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Apple Mail Encryption with GPGMail and OpenPGP

Category : Technical, Uncategorized
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I’ve dabbled with encryption several times over the past few decades, never really getting serious about it.  It started when, in college, I would see that the faculty in the CS department had these weird signature blocks appended to the their USEnet posts containing something called a public key.

This is like setting a can of lighter fluid and box of blue-tip matches in front of a 10 year-old boy — irresistible.

What I found in the later years is that using encryption for email is a lot like being one of the early adopters of the telephone.  Now that I have one, who am I going to call?  My family certainly doesn’t use encryption in their email…those that have discovered email anyway.

Co-workers aren’t likely to invest the time and effort into encryption simply because we’re all too busy with work to be playing spy-games with our de-coder rings.

And, Dorothy, we’re not in Academia anymore where, I imagine, it’s really in use.  Closeted anarchists posting semi-heretical Berkeley-esqe rants against the Proletariat and all that.

And then there’s the whole nouveau post-9/11 trend of “Guilty until Proven Innocent” thing happening.  I imagine some fedora-capped DHS agent squinting at me in a menacing fashion while I try to reason a plausible excuse for being so brazen as to need encryption for my emails in the first place…

So, at this point, let’s assume that, like me, you’re willing to whack the hornet’s nest with a stick and use encryption for your emails and that you actually have someone on the other end willing to dust-off the de-coder ring and play with you.  We’ll also assume that you know what PGP, GPG and OpenPGP actually are, and that you know how basic public-key encryption works.  (If not, leave comments to this article and I will do a future article explaining same.)

Standard Disclaimer: I am providing this tutorial as a hands-on, learn-with-me type of tutorial.  I am not an expert, nor do I pretend to claim anything other than neophyte status when it comes to encryption.  I do not advocate, support, or intend for you to use this, or any, technology as a means to intentionally bending, fracturing, or breaking laws in one or more jurisdictions.  MY only intent is to share what I’ve recently learned with you and to have some fun.

OK – that crap out of the way, let’s get started.  First, as the title implies, this set-up is for Apple Mail under OS X Lion.  The release of the OS I’m currently working on is 10.7.4.

Download and install the GPGTools utility  (Version 2012.03.18 as of this writing.)

Although this article is for Apple mail, the GPGTools utility includes support for Enigmail in Thunderbird 7.  When you launch the installation utility, you’ll be presented with a list of packages to install.  I installed all packages.

Once the install has been completed, you’ll see a little dialog box appear on your desk top telling you the installation was successful, and would you like to read the Quickstart Tutorial?  This would be a good thing to do because I am not going to walk you thought the next steps in any great detail.  This reference, however, does.  With pictures.  So… go there and follow the installation step to:

Generate a key

You will generate a public and a private key.  Anyone with whom you wish to exchange encrypted email with must also have done the same.  They’re called public and private keys for a reason.  One you share with the public and one you do not.  Key, using the nomenclature, are stored on what’s called a keyring.  There are public and private key-rings.  GPGTools refers to key-rings as  keychains - these are one and the same things.

Please note that for whichever email account you’re going to use to generate a key-pair for, that account must already exist in Apple mail.  The email address is case-sensitive so make sure you type it in exactly as it is stored in Apple Mail — otherwise, your encryption will not work.

Over the years, I have created several key-pairs for various email addresses I have had.  What’s critically important to remember is this:  write down your pass-phrase.  Also, click on the Advanced options tab, and set an expiration date (a couple of years is fine and 4-years is the current default – point being: set an expiration date) for your keys.  That way if, after a few years, you return to a previous email account address, and you’ve certainly forgotten your passphrase from lack of use, then you’ll still be able to generate a new key pair if the old one has expired.  To remove a key pair, most public key rings require you to enter your passphrase.  This is known as a conundrum.

Once you’ve created your passphrase and uploaded your key, and you can see your new key in your keychain, open Apple Mail.  Send an email to

the email address you’ve just created (I know…) and you should see two buttons appear in the lower-right corner of the header bar as shown in the image on the right.

The two buttons, as shown above, allow you to either sign or encrypt your mail message.

Signing your email is flagging the email to the recipient assuring them that it was actually you who sent the mail.  In order to sign an email, OpenPGP has to have access to your private key. (You did keep your private key private, right?)  Since you’re the only one, presumably, with access to your private key, then signing the mail guarantees to the recipient that the mail did come from you.

The recipient does not need to have your public key, nor do you need to have the recipient’s public key, to sign an email.  Think of this as the “certified mail” from the US Post Office equivalent for email.

If you have a recipient’s public key, then you may send them an encrypted email.  The recipient will need to have your public key in order to decrypt and read the email — this is why we store public keys on public key rings.

-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
 
Version: GnuPG/MacGPG2 v2.0.18 (Darwin)
 
iQEcBAEBAgAGBQJPtnyiAAoJEC4S4zGLhwvBFNMH/1Yoh59etAcYZpAhZ+htpd81
QzZWDxOR2PeXtPkY3GWl4vdW7GABJ9ysl8vpdErsDtXs6LEVZXag5mV6CGTDNXmm
pdozUJCgNwbHTgoIUdjinmAXLR+4pYSfALTB1S2qpxzMpykBkR7SMuPm3+0LC77/
dwnsSVx5CNtJd8cPoPjwXJ6zaStJCNK+H17MItS5kpw3MqMU35qZdNCDV6ehhA8j
FmTyFoh1TeTmuBrNECWz9z3KniG6SWVl3K21LmS8PQExeHq8qcHGBz5yK2YhoW/w
bn4PIyHaUiXKQTNhYBSd1DrCPUWJKDJ+VCKQ0L97aUPeVPQBI14jsFOgc1dwUjs=
=xfmB
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----

That’s pretty much it — once you send a signed an encrypted mail, you can rest assured that (hopefully) your emails are safe from casually-prying eyes as they’re no longer being sent in clear-text across the ether sphere.

Here’s the raw-text (what’s sent out over the ether) of an encrypted email message:

 

Return-Path: <mshallop@gmail.com>
 
Received: from [192.168.0.2] (c-50-136-203-107.hsd1.ca.comcast.net. [50.136.203.107])
by mx.google.com with ESMTPS id qu6sm6794406pbc.36.2012.05.18.09.54.57
(version=TLSv1/SSLv3 cipher=OTHER);
Fri, 18 May 2012 09:54:58 -0700 (PDT)
Content-Type: multipart/encrypted; boundary="Apple-Mail=_4C5344B9-76FE-43EF-8620-073841EBF944"; protocol="application/pgp-encrypted";
Subject: test both
Mime-Version: 1.0 (Apple Message framework v1278)
X-Pgp-Agent: GPGMail 201 (a30)
From: Micheal Shallop <mshallop@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, 18 May 2012 09:54:56 -0700
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Message-Id: <407C94BA-32A1-4930-B9F6-BBFE7900D213@gmail.com>
Content-Description: OpenPGP encrypted message
To: Micheal Shallop <mshallop@gmail.com>
X-Mailer: Apple Mail (2.1278)
 
This is an OpenPGP/MIME encrypted message (RFC 2440 and 3156)
--Apple-Mail=_4C5344B9-76FE-43EF-8620-073841EBF944
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Type: application/pgp-encrypted
Content-Description: PGP/MIME Versions Identification
 
Version: 1
 
--Apple-Mail=_4C5344B9-76FE-43EF-8620-073841EBF944
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
filename=encrypted.asc
Content-Type: application/octet-stream;
name=encrypted.asc
Content-Description: OpenPGP encrypted message
 
-----BEGIN PGP MESSAGE-----
Version: GnuPG/MacGPG2 v2.0.18 (Darwin)
 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=z4VQ
-----END PGP MESSAGE-----
 
--Apple-Mail=_4C5344B9-76FE-43EF-8620-073841EBF944--

 

Reference Pages and Additional Reading:

GPGTools First Steps
Secure Email in Thunderbird and Apple Mail with GPG

Why is my mongo query so slow?

Category : Technical
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Why’s my mongodb query so slow?

