tag and push it.
  27 + * Upload the pkg to the configured repository (if configured) on ~/.dput.cf.
  28 +* Test that the tarball and deb package are ok
  29 +* Go to the version's wiki topic and edit it to reflect the new reality
  30 +* Edit the topic WebPreferences and update DEBIAN_REPOSITORY_TOPICS setting
  31 +* Attach the generated packages to that topic. Before attaching calculate the
  32 + sha1 of the package (with sha1sum and paste the SHA1 hash as comment in the
  33 + attachment form)
  34 +* Download the attached and verify the MD5 hash
  35 +* Update an eventual demonstration version that you run.
  36 +* Write an announcement e-mail to the relevant mailing lists pointing to the
  37 + release notes, and maybe to the demonstration version.
  38 +
  39 +If you had any problem during these steps, you can do <tt>rake clobber_package</tt> to
  40 +completely delete the generated packages and start the process again.
plugins/anti_spam/README
@@ -1,33 +0,0 @@ @@ -1,33 +0,0 @@
1 -README - AntiSpam (AntiSpam Plugin)  
2 -=======================================  
3 -  
4 -Plugin that checks comments against a spam checking service compatible  
5 -with the Akismet API.  
6 -  
7 -  
8 -Enable Plugin  
9 --------------  
10 -  
11 -Also, you need to enable AntiSpam Plugin at your Noosfero:  
12 -  
13 -cd <your_noosfero_dir>  
14 -./script/noosfero-plugins enable anti_spam  
15 -  
16 -  
17 -Activate Plugin  
18 --------------  
19 -  
20 -As a Noosfero administrator user, go to administrator panel:  
21 -  
22 -- Click on "Plugins" option  
23 -- Click on "AntiSpam Plugin" check-box  
24 -  
25 -Configure Plugin  
26 -----------------  
27 -  
28 -As a Noosfero administrator user, go to administrator panel:  
29 -  
30 -- Click on "Configuration" below the "AntiSpam Plugin"  
31 -- Fill in the "API key" field with the key generated after signing up to  
32 - akismet: https://akismet.com/signup/  
33 -- Save your changes  
plugins/anti_spam/README.md 0 → 100644
@@ -0,0 +1,33 @@ @@ -0,0 +1,33 @@
  1 +README - AntiSpam (AntiSpam Plugin)
  2 +=======================================
  3 +
  4 +Plugin that checks comments against a spam checking service compatible
  5 +with the Akismet API.
  6 +
  7 +
  8 +Enable Plugin
  9 +-------------
  10 +
  11 +Also, you need to enable AntiSpam Plugin at your Noosfero:
  12 +
  13 +cd <your_noosfero_dir>
  14 +./script/noosfero-plugins enable anti_spam
  15 +
  16 +
  17 +Activate Plugin
  18 +-------------
  19 +
  20 +As a Noosfero administrator user, go to administrator panel:
  21 +
  22 +- Click on "Plugins" option
  23 +- Click on "AntiSpam Plugin" check-box
  24 +
  25 +Configure Plugin
  26 +----------------
  27 +
  28 +As a Noosfero administrator user, go to administrator panel:
  29 +
  30 +- Click on "Configuration" below the "AntiSpam Plugin"
  31 +- Fill in the "API key" field with the key generated after signing up to
  32 + akismet: https://akismet.com/signup/
  33 +- Save your changes
plugins/display_content/README
@@ -1,70 +0,0 @@ @@ -1,70 +0,0 @@
1 -README - DisplayContent (DisplayContent Plugin)  
2 -================================  
3 -  
4 -DisplayContent is a plugin to allow the user adds a block where you could choose any of your content for display it.  
5 -  
6 -The DisplayContent block will be available for all layout columns of communities, peole, enterprises and environments.  
7 -  
8 -All the articles choosen are displayed as a list with a link for the title and the lead content.  
9 -  
10 -If a Blog or a Folder is choosen the block will display all articles inside the blog or the folder.  
11 -  
12 -Galleries are not displayed in this block.  
13 -  
14 -INSTALL  
15 -=======  
16 -  
17 -Enable Plugin  
18 --------------  
19 -  
20 -Also, you need to enable DisplayContent Plugin at you Noosfero:  
21 -  
22 -cd <your_noosfero_dir>  
23 -./script/noosfero-plugins enable display_content  
24 -  
25 -Active Plugin  
26 --------------  
27 -  
28 -As a Noosfero administrator user, go to administrator panel:  
29 -  
30 -- Click on "Enable/disable plugins" option  
31 -- Click on "Display Content Plugin" check-box  
32 -  
33 -DEVELOPMENT  
34 -===========  
35 -  
36 -Noosfero uses jQuery 1.5.1 and the jsTree doesn't works fine with this jQuery version.  