I got my geospatial collection set-up — I am running some really great queries making sure that the locations I am pulling aren’t in any sort of cache, and I am just blown-away by how fast data is being returned.

The problem is:  when I query the collection to pull up the requisite lon/lat data by name:  city & state, or city & country, the query seems to take seconds to complete!

I set-up the table correctly…I indexed the crap out of all my columns…a week or two ago, I was at the mongoSV 2011 in Santa Clara and learned some really cool stuff about queries, indexing, and performance management, so let’s dig-out the notes and see where I went wrong.  Because I strongly doubt that the problem is in mongo but, rather as we used to say in technical support: this is a PBCK issue…

The first thing I want to do is run an explain against my query so I can see mongo’s query plan for my query.  This should provide me with a starting point for trying to figure out what went wrong.

> db.geodata_geo.find({ cityName : “Anniston”, stateName : “Alabama” }).explain();

By adding the trailing function: .explain(), I’m requesting that mongoDB return the query-plan to me instead of executing the query.  I hit enter to launch the explain() and get back the following output:

> db.geodata_geo.find({ cityName : “Anniston”, stateName : “Alabama”}).explain();
{
“cursor” : “BasicCursor“,
“nscanned” : 3691723,
“nscannedObjects” : 3691723,
“n” : 1,
“millis” : 2269,
“nYields” : 0,
“nChunkSkips” : 0,
“isMultiKey” : false,
indexOnly” : false,
“indexBounds” : {

}
}

The important information, I bold-faced in the query output (above).   What this output is telling me is that I’ve using a “BasicCursor” for my search cursor — which is indicates that, yes, I am doing a table-scan on the collection.  So, already I know my query is not optimal.  But, wait!  More good news…

The value for nscanned and nscannedObjects is the same: 3,691,723 — which coincidently is the same as the cardinality of the collection.  This number is the number of documents scanned to satisfy the query which, given it’s value, confirms that I am doing a full table scan.

millis tells me the number of milliseconds that the query would take:  2.269 seconds:  way too slow for my back-end methods() serving a REST API — unacceptable.

And then we get to the tell:  IndexOnly tells me that if the query could have been resolved by an (existing) covering index.  Seeing the value false here tells me that the collection has no index on the columns I am scanning against.

What?!?  I know I indexed this collection…

So, I run db.geodata_geo.getIndexes() to dump my indexes and … I … don’t see my name columns indexed.  Oh, I remembered to index the the ID and Code columns…but somehow, indexing the Name columns completely slipped past my lower brain-pan.

I add these indexes to my collection:

> db.geodata_geo.ensureIndex({ cityName : 1 });
> db.geodata_geo.ensureIndex({ stateName : 1 });

And then I rerun the query plan and see the following output:

> db.geodata_geo.find({ cityName : “Anniston”, stateName : “Alabama”}).explain();
{
“cursor” : “BtreeCursor cityName_1″,
“nscanned” : 2,
“nscannedObjects” : 2,
“n” : 1,
“millis” : 101,
“nYields” : 0,
“nChunkSkips” : 0,
“isMultiKey” : false,
“indexOnly” : false,
“indexBounds” : {
“cityName” : [
[
"Anniston",
"Anniston"
]
]
}
}

Instead of BasicCursor, I see BtreeCursor which gives me a happy.  I also see that the nscanned and nscannedObjects values are now more realistic…seriously:  2 is a LOT better than 3.6 million something, right?  Another happy for me!

I score the third happy when I see that the millis has dropped down to 101:  0.101 seconds to execute this search/query!  Not jaw-dropping, I agree — but acceptable considering that everything is running off my laptop…I know production times will be much, much lower.

 

In the end, I learned that a simple tool like .explain() can tell me where my attention is needed when it comes to optimization and fixing even simple, seemingly innocent queries.  Knowing what you’re looking at, and what you’re looking for, is pretty much thick-end of the baseball bat when it comes to crushing one out of the park.

I hope this helps!

 

Reference Link:  Explain

Searching MongoDB Sub-Documents…

Category : Technical
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I’ve recently finished a mongo collection that stores all auditing data from my application — specifically, it records every database transaction, conducted in either mySQL or mongo, assigning an event-identifier to the event, and storing the data under an event ID within a single sessionManger object.

Sounds good?

Well, I like it.   This design eliminated the need to maintain meta-data in my data tables since I can pull transaction history for any record that I’ve accessed.

The problem is that, being new to mongodb, accessing what I’ve put into mongodb isn’t (yet) as intuitive as, say, my mySQL skills are.

Sub-documents within a mongo document are analogous to the results of a mySQL join.  One of the key motivators in storing this information in mongodb to begin with was that I could de-normalize the data by storing the sub-document with it’s parent instead of having to incur the expense of a search-join-fetch later.

Traditionally, any data objects defined as a one-to-many type of a relationship (1:m) were stored in multiple mySQL tables and were accessed via some sort of join mechanism.

Mongodb breaks that traditional mold by allowing you to store a sub-document (the “m” part of the 1:m relationship) within the same document in which you’re currently working.

Using my sessionManger document, I have a document that looks something like this:

{
_id : somevalue,
foo : bar,
event : {},
argle : bargle,
}

My desire is to, for every database event that is recorded, enter information about that event within the sub-document that I’ve wittily named “event”.

In my PHP code, I’ve written a sequence manager for mongo that maintains a document containing sequence values for various tables.  Think of this as the functional version of mySQL’s auto-increment feature.  I decided, then, for the sessionManager events, I would use this key sequence to obtain unique values and use those as my sub-document index.  I’d then store whatever data I needed to store using the sequence value as a sub-document key, or index:

{
_id : somevalue,
foo: bar,
event : {
n : {
created : dateval,
table : tableName,
schema : dbSchema,
query : lastQuery
}
}
argle : bargle
}

So, when I need to add another event, I just create a new sub-document under the event key, then add the data I need to store under the sub-document index key.

Worked like a champ!

And then I asked myself:  ”So, Brainiac, how would you go about extracting event -n- from your collection?”

I went through a lot of failed query attempts, bugged a lot of people, googled and saw stuff  that led me down many plush ratholes until I finally, through some serious trial-and-error, got the answer…

> db.mytable.find( { foo : bar }, { ‘event.n’ : 1 } );

where n = the number of the event I want to find.

If I want to get all of the events for a particular document (sessionManger object), then I would write something like:

> db.mytable.find( {foo : bar}, { event : 1});

If I wanted to return all of the events for all of the objects, then I would write this:

> db.mytable.find( {}, {event : 1});

What I’ve not been able to figure out, so far, is how I can use $slice to grab a range of events within a document.  Everything I try returns the full sub-set of documents back to me.  The doc tells me that $slice is used to return a subrange of array elements, which is what I thought “event.n” was but, apparently, it’s not.  (I think it’s an object (sub-document) which is why $slice fails for me.)

It’s not a big deal because, programmatically, I can grap the entire sub-document from it’s parent and parse in-memory to get the desired record.  And, if I know what the value for -n- is, then I can fetch just that one sub-document.  So, I’m ok for now.  However, please feel free to enlighten me with your expertise and experience should you see where I am failing here, ok?

 

Web Services with PHP & nuSoap – Part 1.1

Category : Technical
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Introduction

[EDIT] – This is a re-hash of a document I wrote a couple years ago.  There’s been changes to the nuSOAP library and I wanted to document the updates relative to the tutorial series.  Also, I need to fix a lot of the broken-links and code listings since I’ve changes hosting providers since this article was first written.

This article is specific to nuSOAP release 0.9.5 on 2011-01-13.  This tutorial was updated on September 22, 2011.

Once upon a time, I was tasked with developing a web-services by my boss as the integration point between our production application and Sales Force.  At this point, although I’d heard of web services … kind of … didn’t Amazon use web services for something?  Still, I’d never coded a web-services based application before.

At this point, I have to assume you are unfamiliar with the concept of web services and why you may have to create and provide a web-services offering to your client base.  Web services allow a remote client to access functionality (as defined by you, the programmer) via the standard HTTP interface (normally, port:80) to your application and database services.

Back in the day, networking services (semaphores, pipes, streams, message queues, and other forms of IPC) were custom-written and assigned/slaved to unique networking ports for accessing specific service daemons.  Of course, the internet was a kinder, gentler place back then… and a given server may have had dozens, or even hundreds, of non-standard ports open, listening, waiting, for networking service requests.  Or hacking attempts.

Today, web-services is a replacement to dedicated networking apps – all handled by your web server, and all serviced over the same network port: port 80.  Since port 80 is a standard port and, usually, already open on a web-server, additional security risks by opening new non-standard ports for networking services are averted.  Your web-server, such as Apache, now has the responsibility of processing the request and delivering the results to the client.

The web-services component piece is a collection of functions that you’ve written that provide remote clients access to your system.  These functions are accessible only via the web services framework and while they may be duplicated from a dedicated and traditional web-based application, the web-services framework is designed as a stand-alone piece of software.  Think of the web-services piece as your application’s data-processing layer minus the presentation layer.  The “M” and “C” of the “MVC” model.

Initially, when I was tasked with a similar set of objectives, I initially tried xml-rpc.  This led me down a rabbit-hole that spanned nearly a week of my time with the end-result being abandonment.  I hit road-blocks with xml-rpc over server authentication and passing complex objects.  Exacerbating the issue overall is that xml-rpc seems to be dated technology – I had a hard time locating resources that were recent.

Then I stumbled across nuSOAP – it’s free via sourceForge, stable and, using a quote from sourceForge:

“NuSOAP is a rewrite of SOAPx4, provided by NuSphere and Dietrich Ayala. It is a set of PHP classes – no PHP extensions required – that allow developers to create and consume web services based on SOAP 1.1, WSDL 1.1 and HTTP 1.0/1.1.”

nuSOAP seemed to have more of everything available: tutorials, examples, articles, blog posts.  When I started my implementation with nuSOAP, the first thing I received help with was server-level authentication.  I was able to immediately get my remote requests validated by the web-server and handed off to the web-services module!

The major selling point, for me, on nuSOAP is that nuSOAP is self-documenting.  As part of the API functionality, nuSOAP generates HTML pages that documents the exposed services via the WSDL  and also provides you with a complete XSLT definition file!

First off, download and install the nuSOAP libraries – I provided a link to the sourceForge site a couple paragraphs ago – and unpack the tarball.  You’ll end-up with a directory (mine is called: ./nuSOAP) and, within that directory, is the one file you include: nusoap.php.

There are two pieces to this tutorial — a server side piece and a client-side piece.  While you can execute both pieces off the same environment (machine), normally you’d use the client remotely to access the API server-side code.

What’s Not Covered:

Apache.  Apache configuration for your vhost.  Apache .htaccess.  This article assumes that you’ve a working server and that you’re able to install and access the server files via Apache.  Even if your Apache server is a localhost configuration, access the server-side files via localhost client, traversing the TCP stack locally, is still a valid method for testing your web-services server application.

 

Time to push up our sleeves and start working on the server code…

The Web-Services Server

Today, we’re going to write a ping server — where the server has an exposed service (method) named “ping” which takes a single argument (a string) and returns an array back to the calling client.  The return array contains two associative members: a boolean (which should always be true – otherwise there are other issues…) and a string which is the modification of the original string in order to prove that, yes, we went there and we came back.

Because my project, and I’m doing this project for my new company, is going to represent significant effort, size and complexity, I’ve broken out the components of nuSOAP request into exterior files because, later, these will become control file which will, in turn, load files that have been organized into a hierarchy friendly to the application’s data model.

So, if this file, which I’ve named index.php, seems small, remember that you’re not viewing the dependent files (yet).

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<pre><?php
/**
 *
 */


// setup...
require('./nuSOAP/nusoap.php');
// set namespace and initiate soap_server instance
$namespace = "http://myapi/index.php";
$server = new soap_server('');
// name the api
$server->configureWSDL("myapi");
// assign namespace
$server->wsdl->schemaTargetNamespace = $namespace;
// register services
require('myServiceRegistrations.php');
// load WSDL...
include('mywsdl.php');
// load services code modules...
require('myServicesModules.php');
// create HHTP listener:
$request = isset($HTTP_RAW_POST_DATA) ? $HTTP_RAW_POST_DATA : '';
$server->service($request);
exit();
?></pre>

So far, so good – let’s take a look at what we’ve just done:

  • we’ve included the nu_soap library…
  • declared our namespace (which is the URL of the api server)
  • instantiated a new soap_server instance and assigned it to the variable $server
  • initialized the WSDL
  • assigned the namespace variable to the WSDL
  • load and register our exposed services
  • load the WSDL
  • load the service code
  • create the HTTP listener
  • invoke the requested service
  • exit

This (index.php) file is the server-side file that will be invoked for ALL future API calls to the service.  It invokes three control files which, in turn loads the services (WSDL definitions), the WSDL variable definitions (think of these as inputs and outputs to your exposed services), and the actual code for all of the services, and their supporting functions, that you’re going to expose via your API.

Side Note:  This is the file you’ll reference in Apache when you’re (preferably) creating a new Virtual Host for the API.  HTTP requests that resolve to your server will be serviced by Apache which will, in turn, serve the results of this program back to the client.

Next, we’re going to define the myServiceRegistrations.php file that is required by index.php.  This file contains the WSDL for each and every exposed service that the API serves.

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<pre><?php
/**
 *
 *
 */


$server->register('ping', array('testString' => 'xsd:string'),
                          array('return' => 'tns:aryReturn'),
                  $namespace, false, 'rpc', 'encoded',
'<p><strong>Summary</strong>: returns response to a ping request from the client.  Response
includes testString submitted.  Used to test Server response/connectivity.
</p>
<p>
<strong>Input</strong>: $testString (type: string) and random collection suffices.
</p>
<p>
<strong>Response</strong>: Service returns an array named $aryReturn with two associative
members: &quot;status&quot; and &quot;data&quot;.<br />$aryReturn[&quot;status&quot;] should
<i>always</i> return true.  (A time-out is an implicit false.)<br />If no value was passed
to the service via $testString, then the value of $aryReturn[&quot;data&quot;] will be
empty.<br />Otherwise it will contain the string: &quot;Rcvd: {yourString} (count)&quot; to
show that the message was received and returned. (count) is a character count of the
passed string, also validating that the passed data was received and processed.
</p>
'
);</pre>

This PHP code registers a function called “ping” with the nuSOAP $server instance.  The second parameter is the input to function.  Note that all input (and output) parameters have to be declared as an array even if there’s only a single value being passed.  Also notice that you have to type-cast the variable being passed using XML datatypes.  For your data definitions, you use one of the 44 built-in datatypes defined in this document: http://www.w3.org/TR/2001/REC-xmlschema-2-20010502/.

(For more information on XSD object and XML schema, please visit: http://ws.apache.org/axis/cpp/arch/XSD_Objects.html.)

The third argument to the method “register” is the data type returned.  This is a complex variable called “aryReturn” — don’t worry about right now, we’re going to define this complex-type variable in another configuration file.

The next four arguments are:

  • our $namespace variable we set in index.php
  • boolean false
  • ‘rpc’ for the call type
  • ‘encoded’
Use these values literally.
The last variable is a huge block of HTML.  This block of HTML can be as large, or as small, as you need it to be.  It’s the basis for the WSDL documentation that nuSOAP generates for your client-side developers.
When developers hit the server URL, they’ll be presented with your API documentation that nuSOAP generates from the WSDL file(s).  As your API grows, exposed methods will be listed in the blue-ish box on the left side of the screen.  Clicking on any of the methods will expose the details (requirements) about that method thus:

Nice, huh?