37 -Until Noosfero upgrade its JQuery version to a newer one is necessary to load jQuery 1.8.3 inside plugin and apply some changes in jsTree to avoid jQuery conflit.  
38 -  
39 -Get the Display Content (Noosfero with Display Content Plugin) development repository:  
40 -  
41 -$ git clone https://gitorious.org/+noosfero/noosfero/display_content  
42 -  
43 -Running DisplayContent tests  
44 ---------------------  
45 -  
46 -$ rake test:noosfero_plugins:display_content  
47 -  
48 -  
49 -Get Involved  
50 -============  
51 -  
52 -If you found any bug and/or want to collaborate, please send an e-mail to leandronunes@gmail.com  
53 -  
54 -LICENSE  
55 -=======  
56 -  
57 -Copyright (c) The Author developers.  
58 -  
59 -See Noosfero license.  
60 -  
61 -  
62 -AUTHORS  
63 -=======  
64 -  
65 - Leandro Nunes dos Santos (leandronunes at gmail.com)  
66 -  
67 -ACKNOWLEDGMENTS  
68 -===============  
69 -  
70 -The author have been supported by Serpro  
plugins/display_content/README.md 0 → 100644
@@ -0,0 +1,70 @@ @@ -0,0 +1,70 @@
  1 +README - DisplayContent (DisplayContent Plugin)
  2 +================================
  3 +
  4 +DisplayContent is a plugin to allow the user adds a block where you could choose any of your content for display it.
  5 +
  6 +The DisplayContent block will be available for all layout columns of communities, peole, enterprises and environments.
  7 +
  8 +All the articles choosen are displayed as a list with a link for the title and the lead content.
  9 +
  10 +If a Blog or a Folder is choosen the block will display all articles inside the blog or the folder.
  11 +
  12 +Galleries are not displayed in this block.
  13 +
  14 +INSTALL
  15 +=======
  16 +
  17 +Enable Plugin
  18 +-------------
  19 +
  20 +Also, you need to enable DisplayContent Plugin at you Noosfero:
  21 +
  22 +cd <your_noosfero_dir>
  23 +./script/noosfero-plugins enable display_content
  24 +
  25 +Active Plugin
  26 +-------------
  27 +
  28 +As a Noosfero administrator user, go to administrator panel:
  29 +
  30 +- Click on "Enable/disable plugins" option
  31 +- Click on "Display Content Plugin" check-box
  32 +
  33 +DEVELOPMENT
  34 +===========
  35 +
  36 +Noosfero uses jQuery 1.5.1 and the jsTree doesn't works fine with this jQuery version.
  37 +Until Noosfero upgrade its JQuery version to a newer one is necessary to load jQuery 1.8.3 inside plugin and apply some changes in jsTree to avoid jQuery conflit.
  38 +
  39 +Get the Display Content (Noosfero with Display Content Plugin) development repository:
  40 +
  41 +$ git clone https://gitorious.org/+noosfero/noosfero/display_content
  42 +
  43 +Running DisplayContent tests
  44 +--------------------
  45 +
  46 +$ rake test:noosfero_plugins:display_content
  47 +
  48 +
  49 +Get Involved
  50 +============
  51 +
  52 +If you found any bug and/or want to collaborate, please send an e-mail to leandronunes@gmail.com
  53 +
  54 +LICENSE
  55 +=======
  56 +
  57 +Copyright (c) The Author developers.
  58 +
  59 +See Noosfero license.
  60 +
  61 +
  62 +AUTHORS
  63 +=======
  64 +
  65 + Leandro Nunes dos Santos (leandronunes at gmail.com)
  66 +
  67 +ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
  68 +===============
  69 +
  70 +The author have been supported by Serpro
plugins/ldap/README
@@ -1,71 +0,0 @@ @@ -1,71 +0,0 @@
1 -README - LDAP (LDAP Plugin)  
2 -================================  
3 -  
4 -LDAP is a plugin to allow ldap authentication to noosfero  
5 -  
6 -  
7 -INSTALL  
8 -=======  
9 -  
10 -Dependences  
11 ------------  
12 -  
13 -See the Noosfero install file. After install Noosfero, install LDAP dependences:  
14 -  
15 -$ gem install net-ldap -v 0.3.1  
16 -  
17 -Enable Plugin  
18 --------------  
19 -  
20 -Also, you need to enable LDAP Plugin at you Noosfero:  
21 -  
22 -cd <your_noosfero_dir>  
23 -./script/noosfero-plugins enable ldap  
24 -  
25 -Active Plugin  
26 --------------  
27 -  
28 -As a Noosfero administrator user, go to administrator panel:  
29 -  
30 -- Click on "Enable/disable plugins" option  
31 -- Click on "LDAP Plugin" check-box  
32 -  
33 -  
34 -DEVELOPMENT  
35 -===========  
36 -  
37 -Get the LDAP (Noosfero with LDAP Plugin) development repository:  
38 -  
39 -$ git clone https://gitorious.org/+noosfero/noosfero/ldap  
40 -  
41 -Running LDAP tests  
42 ---------------------  
43 -  
44 -Configure the ldap server creating the file 'plugins/ldap/fixtures/ldap.yml'.  