The second file (that we’ve included in our source: (mywsdl.php)) is the WSDL file that defines our data structures that are used as either inputs, outputs, or both, to the exposed services.  Another thing I like about SOAP and nuSOAP is that it introduces a layer of strong-typing to the PHP stack.  You can save a bit of debugging time by requiring that you call a method with EXACTLY this and return EXACTLY that.  Anything else tends to generate a system-level error:

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<pre>[Thu Sep 22 14:36:59 2011] [error] [client ::1] PHP Fatal error:  Call to a member function addComplexType() on a non-object in /htdocs/LL2/trunk/services/mywsdl.php on line 9
[Thu Sep 22 14:36:59 2011] [error] [client ::1] PHP Stack trace:
[Thu Sep 22 14:36:59 2011] [error] [client ::1] PHP   1. {main}() /htdocs/LL2/trunk/services/ll2wsdl.php:0</pre>
<pre>

This error message, from the apache error log, is somewhat obfuscated in it's meaning.   I attempted to return only the string, by itself, instead of returning the array (of two elements) that I had told nuSOAP I would return for this service.  This error was generated because the types (between the code and the WSDL) of the return variable (structure) did not exactly match.

If you've only ever coded in a loosely-typed language, like PHP, than this part of SOAP is going to be a bit of a ... transition ... for you.  When we say that something, be it a variable, function, or exposed service, is strongly typed, we're declaring the type of that object and, if the type of the object during run-time does not match, then SOAP will force PHP to throw a fatal as shown in the error log snippet above.

Keep this in-mind as you develop exposed services that are increasingly complex.  Since the error messages tend to point you at your code, at the point of failure, it's easy to forget that that the requirements of the underpinnings (in this case, the WSDL), are the root cause of your PHP fatals.

That being said, let's take a look at the WSDL for our ping service:

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<pre><?php
/**
 * WDSL control structures
 *
 * initially, while in dev, this will be one large file but, later, as the product
 * matures, the plan will be to break out the WSDL files into associative files based
 * on the object class being defined.
 */

$server->wsdl->addComplexType('aryReturn', 'complexType', 'struct', 'all', '',
            array('status' => array('name' => 'status', 'type' => 'xsd:boolean'),
                  'data'   => array('name' => 'data',   'type' => 'xsd:string')));</pre>

We're invoking the nuSOAP method addComplexType to define a structure to the WSDL in our Table Name Space (tns).   To do this, we first define the name of the structure that we're going to use: aryReturn and then we define the composition of that structure.

The declaration for this looks a lot like a standard PHP declaration for an array with the exception of the XSD (XML Schema Definition) appended at the end of each element's declaration.  (See the links I embedded above for explanations and examples of valid XSD.)

XSD provides part of the strongly-typed concept for our structure elements.  We're telling nuSOAP to expect a variable structure containing these named elements of this type.

What we have, then, is an associative array with two elements: 'status' and 'data'.  $aryReturn['status'] and $aryReturn['data'] and they're of type BOOL and STRING respectively.

Note, finally, that this variable structure isn't confined to single-use.  Once we've declared it within our tns, it's available to any exposed service where it's needed.  This is the model for my common error structure -- the boolean indicates success or fail on some service operation and the data component contains the relative diagnostic information.

The third and final file we're including into the server source is the code for the exposed service.  This is where you write the function handlers for your services.  Since you've already defined the input parameters, and the return types for the ping service, there's very little left to do.

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<pre><?php
/**
 * ping
 *
 * service that confirms server availability
 *
 * input: any string
 *
 * output: reformatted string:  "Rcvd: {string} (charcount{string})"
 *
 * @param string $testString
 * @return string
 */

function ping($testString = '') {
    return(array('status' => true, 'data' => 'Rcvd: ' . $testString . '(' . strlen($testString) . ')'));
}</pre>

Note the following in the code for our exposed service:

  • our exposed method is named ping because that's how we registered the service (myServiceRegistrations.php)
  • we're providing a default type-cast for the input param of string in case the service is invoked without input params.
  • we're returning BOOL true and prepending "Rcvd: " to the received string, and appending a character count to prove that the service successfully responded to the client's request.
  • the return structure exactly matches the WSDL declaration: the name of the array elements, and the element types.
If you've correctly installed and referenced (within your PHP) the nuSOAP libraries, then you should be able to load the url of the new server source file into your web browser to see the nuSOAP-generated documentation for your new web services.  Click on the WSDL service function: ping to see a detailed description of the function.

If you're using IE, then clicking on the WSDL link will return the XML.  If you're using Firefox, Chrome or other browsers, clicking on WSDL will display the generated XML for your service.

Now that the server is working on it's own, it remains fairly useless until we can get a client to connect to it invoke it's methods.  Let's work on the client next...

The Web-Services Client

The web services client application will also be written in PHP.

The web client is an application that connects to remote server using the http port 80.  To do so, you'll need the client to be aware of certain bits of information that may, or may not, be required to access the remote server.

In our client, we're not going to require remote authentication -- but I'll take a quick aside andexplain how you would include this, client-side, if your server required .htaccess authentication.

nuSOAP has a client method called setCredentials which allows you to specify your .htaccess username and password and the authentication schema.  It's a single line of code which is normally used to require not only clients to login to access your API, but, once identified, you can limit the set of exposed methods available to individual clients or groups.

For example, if you have a product you've developed in-house, then you'd want full-access for your front-end web/applications servers.  Your PM later decides to open a subset of the API to the general public and a subscription-based set of exposed methods in order to monetize your product.  Finally, the PM also wants to "white-box" the product so that other companies can use it but with their branding and access to isolated or discrete data sets.

What you'd end-up with is several levels of client access to your web services.  Implementation of limiting exposed services would be handled server-side but it would be based on your client's authentication and possibly the subject of a future tutorial...

So, to the client-side code: (name this file: apiTestClient.php)

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<pre><?php
// Pull in the NuSOAP code
require_once('./nuSOAP/nusoap.php');
$proxyhost = isset($_POST['proxyhost']) ? $_POST['proxyhost'] : '';
$proxyport = isset($_POST['proxyport']) ? $_POST['proxyport'] : '';
$proxyusername = isset($_POST['proxyusername']) ? $_POST['proxyusername'] : '';
$proxypassword = isset($_POST['proxypassword']) ? $_POST['proxypassword'] : '';
$useCURL = isset($_POST['usecurl']) ? $_POST['usecurl'] : '0';
$client = new nusoap_client('http://{YOURSERVERURLHERE}/index.php', false, $proxyhost, $proxyport, $proxyusername, $proxypassword);
$err = $client->getError();
if ($err) {
    echo '<h2>Constructor error</h2><pre>' . $err . '</pre>';
}
$client->setUseCurl($useCURL);
$client->useHTTPPersistentConnection();
// Call the SOAP method
$result = $client->call('ping', array('testString' => 'Argle'), 'http://localhost');
// Display the result
if (!$result) {
    echo "service returned false";
} else {
    print_r($result);
}
unset($client);</pre>
<pre>?></pre>

The first thing we do in our client-side code is to include the nuSOAP libraries.

The next five lines of code read from the local POST environment, testing if you've established a proxy for your web-services server and, if so, populating the proxy variables.

The next line instantiates a nuSOAP client and associates it with our remote server.  Change "YOURSERVERURLHERE" to the name of your apache web server URL where you have the server side code installed.  (e.g.: localhost, myserver.com, etc.)

Note the name of the function call: newsoap_client()...as opposed to using the function soapclient().  This function name is legacy-compatible with PHP 5.0's instantiation call:  new soapclient() - the PHP SOAP extension uses the same instantiation function name as the nuSOAP library.  If you have both installed, (PHP 5.0 SOAP extension, and the nuSOAP libraries), executing the client will return errors as you've overloaded the soapclient() function.  (You're calling the PHP SOAP function with the nuSOAP function parameters.)  Rename the soapclient() function to the back-compatible function: newsoap_client().

The next two lines tell the nuSOAP client to useCurl, when possible and if previously saved and, if possible, to use HTTP persistent connections.

Next, we're going to consume the web-services from the server by making a call to the nuSOAP method: call().  The arguments to this method are:

  1. the name of the service being consumed (ping)
  2. the input string (note:  all inputs must be passed as arrays!)
  3. the namespace URI (optional:  WSDL can override)

Store the results of the web-services to the aptly-named variable $results and evaluate it upon return.  If the client call was not successful, then display an error message.

If the client call was successful, then display the contents of the returned array.

Note that you can run this client code from either a browser using the "file://" option or, if the client source code is accessible to apache, then you can display using a browser.

When I run this client-side software in the browser, I get displayed back:

Array ( [status] => 1 [data] => Rcvd: Argle(5) )

So, how do we know that the client went out and successfully returned from the server with the data?  Simple - in the client source, you will not find the literal "Rcvd:" anywhere in the source.  This data was supplied by the server-side function and returned back to the client.  It's a simple example, but it provides proof-of-concept that we're successfully able to connect to a remote web-server and return data created on the remote server back to the client program.

Let's wrap this up...

Summary:

This tutorial (hopefully) explained what web-services are, and provided you with a practical example of a consumable service: ping().  Such a service would normally be invoked as a means of testing server availability.

We created a web-services server file using the nuSOAP library by defining a complex-structure (an associative array) and registering a method with the nuSOAP server.  The method takes an input parameter which, although it's only a single input parameter, must be built and passed as an array construct to the server method.  Next, we showed that by loading the server source into a browser, we learned the nuSOAP provides built-in documentation for your web-services structures and methods.  Which is a very nice-to-have when you're creating your developer documentation!  Next we created the web-services client source code file which connected to our remote server and invoked the server's method: hellow().  If all worked correctly, you displayed the string returned from the remote server within your browser window.

In the next installment, I'll cover the web-services server-side of this business and we'll see how to create the various methods for accessing a mySQL database, complex structures as input and output parameters to those methods, and general debugging techniques.

Thank-you for your patience - I hope this article helped you.

September 26, 2011

X11Forwarding from CentOS 6 Linux to Mac OS X Lion via SSH

Category : Technical
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In my previous post, I wrote about getting gpass (a password manager for the gnome desktop) compiled from source and running on our CentOS 6 platform.  The screenie I took of the welcome screen was a mac-i-fied version.

I had configured my Linux machine to support X11 port-forwarding over a secure shell.  It was surprisingly quick and easy to set-up and execute.

I wanted to remote-display the gpass window to my Mac OS X Lion desktop because I needed to transfer passwords from my 1Password application (running on Lion) to my gpass (Linux) program.  Some of the passwords are pretty gnarly so the only way I can guarantee transferring data without making typos was to set-up a copy-paste-friendly environment.

One quick caveat. I’ve noticed that, when I terminate an X11 program from my Lion shell, I can no longer use that shell to initialize another X11 applet.  I need to exit and re-start the terminal.  If you know of the work-around for this, please leave a comment/reply to this post.

For all the following commands, it is assumed you have sudo privileges on your Linux system.

The first step I took was to edit the /etc/ssh/ssh_config file.  At the end of the file, past the comments, there is a section labeled:

Host *

ForwardX11Trusted yes
X11 Forwarding yes

Make sure that you have those two lines, uncommented and present, in your configuration.

Next, (re)start your sshd server:

# /etc/init.d/sshd restart

Stopping sshd:                                         [ FAILED ]
Generating SSH1 RSA host key:         [      OK      ]
Generating SSH2 RSA host key:         [      OK      ]
Generating SSH2 DSA host key:         [      OK      ]
Starting sshd:                                           [      OK      ]

 

In case you’re curious, the FAILED message in the first line of output was generated because I didn’t already have sshd running on my system.

My machines run on a 192.168 subnet behind two firewalls – the firewall on my DSL modem, and the firewall on my multi-port router.  Normally, I’m not too concerned about the security of my individual machines.  (e.g.: I’m not running a software firewall on my Mac or my Linux server.)  My subnet is DHCP-served by my router and the router is on it’s own subnet DHCP-served by the dsl router/modem.

I need to obtain the current IP address of my linux server which I do so my running the ipconfig command.

Next, I switch over to my Mac and open a terminal — within the terminal, I enter:

iMac:~ mike$ ssh -X 192.168.0.6
The authenticity of host '192.168.0.6 (192.168.0.6)' can't be established.
RSA key fingerprint is f9:04:2d:0e:70:3d:a7:8f:92:c0:02:69:8c:f2:e6:51.
Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no)? yes
Warning: Permanently added '192.168.0.6' (RSA) to the list of known hosts.
mike@192.168.0.6's password:
whassup?
/usr/bin/xauth: creating new authority file /home/mike/.Xauthority
[mike@codeMonkey ~]$

At the command prompt, I now only have to enter whatever X11 command and that program will be displayed on my Mac Desktop.  I can even open and start an entire desktop session.  I could – but I won’t — my Linux server only has 2gB of Ram…

Instead, I’ll open a gnome-terminal.  So, at the prompt, I simply type: gnome-terminal and I get the gnome-terminal to appear on my desktop:

That’s pretty much all there is to it, as far as I could tell.  Eazy-peezy.

One last note — once you have a terminal running on your Lion desktop, then any X11 commands, such as gpass, you enter will all be displayed on your Lion desktop.  This circumvents the one-terminal-one-applet restriction I mentioned at the top of this article.

That’s pretty much it for this article — hope this helps!

Installing gpass on CentOS 6 Linux

Category : Technical
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Over the last year I have become utterly dependent on a product called 1Password by Agile Bits software.  For those of you that are unfamiliar with this software, 1Password is a multi-platform program that manages all your passwords, in additional to other sensitive information, in an easy-to-use interface.

Originally written for the Mac, the software is now offered on iPad, iPod, ‘droid, and Windows machines.  I have it installed on all available platforms.  While initially bemoaning the cost of the product – it’s not cheap – I’ve come to depend on it for all of password storage, my software license management, and even the credit-card information for the card I use for online purchases and subscriptions.

Quick aside and then I’ll cease the fanboi gushing: my favorite feature of the program is the password generator.  I can custom-tailor a password to be as obnoxiously long, and obfuscated, as I need and I don’t ever, ever, have to type it in when challenged.  Passwords are simply copy-pasted from the 1Password program, or you can use the embedded 1-click feature functionality of the support extensions available for all browsers.

My only complaint with 1Password is the lack of Linux support.  Since I’m using Linux as my LAMP development platform while at-home, I need a comparable password manager. I know I won’t have all of the slick features of 1Password, but at least I’ll be able to copy-paste long, obfuscated, passwords from the password manager into my Linux desktop applications.

So, let’s get started!

There’s some good tutorials already available on the ‘net about doing just this – however, none I found were exactly right and, following those tutorials, I did run into several side issues.  I’ll cover all those issues here so that your installation will be seamless.

Operating System: CentOS 6 Linux
Desktop GUI: Gnome
gPass version: 0.5.1
EPEL repository: 6.5

Download the gpass source into your “Downloads” directory and unpack the tarball:

wget http://projects.netlab.jp/gpass/release/gpass-0.5.1.tar.gz

tar xvzf gpass-0.5.1.tar.gz

cd gpass-0.5.1

I based my initial install of gpass from the UnixCraft blog post here.  (In the tutorial, they omitted the arguments to the tar command to un-tar the tarball that creates the gpass source directory.)

In step 1, the blog asks you to do a group install of the development tools and, secondly, install the gnome-ui, mhash, and mcrypt development libraries.  The second step failed for me following the successful install of the gnome-ui as my stock yum configuration was unable to locate either the mhash or the mcrypt packages.

After googling the issue, I determined that I needed to at the EPEL repository to my yum configuration.  It’s common to have several repositories in your yum catalog.  You’ll add additional repositories by establishing configuration files in /etc/yum.repos.d/.

Setting up the EPEL repository is pretty easy as they’ve created an rpm just for this purpose.  Make sure you have sudo privileges on your account and enter the following commands: (I’m currently in the “Downloads” directory in my $HOME.)

wget http://download.fedora.redhat.com/pub/epel/6/x86_64/epel-release-6-5.noarch.rpm
...
rpm -Uvh epel-release-6-5.noarch.rpm

Side note: I’m aware when I’m reading how-to’s on other sites that reference software versions that said versions may not always be the current, and most stable, release available today.  I always check the repository, using a browser, before downloading to ensure I’m obtaining the latest version.