45 -A sample file is offered in 'plugins/ldap/fixtures/ldap.yml.dist'  
46 -  
47 -$ rake test:noosfero_plugins:ldap  
48 -  
49 -  
50 -Get Involved  
51 -============  
52 -  
53 -If you found any bug and/or want to collaborate, please send an e-mail to leandronunes@gmail.com  
54 -  
55 -LICENSE  
56 -=======  
57 -  
58 -Copyright (c) The Author developers.  
59 -  
60 -See Noosfero license.  
61 -  
62 -  
63 -AUTHORS  
64 -=======  
65 -  
66 - Leandro Nunes dos Santos (leandronunes at gmail.com)  
67 -  
68 -ACKNOWLEDGMENTS  
69 -===============  
70 -  
71 -The author have been supported by Serpro  
plugins/ldap/README.md 0 → 100644
@@ -0,0 +1,71 @@ @@ -0,0 +1,71 @@
  1 +README - LDAP (LDAP Plugin)
  2 +================================
  3 +
  4 +LDAP is a plugin to allow ldap authentication to noosfero
  5 +
  6 +
  7 +INSTALL
  8 +=======
  9 +
  10 +Dependences
  11 +-----------
  12 +
  13 +See the Noosfero install file. After install Noosfero, install LDAP dependences:
  14 +
  15 +$ gem install net-ldap -v 0.3.1
  16 +
  17 +Enable Plugin
  18 +-------------
  19 +
  20 +Also, you need to enable LDAP Plugin at you Noosfero:
  21 +
  22 +cd <your_noosfero_dir>
  23 +./script/noosfero-plugins enable ldap
  24 +
  25 +Active Plugin
  26 +-------------
  27 +
  28 +As a Noosfero administrator user, go to administrator panel:
  29 +
  30 +- Click on "Enable/disable plugins" option
  31 +- Click on "LDAP Plugin" check-box
  32 +
  33 +
  34 +DEVELOPMENT
  35 +===========
  36 +
  37 +Get the LDAP (Noosfero with LDAP Plugin) development repository:
  38 +
  39 +$ git clone https://gitorious.org/+noosfero/noosfero/ldap
  40 +
  41 +Running LDAP tests
  42 +--------------------
  43 +
  44 +Configure the ldap server creating the file 'plugins/ldap/fixtures/ldap.yml'.
  45 +A sample file is offered in 'plugins/ldap/fixtures/ldap.yml.dist'
  46 +
  47 +$ rake test:noosfero_plugins:ldap
  48 +
  49 +
  50 +Get Involved
  51 +============
  52 +
  53 +If you found any bug and/or want to collaborate, please send an e-mail to leandronunes@gmail.com
  54 +
  55 +LICENSE
  56 +=======
  57 +
  58 +Copyright (c) The Author developers.
  59 +
  60 +See Noosfero license.
  61 +
  62 +
  63 +AUTHORS
  64 +=======
  65 +
  66 + Leandro Nunes dos Santos (leandronunes at gmail.com)
  67 +
  68 +ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
  69 +===============
  70 +
  71 +The author have been supported by Serpro
plugins/mezuro/README
@@ -1,144 +0,0 @@ @@ -1,144 +0,0 @@
1 -README - Mezuro Plugin  
2 -======================  
3 -  
4 -Mezuro is a source code tracking platform based on Noosfero social networking  
5 -platform with Mezuro Plugin actived to access Kalibro Web Service.  
6 -  
7 -  
8 -INSTALL  
9 -=======  
10 -  
11 -Dependences  
12 ------------  
13 -  
14 -See the Noosfero INSTALL (and HACKING) file. After install Noosfero, you must  
15 -install Mezuro dependences:  
16 -  
17 -$ gem install --no-ri --no-rdoc nokogiri -v 1.5.0  
18 -$ gem install --no-ri --no-rdoc wasabi -v 2.0.0  
19 -$ gem install --no-ri --no-rdoc savon -v 0.9.7  
20 -$ gem install --no-ri --no-rdoc googlecharts  
21 -  
22 -$ gem uninstall rack  
23 -$ gem install --no-ri --no-rdoc rack -v 1.0.1  
24 -  
25 -  
26 -*with RVM*  
27 -  
28 -if you want to use RVM (Ruby Version Manager) environment, just run:  
29 -  
30 -$ plugins/mezuro/script/install/install-rvm.sh  
31 -  
32 -  
33 -Enable Mezuro Plugin  
34 ---------------------  
35 -  
36 -Also, you need to enable Mezuro Plugin at your Noosfero installation:  
37 -  
38 -cd <your_noosfero_dir>  
39 -./script/noosfero-plugins enable mezuro  
40 -  
41 -  
42 -Install Service  
43 ----------------  
44 -  
45 -To run Mezuro (Noosfero with Mezuro Plugin), you need to install the Kalibro  
46 -Service. For that, see:  
47 -https://gitorious.org/kalibro/kalibro/blobs/master/INSTALL  
48 -  
49 -  
50 -Configure Service Address  
51 --------------------------  
52 -  
53 -Addictionaly, copy service.yml.example to service.yml and define your Kalibro  
54 -Service address:  
55 -  
56 -$ cd <your_noosfero_dir>/plugin/mezuro  
57 -$ cp service.yml.example service.yml  
58 -  
59 -If you install Kalibro Service at localhost, just keep the default  
60 -adress:  
61 -  
62 -http://localhost:8080/KalibroService/  
63 -  
64 -  
65 -Set Licences list  
66 ------------------  
67 -  
68 -$ cd <your_noosfero_dir>/plugin/mezuro  
69 -$ cp licence.yml.example licence.yml  
70 -  
71 -  
72 -Apply Mezuro Theme  
73 ----------------------  
74 -  
75 -(Our RVM install script already do that)  
76 -  
77 -If you want, you can use the Mezuro default theme:  
78 -  
79 -$ cd public/designs/themes && rm -f default  
80 -$ git clone git://gitorious.org/mezuro/mezuro-theme.git  
81 -$ ln -s mezuro-theme/ default && cd ../../../  
82 -  
83 -  
84 -Active Mezuro Plugin on Noosfero Environment  
85 ---------------------------------------------  
86 -  
87 -As a Noosfero administrator user, go to administrator panel:  
88 -  
89 -- Click on "Enable/disable plugins" option  
90 -- Click on "Mezuro Plugin" check-box  
91 -  
92 -  
93 -DEVELOPMENT  
94 -===========  
95 -  
96 -Get the Mezuro (Noosfero with Mezuro Plugin) development repository:  
97 -  
98 -$ git clone https://gitorious.org/+mezuro/noosfero/mezuro  
99 -$ cd mezuro  
100 -$ git checkout mezuro  
101 -  
102 -Running Mezuro tests  
103 ---------------------  
104 -  
105 -$ rake test:noosfero_plugins:mezuro  
106 -  
107 -or just:  
108 -  
109 -$ rake test:noosfero_plugin_mezuro:units  
110 -$ rake test:noosfero_plugin:mezuro:functionals  
111 -  
112 -  
113 -Get Involved  
114 -============  
115 -  
116 -If you found any bug and/or want to collaborate, please send an e-mail to  
117 -paulo@softwarelivre.org  
118 -  
119 -  
120 -LICENSE  
121 -=======  
122 -  
123 -Copyright (c) The Author developers.  
124 -  
125 -See Noosfero license.  
126 -  
127 -  
128 -AUTHORS  
129 -=======  
130 -  
131 -Please, see the Mezuro AUTHORS file.  
132 -  
133 -  
134 -ACKNOWLEDGMENTS  
135 -===============  
136 -  
137 -The authors have been supported by organizations:  
138 -  
139 -University of São Paulo (USP)  
140 -FLOSS Competence Center  
141 -http://ccsl.ime.usp.br  
142 -  
143 -Brazilian National Research Council (CNPQ)  
144 -http://www.cnpq.br/  
plugins/mezuro/README.md 0 → 100644
@@ -0,0 +1,144 @@ @@ -0,0 +1,144 @@
  1 +README - Mezuro Plugin
  2 +======================
  3 +
  4 +Mezuro is a source code tracking platform based on Noosfero social networking
  5 +platform with Mezuro Plugin actived to access Kalibro Web Service.