Once the rpm is installed, you’ll need to edit the repository file.  Again, using sudo, edit the /etc/yum.repos.d/epel.repo file and in the EPEL repository section, add the line: priority=3 at the end of the section.

I’m now ready to install the mhash and mcrypt packages, obtaining them from the Redhat EPEL repository.  Again, assuming sudo privileges:

# yum install libmcrypt-devel
# yum install mhash-devel

From this point, you need merely to follow the instructions in the UnixCraft blog I linked-to above, but here are the steps to finish the installation.  Again, assuming you’ve changed-directory to the gpass source:

./configure

./make

./make install

At this point, as long as you’ve not seen any error messages in your output, your gpass program is ready to use.  Test by typing gpass at the command line — you should see the gpass window pop-up on your desktop:

In the screen-shot to the right, those of you that are past your second cup of coffee may have noticed that my gpass window looks suspiciously like a Mac OS X version.

I am running the gpass application on my Linux server, but I am serving the display to Mac OS X Lion desktop.  I set-up the configuration to do this for two reasons.

  1. to capture and display screenies
  2. to copy paste data from my native Mac 1Password application into my Linux gpass application.  I do NOT want to retype some of those passwords…
That’s pretty much it.  I leave the exploration and use of gpass up to you.  I’ll do a follow-up tutorial quick-post on how-to set-up XForwarding on Linux to your remote desktop (Mac) via secure shell.
Thanks for reading – hope this helps!

 

Part 5: Setting-up a Linux Development Machine: Virtual Hosts in Apache2

Category : Technical
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When I am working on code project, I isolate that project within it’s own directory/repository.  Further, it matters not if I’m starting a completely new project, or if I’m branching off the trunk of an existing project.  As a means of imposing order over chaos, I isolate the existing project within it’s own sandbox both on the filesystem and via Apache2.

To do so requires an understanding, somewhat, of the mechanics of Apache2, DNS, and your localhost.  A minimal understanding, trust me.

What it, in return, gives you is an isolated view of your code project from the web-server perspective.  Cookies are isolated by domain, your document root is isolated to a single directory/repository, and you not only put your log files, just for that domain, where ever you want but you can also name them anything you want as well.

What I’ll provide you with in this installment is a rudimentary understanding of the mechanics behind virtual hosting using Apache2, a template configuration file to get you going, and the basic steps necessary to get the whole mess working.  Let’s get started…

When you start a new project, if you’re checking it out from a source-code repository, you’ll typically assign it to a directory somewhere common.  For example, within your home directory, you may have a folder named “code” and beneath that folder, other folders that describe either the project or the programming language you’re working in.  Doesn’t really matter as the point is this:  you’ve isolated your code repository from everything else on your filesystem, right?

It really doesn’t matter, to Apache2, where you create your filesystem repository.  As long as the webserver pseudo-user has access permissions to the directory, then you can access the files within that directory via a web browser.  The webserver has to be configured to be told that, for a given domain name, where is the documentRoot for that domain.

Some of you, at this point, may be asking: what’s a domain name and why is it important?  Well, a domain name is simply a name you’ve assigned to the project to keep it separate, at least in your own head, from the other projects you may, or may not, have running on your development machine.  For example, I create a new project called newWidget and it’s currently in the 1.4 revision.  I’m ready to branch and write some new features for the product so, using whatever sccs tool, I branch off the trunk and create the 1.5 branch.

I check that branch out to a directory in /lampdev/php/newWidget115.  I now need to do two basic things:

  1. invent some domain name that will be used exclusively for this project and resolve the domain to my localhost
  2. create a virtual host in apache so that apache knows that http://newW115 points to my localhost

The reasons, apart from what we’ve already discussed, is to keep your local DNS services on your local machine.  If you, before entering any configuration information, entered: http://newW115 into a browser url bar, chances are very good you’re going to end-up on a search page (I’m using Chrome) or get some sort of browser error.

So the first step is to define the new domain name (again, given that we’re already checked the code out into the aforementioned directory) to the local system so that all requests to that domain are resolved locally through our name services.  To do this, we’re going to sudo edit the /etc/hosts file.

This file, /etc/hosts, is the first thing checked whenever your local name services is trying to resolve a host name.  If it finds a host-to-IP alias in this file, all further attempts at resolution are halted as it has successfully resolved the host name.  Edit /etc/hosts to resolve your new domain.  It should look something like this:

127.0.0.1    localhost codemonkey codemonkey.shallop.com codeMonkey.shallop.com newW115

The way /etc/hosts works is that you first list an IP address for the domain to resolve to - in this case, we’re using 127.0.0.1 which is TCP/IP speak for your local host.  Next we list all of the domain names that are going to resolve to this IP address.  In the example above, we’re resolving localhost, codemonkey, codemonkey.shallop.com, codeMonkey.shallop.com, and the new domain: newW115 all to 127.0.0.1.

Whenever I type one of these domains, for example, in to a web browser URL bar, my local host domain services won’t go out to my network name servers to resolve the domain name — it’s telling the requesting service that it’s 127.0.0.1.  Note, too, that you can alias multiple domain names to the same machine.

Side Note — this is how you can blacklist certain domains from your browsing experience.  Simple resolve that domain to 127.0.0.1…but that’s an article for another day…

You can also have multiple entries resolving to the same IP address.  It would have been just as correct for me to have listed by /etc/hosts file as:

127.0.0.1     localhost
127.0.0.1     codemonkey
127.0.0.1     codeMonkey
127.0.0.1     codemonkey.shallop.com
127.0.0.1     codeMonkey.shallop.com
127.0.0.1     newW115

Finally, also note that a domain extension isn’t really required.  We can name our domain pretty much anything we want and as long as you universally use that spelling (and case), then it will resolve locally.

Now that the domain is resolving locally, the next step is to tell Apache2 how to handle the request.  When you type: http://newW115 at the browser, the browser will query local services and receive a response that the domain is handled locally.  Apache2 will then say: “Oh, if it’s local, then were do I go to get the files and stuff?”

The configuration for Apache2 is done with virtual hosting.  Technically, you can do this without virtual hosting — but you can only do it for one domain.  If you want to locally-host multiple domains, you have to use virtual hosting.

The Apache2 configuration file lives in: /etc/httpd/conf and is named: httpd.conf.  This is the main configuration file for Apache2.  Some installations use a sub-directory, usually called something like: vhostsd.conf, and stores the vhosts.conf file within that directory.  That’s ok, too.  Apache2 is versatile that way but, for our purposes, we’re going to maintain the virtual host configuration(s) within the main conf file.

However, if you wanted to use a separate file for Virtual Hosting, all you need in your httpd.conf file is the directive:

# Virtual hosts
Include conf/extra/httpd-vhosts.conf

At the very end of httpd.conf, there’s a section called: Name-Based Virtual hosting.  We’re going to append this virtual host configuration to the end of this file.

Allow me to side-step for a quick second.  Consider if we were to install phpMyAdmin locally on our server because this is how we want to administer our mySQL database.  We can install the program files anywhere as phpMyAdmin is just another LAMP application, right?  Were we to do that, then we would need a <Directory> directive to Apache2 telling Apache2 where to look for phpMyAdmin.  The domain for phpMyAdmin would still be localhost, or 127.0.0.1 or whatever else you’d defined in /etc/hosts.  The location of the application can live anywhere and we’re using the conf file to tell Apache2 how to find and serve it to us when requested.

Alias /phpMyAdmin "/opt/local/www/phpmyadmin"
&lt;Directory "/opt/local/www/phpmyadmin"&gt;
Options Indexes MultiViews
AllowOverride None
Order allow,deny
Allow from all
&lt;/Directory&gt;

What this <Directory> directive simply does is tell Apache2 where to look for phpMyAdmin if I enter something like: http://localhost/phpMyAdmin in the URL bar of my browser.  It’s not the same thing as giving phpMyAdmin it’s own domain at all.

I do this with a lot of my web applications: phpMyAdmin, mcmon, ajaxmytop, nagios, etc., simply because I don’t want to remember where the fill path name is of the applications.  It’s easier to type: http://localhost/phpMyAdmin that it is to type: http://localhost/webapps/database/phpMyAdmin.