  6 +
  7 +
  8 +INSTALL
  9 +=======
  10 +
  11 +Dependences
  12 +-----------
  13 +
  14 +See the Noosfero INSTALL (and HACKING) file. After install Noosfero, you must
  15 +install Mezuro dependences:
  16 +
  17 +$ gem install --no-ri --no-rdoc nokogiri -v 1.5.0
  18 +$ gem install --no-ri --no-rdoc wasabi -v 2.0.0
  19 +$ gem install --no-ri --no-rdoc savon -v 0.9.7
  20 +$ gem install --no-ri --no-rdoc googlecharts
  21 +
  22 +$ gem uninstall rack
  23 +$ gem install --no-ri --no-rdoc rack -v 1.0.1
  24 +
  25 +
  26 +*with RVM*
  27 +
  28 +if you want to use RVM (Ruby Version Manager) environment, just run:
  29 +
  30 +$ plugins/mezuro/script/install/install-rvm.sh
  31 +
  32 +
  33 +Enable Mezuro Plugin
  34 +--------------------
  35 +
  36 +Also, you need to enable Mezuro Plugin at your Noosfero installation:
  37 +
  38 +cd <your_noosfero_dir>
  39 +./script/noosfero-plugins enable mezuro
  40 +
  41 +
  42 +Install Service
  43 +---------------
  44 +
  45 +To run Mezuro (Noosfero with Mezuro Plugin), you need to install the Kalibro
  46 +Service. For that, see:
  47 +https://gitorious.org/kalibro/kalibro/blobs/master/INSTALL
  48 +
  49 +
  50 +Configure Service Address
  51 +-------------------------
  52 +
  53 +Addictionaly, copy service.yml.example to service.yml and define your Kalibro
  54 +Service address:
  55 +
  56 +$ cd <your_noosfero_dir>/plugin/mezuro
  57 +$ cp service.yml.example service.yml
  58 +
  59 +If you install Kalibro Service at localhost, just keep the default
  60 +adress:
  61 +
  62 +http://localhost:8080/KalibroService/
  63 +
  64 +
  65 +Set Licences list
  66 +-----------------
  67 +
  68 +$ cd <your_noosfero_dir>/plugin/mezuro
  69 +$ cp licence.yml.example licence.yml
  70 +
  71 +
  72 +Apply Mezuro Theme
  73 +---------------------
  74 +
  75 +(Our RVM install script already do that)
  76 +
  77 +If you want, you can use the Mezuro default theme:
  78 +
  79 +$ cd public/designs/themes && rm -f default
  80 +$ git clone git://gitorious.org/mezuro/mezuro-theme.git
  81 +$ ln -s mezuro-theme/ default && cd ../../../
  82 +
  83 +
  84 +Active Mezuro Plugin on Noosfero Environment
  85 +--------------------------------------------
  86 +
  87 +As a Noosfero administrator user, go to administrator panel:
  88 +
  89 +- Click on "Enable/disable plugins" option
  90 +- Click on "Mezuro Plugin" check-box
  91 +
  92 +
  93 +DEVELOPMENT
  94 +===========
  95 +
  96 +Get the Mezuro (Noosfero with Mezuro Plugin) development repository:
  97 +
  98 +$ git clone https://gitorious.org/+mezuro/noosfero/mezuro
  99 +$ cd mezuro
  100 +$ git checkout mezuro
  101 +
  102 +Running Mezuro tests
  103 +--------------------
  104 +
  105 +$ rake test:noosfero_plugins:mezuro
  106 +
  107 +or just:
  108 +
  109 +$ rake test:noosfero_plugin_mezuro:units
  110 +$ rake test:noosfero_plugin:mezuro:functionals
  111 +
  112 +
  113 +Get Involved
  114 +============
  115 +
  116 +If you found any bug and/or want to collaborate, please send an e-mail to
  117 +paulo@softwarelivre.org
  118 +
  119 +
  120 +LICENSE
  121 +=======
  122 +
  123 +Copyright (c) The Author developers.
  124 +
  125 +See Noosfero license.
  126 +
  127 +
  128 +AUTHORS
  129 +=======
  130 +
  131 +Please, see the Mezuro AUTHORS file.
  132 +
  133 +
  134 +ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
  135 +===============
  136 +
  137 +The authors have been supported by organizations:
  138 +
  139 +University of São Paulo (USP)
  140 +FLOSS Competence Center
  141 +http://ccsl.ime.usp.br
  142 +
  143 +Brazilian National Research Council (CNPQ)
  144 +http://www.cnpq.br/
plugins/recent_content/README
@@ -1,69 +0,0 @@ @@ -1,69 +0,0 @@
1 -README - RecentContent (RecentContent Plugin)  
2 -================================  
3 -  
4 -RecentContent is a plugin that provides a blog which displays the content posted inside a blog chosen by the user.  
5 -  
6 -The RecentContent block will be available for all layout columns of communities, people, enterprises and environments.  
7 -  
8 -The articles posted from the chosen blog are displayed as a list with a link for the title and optionally the abstract/lead content.  
9 -  
10 -If the chosen blog has a cover image, the user can configure the block to show the same image displayed on that blog.  
11 -  
12 -Galleries and folders are not displayed in this block.  
13 -  
14 -INSTALL  
15 -=======  
16 -  
17 -Enable Plugin  
18 --------------  
19 -  
20 -Also, you need to enable RecentContent Plugin at your Noosfero:  
21 -  
22 -cd <your_noosfero_dir>  
23 -./script/noosfero-plugins enable recent_content  
24 -  
25 -Active Plugin  
26 --------------  
27 -  
28 -As a Noosfero administrator user, go to administrator panel:  
29 -  
30 -- Click on "Enable/disable plugins" option  
31 -- Click on "Recent Content Plugin" check-box  
32 -  
33 -DEVELOPMENT  
34 -===========  
35 -  
36 -Get the Recent Content (Noosfero with Recent Content Plugin) development repository:  
37 -  
38 -$ git clone https://github.com/fga-unb/noosfero/tree/AI2848-block_recent_articles  
39 -  
40 -Running RecentContent tests  
41 ---------------------  
42 -  
43 -$ rake test:noosfero_plugins:recent_content  
44 -  
45 -  
46 -Get Involved  
47 -============  
48 -  
49 -If you found any bug and/or want to collaborate, please send an e-mail to contato@valessiobrito.com.br  
50 -  
51 -LICENSE  
52 -=======  
53 -  
54 -Copyright (c) The Author developers.  
55 -  
56 -See Noosfero license.  
57 -  
58 -  
59 -AUTHORS  
60 -=======  
61 - David Carlos (ddavidcarlos1392 at gmail.com)  
62 - Gabriela Navarro (navarro1703 at gmail.com)  
63 - Marcos Ramos (ms.ramos at outlook.com)  
64 - Valessio Brito (contato at valessiobrito.com.br)  
65 -  
66 -ACKNOWLEDGMENTS  
67 -===============  
68 -  
69 -The author have been supported by FGA - UnB and Lappis  
plugins/recent_content/README.md 0 → 100644
@@ -0,0 +1,69 @@ @@ -0,0 +1,69 @@
  1 +README - RecentContent (RecentContent Plugin)
  2 +================================
  3 +
  4 +RecentContent is a plugin that provides a blog which displays the content posted inside a blog chosen by the user.
  5 +
  6 +The RecentContent block will be available for all layout columns of communities, people, enterprises and environments.
  7 +
  8 +The articles posted from the chosen blog are displayed as a list with a link for the title and optionally the abstract/lead content.
  9 +
  10 +If the chosen blog has a cover image, the user can configure the block to show the same image displayed on that blog.
  11 +
  12 +Galleries and folders are not displayed in this block.
  13 +
  14 +INSTALL
  15 +=======
  16 +
  17 +Enable Plugin
  18 +-------------
  19 +
  20 +Also, you need to enable RecentContent Plugin at your Noosfero:
  21 +
  22 +cd <your_noosfero_dir>
  23 +./script/noosfero-plugins enable recent_content
  24 +
  25 +Active Plugin
  26 +-------------
  27 +
  28 +As a Noosfero administrator user, go to administrator panel:
  29 +
  30 +- Click on "Enable/disable plugins" option
  31 +- Click on "Recent Content Plugin" check-box
  32 +
  33 +DEVELOPMENT
  34 +===========
  35 +
  36 +Get the Recent Content (Noosfero with Recent Content Plugin) development repository:
  37 +
  38 +$ git clone https://github.com/fga-unb/noosfero/tree/AI2848-block_recent_articles
  39 +
  40 +Running RecentContent tests
  41 +--------------------
  42 +
  43 +$ rake test:noosfero_plugins:recent_content
  44 +
  45 +
  46 +Get Involved
  47 +============
  48 +
  49 +If you found any bug and/or want to collaborate, please send an e-mail to contato@valessiobrito.com.br
  50 +
  51 +LICENSE
  52 +=======
  53 +
  54 +Copyright (c) The Author developers.
  55 +
  56 +See Noosfero license.
  57 +
  58 +
  59 +AUTHORS
  60 +=======
  61 + David Carlos (ddavidcarlos1392 at gmail.com)
  62 + Gabriela Navarro (navarro1703 at gmail.com)
  63 + Marcos Ramos (ms.ramos at outlook.com)
  64 + Valessio Brito (contato at valessiobrito.com.br)
  65 +
  66 +ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
  67 +===============
  68 +
  69 +The author have been supported by FGA - UnB and Lappis
plugins/solr/INSTALL
@@ -1,19 +0,0 @@ @@ -1,19 +0,0 @@
1 -(THIS INSTALL IS INCOMPLETE)  
2 -  
3 -Dependencies  
4 -============  
5 -  
6 -apt-get install openjdk-6-jre  
7 -  
8 -* Solr: http://lucene.apache.org/solr  
9 -  
10 -Instalation  
11 -===========  
12 -  
13 -$ rake solr:download  
14 -  
15 -Running the server  
16 -==================  
17 -Run Solr  
18 -  
19 -$ rake solr:start  
plugins/solr/INSTALL.md 0 → 100644
@@ -0,0 +1,19 @@ @@ -0,0 +1,19 @@
  1 +(THIS INSTALL IS INCOMPLETE)
  2 +
  3 +Dependencies
  4 +============
  5 +
  6 +apt-get install openjdk-6-jre
  7 +
  8 +* Solr: http://lucene.apache.org/solr
  9 +
  10 +Instalation
  11 +===========
  12 +
  13 +$ rake solr:download
  14 +
  15 +Running the server
  16 +==================
  17 +Run Solr
  18 +
  19 +$ rake solr:start
plugins/solr/README
@@ -1,6 +0,0 @@ @@ -1,6 +0,0 @@
1 -(THIS README IS INCOMPLETE)  
2 -  
3 -Configuration  
4 -=============  
5 -Copy config/solr.yml.dist to config/solr.yml. You will  
6 --probably not need to customize this configuration, but have a look at it.  