Ok, so back to domains.  Here’s the template for the virtual host we’ve created in /etc/hosts: newW115:

&lt;VirtualHost *:80&gt;
ServerName  <strong>newW115</strong>
ServerAdmin <a href="mailto:mshallop@nileguide.com">mshallop@g</a>mail.com
DocumentRoot <strong>/code/webapps/LAMP/newWidget/1-15</strong>

DirectoryIndex  index.php

&lt;Directory /&gt;
Options FollowSymLinks
AllowOverride None
&lt;/Directory&gt;
&lt;Directory <strong>/code/webapps/LAMP/newWidget/1-15</strong>&gt;
Options Indexes FollowSymLinks MultiViews
AllowOverride All
Order allow,deny
allow from all
&lt;/Directory&gt;

ScriptAlias /cgi-bin/ /usr/lib/cgi-bin/
&lt;Directory "/usr/lib/cgi-bin"&gt;
AllowOverride None
Options +ExecCGI -MultiViews +SymLinksIfOwnerMatch
Order allow,deny
Allow from all
&lt;/Directory&gt;

<strong>ErrorLog /var/logs/115_error.</strong><wbr><strong>log</strong>

LogFormat       "%h %l %u %t \"%r\" %&gt;s %b \"%{Referer}i\" \"%{User-Agent}i\"" combined
LogFormat       "%h %l %u %t \"%r\" %&gt;s %b" common
LogFormat       "%{Referer}i -&gt; %U" referer
LogFormat       "%{User-agent}i" agent
<strong>       CustomLog       /var/logs/115_log common</strong>
<strong>       ErrorLog        /var/logs/115_error_</strong><wbr><strong>log</strong>

# Possible values include: debug, info, notice, warn, error, crit,
# alert, emerg.
LogLevel warn

CustomLog /var/logs/115_access.<wbr>log combined
ServerSignature On

&lt;/VirtualHost&gt;
</wbr></wbr></wbr>

This is a pretty minimal configuration — but it’s the boilerplate template I use for all new domains and it works.  The lines that in boldface are the lines you should change to match your environment.  Note that you can pretty much put files, such as the log files, where ever you wish.  I changed the names from my normal location but, as a rule, I maintain the entire environment outside of the root filesystem.

Once you’ve made your changes and saved the file, you’ll need to restart Apache2 so that it will read the new configuration.  If there are errors in your configuration file, Apache2 will let you know and will refuse to start.  Make sure you’ve corrected all errors and, once the server successfully restarts, you should be able to type: http://newW115 into your browser URL bar and have that domain resolve locally, and serve files from the directory you specified in the httpd.conf file.

Over time, as you add additional projects and create new code-domains, you can simply add the new <VirtualHost> directives, appending them, to the httpd.conf file as needed.  When you expire and remove hosts and files, don’t forget to remove them from the Apache configuration as well.

And that’s pretty much it.  This is a simple thing to set-up as we didn’t delve into anything that wasn’t plain-vanilla.  For example: SSL configurations, .htacces, or the re-write engine.  That’s for another day, another article.

Hope this helps…

Part 4: Installing Apache Thrift: Linux Development Environment

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Previously, we dealt with getting a working LAMP development environment up and running on a fresh CentOS 6 install.  We next dealt with the installation of PHPStorm and our JDK issues.

In this, and the next issue, I’m going to talk about the Thrift framework and getting it installed and running.

Thrift was originally developed by Facebook, was entered into open source in 2007, and became part of the Apache incubator the next year.

Thrift, according to Apache, is “a software framework for scalable cross-language services development. It combines a software stack with a code generation engine to build services that work efficiently and seamlessly between C++, Java, Python, PHP, Ruby, Erlang, Perl, Haskell, C#, Cocoa, JavaScript, Node.js, Smalltalk, and OCaml.”

What it is in plainspeak is an API framework for your LAMP application.

Why I want it:  I want to use Thrift for our project because of the nature of the project.  (A social-networking concept.)  Because the application will rely heavily on data-storage calls, I’ve decided to implement the data access layer as an API instead of a more-traditional OOP model.  Thrift, as the API framework, allows me complete freedom on the back-end of the API.  I can implement the API in a variety of languages, although I’ll probably use PHP.

Thrift also provides me with a strongly-typed interface to the API.  Like XML-RPC, calls to the API are well-defined beforehand and must comply with the typed definition of both the methods used, and the data exchanged to/from said methods.

My personal experience with Thrift is limited — I used it as an API for a product concept at a former employer.  The calling application would invoke the API and make requests to the API which, in turn, would do a “bunch of stuff” and return a well-defined “data ball” (a json object) back to the calling stub for processing and display.

The other concept that makes me embrace Thrift as the controller for my LAMP application is that I can completely encapsulate the data layer from the front-end developers.  They do not need to know if the data is stored within mongodb, mysql, or a flat file.  All they need is the data.  The query language is hidden; front-end developers should not need to write data-access code.

I’ll talk more about the glories of Thrift later.  For now, let’s just get it installed and running…

On our Linux system, we have to do some preliminary installation of packages first.  Luckily, if you hit the Thrift Wiki, you’ll find pretty much everything you need to do a successful install.  Be warned, however.  Sparseness of documentation could easily be one of the hallmarks of Thrift.  Read carefully, and then read again before punching the enter key on your keyboard.  Make sure you understand what it is you’re about to do.

Ok.  Let’s get some non-LAMP development tools installed.  Our first command will be to install most of the pre-requisite packages needed by Thrift:

#  <span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: Consolas, Monaco, monospace; font-size: 12px; line-height: 18px; white-space: pre;">sudo yum install automake libtool flex bison pkgconfig gcc-c++ boost-devel libevent-devel zlib-devel python-devel ruby-devel</span>

This  will install the base development packages you’re going to need.  Once this has completed, you should also install the open-SSL development libs as the build will fail without it.  (At least, if failed on my install.)

#  sudo yum install openssl-devel.x86_64

Installing this package will also pick-up all the dependent packages you’ll need to complete the install.

Next, download the Thrift tarball from the site and move the package somewhere within what will become your DocumentRoot path for Apache2.

#  tar xvzf thrift-0.7.0.tar.gz

Once you’ve expanded the tarball, cd into the thrift directory and follow the instructions to make the Thrift packages and libraries.  I did this pretty much exactly as told and my installation went without a problem.

At this point, we’ve only built and installed the Thrift libraries (installed in /usr/lib, I believe…).  In the next installation, we’re going to install the PHP src directory and make it visible to our application’s docRoot.

Installing a Linux-Based Development Environment – Fedora 15 Fails

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I’ve scrapped my VOIP project with the realization that, advanced DSL or not (whatever THAT is, AT&T), I just don’t have the upload bandwidth to support the project to a place of anything usable.

So, after a couple months of looking at an inactive PC sitting on the top of my desk doing absolutely nothing, except irritating my OCD bone, I decided to embark on a new project — installing a linux-desktop based IDE platform.

Keeping my goals simple, I want a LAMP development environment with the option to later build out to a compiled-based environment/IDE for C/C++.

I am installing on an older PC – an HP Pavilion Slimline S3300f  that initially had Windows Vista installed but has since advanced and evolved to host a variety of various Linux platforms.  The CPU is a AMD Athalon X2 64-bit Dual-Core hosting 2-gb of PC2-5300 SDRAM, a 500-gb hard drive and a 2007 Phoenix BIOS.  Perfect for Linux.

I thought about which flavor of Linux to install – over the years I’ve used pretty much all of them and finally decided to try something new…new in that I’ve not used it in quite a while.  I decided on the latest 64-bit Fedora install with the Gnome IDE available from the Fedora Project.  While I normally choose CentOS as my linux-of-choice, I picked Fedora because I wanted to re-visit the distribution.

I’ve not used Fedora since 2002.  I was never that enthusiastic about Fedora since it seemed, to me at the time, to spend too much time customizing what was, at that time, standard unix configurations.  Well, I really like CentOS, which is based on Fedora, so maybe it’s time to put past-prejudices aside and see what’s up with one of the most popular distributions in the world.

And, while we’re at it, let’s eliminate our past-dependencies on KDE and stagger completely free from our comfort zone and go with the Gnome desktop, shall we?  <muted screaming noises>

I downloaded the Fedora x86_64 CD ISO from the Fedora project and booted my Pavilion off the CD.  A desktop soon appeared which, I have to admit, is really nice.  The default boot brings you into a run-time environment chock-full of neat applications which I didn’t take the time to explore…unfortunately…but I do like the concept.  This ISO gives you a portable and secure desktop system that, with internet access, provides you with the ultimate, secure, thin-client.

Anyway, I clicked on the install-to-hard-drive option and dove into the Fedora installation program.  I have no screen shots for you  - I am writing this blog on my Mac OS-X bootmaster partition of Windows 7 (Ultimate-64) because I’m too lazy to reboot back into Mac OS X and I’m going to play Rift later…

The Fedora installer took two options, initially — my language and the storage device choice.  English and local (as, say opposed to SAN) and it paused because I had encrypted, in a previous install, the hard drive.  So, it waiting patiently until I was able to dredge the password out of my abused long-term memory.  Luckily, I had saved it in a keychain…

I then configured standard stuff – machine name (codemonkey), root passwords, and storage option.  I elected to use the entire hard-drive which will wipe whatever crap I previously had installed/stored.  In this, I was also given the option to encrypt the file system (which is cool in a James Bond sort of way but a pain-in-the-ass in RL because you have to remember your password and you do take a CPU hit), and to review the partitioning schema.  I went with no encryption and no review — nuke it, Chuck.

While it’s installing, I wanted to add that this system is using a 17″ LCD monitor.  While this type of monitor used to be the shizzle, it’s now dwarfed by my iMac’s 27″ display and the slaved 23″ LCD next to that.  On the other hand, I now have 71″ of LCD wrapping around my two keyboards…which is pretty cool.  Traditionally, Linux never seemed to give me the same video resolutions on this monitor that Windows was able to.  8×6 or even 1024×768 just doesn’t seem to cut it anymore, so I’m curious as to what Redhat will deliver.

The Fedora installer copied the live image to my hard drive fairly quickly.  I noticed that the installer should update it’s (C) date and include 2011 – I believe this install was last update just a few days ago…and, the entire time the installer is running as a windowed app beneath the live desktop.  My first linux install was sometime around 1991 under version 0.91 or so — so the installers have definitely evolved!

After about 10 minutes, I was presented with the reboot message….so I popped the CD out of the tray and rebooted…exiting the installer took me back to the live desktop.  I had to manually power off the machine, reboot, remove the CD from the tray…so I missed the short window to pop back into the BIOS to reset the boot order.

Booting from the hard drive, I was brought to a Welcome screen (very snazzy!) and querying me for more information.  I was asked to create a user account – which I added to the administrator’s group assuming that this would bestow me with su privileges.   I then set-up the NTP server and submitted my hardware profile back to the Fedora Project.

Following this, I was presented with the log-in window…and I after entering in my password, I was introduced to my first-ever Gnome desktop environment under Fedora.  (2001 Space Odyssey music playing in my head.)

I’m immediately happy because I’m at 1280×1024 resolution for the first time, ever, in a linux install on this hardware.  I’m going to play around with my desktop for a bit and get used to the UX while finding a comfortable configuration.

The system information informs me that I am running Gnome 3.0.1 with 1.8gb of RAM, and AMD Athalon 64×2 Dual Core Processor 5000+ X2, a Gallium 0.4 on NV4C graphic driver, 64-bit OS and 931.4 gb free on the hard drive.  df -h output shows that I’ve used 6% of my 50gb root partition and I’m worrying that this won’t be enough to support system updates.  Looks like everything will have to be installed into /home.

So, I have the following (default) filesystem set-up:

/ (root) at 50gb with 94% free
/boot at 500mb with 91% free
/home at 864gb with 99% free
/tmp at 50gb with 94% free

Interesting that this window also provides me with update notification which was my next step…installation of updates and installation of new packages…the software has located a staggering 634 updates at 197.3mb…the majority of which appear to be bug-fixes with the remaining packages listed as enhancements.

The package install fails immediately with what I suspect are permissions issues.  I then next learn that Fedora has disabled root logins into Gnome.  Since this is an administrator account, I need to figure out how to install these updates.  I re-login and try to re-install and get another failure, albeit a different failure message.  I try to, and succeed, in installing a single update and the installer informs me I have to re-login for the updates to be effective.  I do so, but it’s a bit of an Easter-Egg-hunt as the installer reset my terminal…I have to Ctrl-Alt-F8 to get back to my terminal session and I re-login and restart the software update program.

And I keep getting errors…geh… time for terminal.  I google the issue and discover that it’s a known bug in the package kit installer and to use yum instead.  I switch to terminal, su to root and yum update … The (now) 302 updates I need spin down to the box effortlessly and the entire system is updated in about 10 minutes.

The next step is to identify and install the development components.  Also, I’ll need to install some server software (apache2, php5, mysql, mongodb, etc.) for the LAMP development environment.  For now, what I have is a working desktop environment.

I pulled out an old set of Logitech speakers from the garage, rescuing them from an in-progress garage-sale, and now I have working sound which is cool.  I also want to get network shares up and running so that I can copy files back-and-forth across the network.

As a final note to this post, I had a hell of a time trying to get Firefox to connect.  It’s a DNS server issue with Fedora 15 and FF that’s based on auto-enabling of IPV6 protocols.  To “fix” the issue, simply add google’s default nameserver configuration to your /etc/resolv.conf file:

nameserver 8.8.8.8

And any name-server resolution issues in firefox should disappear immediately.

[EDIT]

I’m going to have to trash Fedora 15 as a viable option.  I had the desktop lock-up on me while displaying the application listings following a Chrome install.  When I rebooted, I lost the nameserver configuration that I added to /etc/resolv.conf (above) and had to manually add it so that other network-based applications (browser, chat client) would work.

All in all, there’s probably fixes for these issue but at this point I really don’t care.  There are other Linux distributions out there that are stable and don’t distract you from accomplishing real work with niggling little issues such as what I’ve experienced.  The application lock-up was unforgivable, to be honest.  If I wanted to experience fun like that, I’d install Vista back on this machine.

I’m really kind of surprised to have this much trouble with a Fedora install considering their reputation for reliability and stability in the enterprise.  Clearly, Fedora isn’t ready for a desktop/client market.

I’m in-process of downloading CentOS 6 — we’ll see how that goes in the next installation….

Secure Access to Cloud-based Source-Code

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I’ve had this idea for about a week now — I want to store my working source-code tree in the cloud, securely, so that I can access it from my machine at work, or from home.  I use a laptop at work as my primary machine — which is cool — but I really hate lugging the damn thing back-and-forth from work to home.

In my mind, it introduces risk – shoving a laptop into a backpack and trundling 70 or so miles (one-way) just doesn’t seem, to me, to be the best way to treat delicate electronics, even if said device was designed to be portable.  There’s also the additional liability of theft or loss of the device.

Like most geeks, my home machine makes a far better development environment because it has significantly more display real-estate, more memory, and faster everything else.  I don’t have to hunt for a spare power receptacle to plug the laptop into, or work off the kitchen table because my desk is already at capacity.

So I came up with the idea (and I’m not claiming this to be original – but it does work) that if I could store my source code in the cloud, then all I’d need is a duplicate operating environment (apache, mysql and the db contents, etc.) while I ran my development source from the cloud, pushing it to the stage-server when necessary, thereby always maintaining the code in a consistent state across platforms.

I need the repository to be stored under subversion, and I want really decent encryption so that if the account gets hacked, my code isn’t exposed.  (Protect corporate assets.)

Oh, and I want it to be free.   :-)

And to be large enough to store my entire project.  (I like CloudApp and DropBox, but I don’t feel they offer either enough space for what I need to do, or the ability to access the remote “device” as a filesystem.)  Here we go…

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