plugins/solr/README.md 0 → 100644
@@ -0,0 +1,6 @@ @@ -0,0 +1,6 @@
  1 +(THIS README IS INCOMPLETE)
  2 +
  3 +Configuration
  4 +=============
  5 +Copy config/solr.yml.dist to config/solr.yml. You will
  6 +-probably not need to customize this configuration, but have a look at it.
plugins/spaminator/README
@@ -1,44 +0,0 @@ @@ -1,44 +0,0 @@
1 -README - Spaminator (Spaminator Plugin)  
2 -=======================================  
3 -  
4 -Plugin that search and destroy spams and spammers.  
5 -  
6 -  
7 -Enable Plugin  
8 --------------  
9 -  
10 -Also, you need to enable Spaminator Plugin at your Noosfero:  
11 -  
12 -cd <your_noosfero_dir>  
13 -./script/noosfero-plugins enable spaminator  
14 -  
15 -And run the migrations for Spaminator Plugin at your Noosfero:  
16 -cd <your_noosfero_dir>  
17 -  
18 -- Development environment:  
19 -rake db:migrate  
20 -  
21 -- Production environment:  
22 -RAILS_ENV=production rake db:migrate  
23 -  
24 -  
25 -Activate Plugin  
26 --------------  
27 -  
28 -As a Noosfero administrator user, go to administrator panel:  
29 -  
30 -- Click on "Plugins" option  
31 -- Click on "Spaminator Plugin" check-box  
32 -  
33 -Configure Plugin  
34 -----------------  
35 -  
36 -As a Noosfero administrator user, go to administrator panel:  
37 -  
38 -- Click on "Configuration" below the "Spaminator Plugin"  
39 -- Define how often the plugin will run on "Period (days) for scanning spammers"  
40 -- Save your changes  
41 -  
42 -The "Scan now!" button will run spaminator plugin when clicked.  
43 -The "Deploy" button will schedule scanning to run after the period  
44 -defined on "Period (days) for scanning spammers".  
plugins/spaminator/README.md 0 → 100644
@@ -0,0 +1,44 @@ @@ -0,0 +1,44 @@
  1 +README - Spaminator (Spaminator Plugin)
  2 +=======================================
  3 +
  4 +Plugin that search and destroy spams and spammers.
  5 +
  6 +
  7 +Enable Plugin
  8 +-------------
  9 +
  10 +Also, you need to enable Spaminator Plugin at your Noosfero:
  11 +
  12 +cd <your_noosfero_dir>
  13 +./script/noosfero-plugins enable spaminator
  14 +
  15 +And run the migrations for Spaminator Plugin at your Noosfero:
  16 +cd <your_noosfero_dir>
  17 +
  18 +- Development environment:
  19 +rake db:migrate
  20 +
  21 +- Production environment:
  22 +RAILS_ENV=production rake db:migrate
  23 +
  24 +
  25 +Activate Plugin
  26 +-------------
  27 +
  28 +As a Noosfero administrator user, go to administrator panel:
  29 +
  30 +- Click on "Plugins" option
  31 +- Click on "Spaminator Plugin" check-box
  32 +
  33 +Configure Plugin
  34 +----------------
  35 +
  36 +As a Noosfero administrator user, go to administrator panel:
  37 +
  38 +- Click on "Configuration" below the "Spaminator Plugin"
  39 +- Define how often the plugin will run on "Period (days) for scanning spammers"
  40 +- Save your changes
  41 +
  42 +The "Scan now!" button will run spaminator plugin when clicked.
  43 +The "Deploy" button will schedule scanning to run after the period
  44 +defined on "Period (days) for scanning spammers".
plugins/stoa/README
@@ -1,28 +0,0 @@ @@ -1,28 +0,0 @@
1 -README - Stoa (Stoa Plugin)  
2 -================================  
3 -  
4 -Plugin that includes features to Stoa, USP's social network  
5 -  
6 -More informartion about Stoa: http://wiki.stoa.usp.br/Stoa:Sobre  
7 -  
8 -DATABASE  
9 -========  
10 -  
11 -First you need to configure Noosfero to connect with the database users from USP.  
12 -For that, add a section setting the connection on file config/database.yml with the the identifier "stoa".  
13 -  
14 -Example:  
15 ---------  
16 -  
17 -stoa:  
18 - adapter: mysql  
19 - host: db2.stoa.usp.br  
20 - database: usp  
21 - username: <usuario>  
22 - password: <senha>  
23 -  
24 -CONFIGURATION  
25 -=============  
26 -  
27 -Copy config.yml.dist to config.yml on Stoa plugin's folder.  
28 -You need to customize this configuration, adding a Salt ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salt_(cryptography) ).  
plugins/stoa/README.md 0 → 100644
@@ -0,0 +1,28 @@ @@ -0,0 +1,28 @@
  1 +README - Stoa (Stoa Plugin)
  2 +================================
  3 +
  4 +Plugin that includes features to Stoa, USP's social network
  5 +
  6 +More informartion about Stoa: http://wiki.stoa.usp.br/Stoa:Sobre
  7 +
  8 +DATABASE
  9 +========
  10 +
  11 +First you need to configure Noosfero to connect with the database users from USP.
  12 +For that, add a section setting the connection on file config/database.yml with the the identifier "stoa".
  13 +
  14 +Example:
  15 +--------
  16 +
  17 +stoa:
  18 + adapter: mysql
  19 + host: db2.stoa.usp.br
  20 + database: usp
  21 + username: <usuario>
  22 + password: <senha>
  23 +
  24 +CONFIGURATION
  25 +=============
  26 +
  27 +Copy config.yml.dist to config.yml on Stoa plugin's folder.
  28 +You need to customize this configuration, adding a Salt ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salt_(cryptography) ).
plugins/video/README
@@ -1,57 +0,0 @@ @@ -1,57 +0,0 @@
1 -README - Video (Video Plugin)  
2 -================================  
3 -  
4 -Video is a plugin that allow users to add a block where you can choose  
5 -any url from youtube, vimeo and url's of the following file formats:  
6 -mp4, ogg, ogv and webm.  
7 -  
8 -The Video block will be available for all layout columns of communities,  
9 -people, enterprises and environments.  
10 -  
11 -INSTALL  
12 -=======  
13 -  
14 -Enable Plugin  
15 --------------  
16 -  
17 -Also, you need to enable Video Plugin on your Noosfero:  
18 -  
19 -cd <your_noosfero_dir>  
20 -./script/noosfero-plugins enable video  
21 -  
22 -Active Plugin  
23 --------------  
24 -  
25 -As a Noosfero administrator user, go to administrator panel:  
26 -  
27 -- Click on "Enable/disable plugins" option  
28 -- Click on "Display Content Plugin" check-box  
29 -  
30 -Running Video tests  
31 ---------------------  
32 -  
33 -$ rake test:noosfero_plugins:video  
34 -  
35 -  
36 -Get Involved  
37 -============  
38 -  
39 -If you find any bug and/or want to collaborate, please send an e-mail to leandronunes@gmail.com  
40 -  
41 -LICENSE  
42 -=======  
43 -  
44 -Copyright (c) The Author developers.  
45 -  
46 -See Noosfero license.  
47 -  
48 -  
49 -AUTHORS  
50 -=======  
51 -  
52 - Leandro Nunes dos Santos (leandronunes at gmail.com)  
53 -  
54 -ACKNOWLEDGMENTS  
55 -===============  
56 -  
57 -The author have been supported by Serpro  
plugins/video/README.md 0 → 100644
@@ -0,0 +1,57 @@ @@ -0,0 +1,57 @@
  1 +README - Video (Video Plugin)
  2 +================================
  3 +
  4 +Video is a plugin that allow users to add a block where you can choose
  5 +any url from youtube, vimeo and url's of the following file formats:
  6 +mp4, ogg, ogv and webm.
  7 +
  8 +The Video block will be available for all layout columns of communities,
  9 +people, enterprises and environments.
  10 +
  11 +INSTALL
  12 +=======
  13 +
  14 +Enable Plugin
  15 +-------------
  16 +
  17 +Also, you need to enable Video Plugin on your Noosfero:
  18 +
  19 +cd <your_noosfero_dir>
  20 +./script/noosfero-plugins enable video
  21 +
  22 +Active Plugin
  23 +-------------
  24 +
  25 +As a Noosfero administrator user, go to administrator panel:
  26 +
  27 +- Click on "Enable/disable plugins" option
  28 +- Click on "Display Content Plugin" check-box
  29 +
  30 +Running Video tests
  31 +--------------------
  32 +
  33 +$ rake test:noosfero_plugins:video
  34 +
  35 +
  36 +Get Involved
  37 +============
  38 +
  39 +If you find any bug and/or want to collaborate, please send an e-mail to leandronunes@gmail.com
  40 +
  41 +LICENSE
  42 +=======
  43 +
  44 +Copyright (c) The Author developers.
  45 +
  46 +See Noosfero license.
  47 +
  48 +
  49 +AUTHORS
  50 +=======
  51 +
  52 + Leandro Nunes dos Santos (leandronunes at gmail.com)
  53 +
  54 +ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
  55 +===============
  56 +
  57 +The author have been supported by Serpro