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Installation
How to install Skosmos
The rest of this document assumes you have a Linux machine with Apache and PHP already installed. This guide works with at least Ubuntu 12.04, 14.04 and RHEL6/CentOS6.
Make sure that Apache works and that PHP is enabled. If you have just installed PHP, you may need to restart Apache.
You will also need a SPARQL endpoint with SKOS vocabulary data. See InstallFusekiJenaText for instructions on installing Fuseki with the jena-text extension for this purpose. Alternatively, you can use any other SPARQL 1.1 compliant RDF store, but performance will likely not be very good with large vocabularies since there is no text index support with generic SPARQL 1.1.
Choose a directory for installing Skosmos. In this example, we'll use /opt/skosmos
Go to the parent directory:
cd /opt
You will need to either download the code as a tar.gz archive, or get the most recent code from Github.
You can download archives of released versions from here: https://github.com/NatLibFi/Skosmos/releases
Note: This may make future updates more difficult, especially if you make changes to the code. It is better to clone from Github as you can then easily upgrade to newer versions using git pull
.
Clone the code from Github:
Development version (master branch):
git clone https://github.com/NatLibFi/Skosmos.git skosmos
Current stable version (maintenance branch):
git clone -b v1.2-maintenance https://github.com/NatLibFi/Skosmos.git skosmos
Skosmos requires a number of PHP libraries, which are installed using Composer.
First you need to download Composer, unless you have it on your system already:
wget https://getcomposer.org/composer.phar
Install the dependencies like this (assuming you downloaded composer.phar as above):
php composer.phar install --no-dev
This will create vendor
and components
subdirectories containing the libraries.
Later you may want/need to update the dependencies:
php composer.phar update --no-dev
If you want to do your own development, run unit tests, generate documentation etc., you should omit the --no-dev
options and Composer will install required packages for development as well.
If Composer asks for your Github username and password, you may have hit the Github API rate limit - see the Composer documentation for details (either give your username/password or use an OAuth token)
The simplest way to make Apache display the code is to add a symbolic link into the DocumentRoot
.
First find out what your DocumentRoot
setting is (check the apache config). In RHEL6, it's /var/www/html
and in Debian/Ubuntu it's /var/www
.
Now add a symbolic link:
cd /var/www/html
ln -s /opt/skosmos skosmos
Now you should be able to access the front page of Skosmos using the URL http://myhost/skosmos . If not, check the following:
- Check that mod_rewrite is enabled in the Apache configuration
- Check that
AllowOverride All
is set for theDocumentRoot
(or the directory where you installed Skosmos)
The default PHP configuration provided by your distribution is probably fine for Skosmos, but you may want to check php.ini
anyway. Here are some things to check:
-
Make sure you have the
date.timezone
setting configured, otherwise you may get errors displaying date values. -
If you use vocabularies, such as Lexvo, that link to DBpedia or other resources with potentially a large number of triples, you may need to adjust the
memory_limit
setting (see issue #98). The default is usually 128M but the recommended setting is 256M. -
You can get a performance boost for Skosmos by installing the APC extension, e.g. the Debian/Ubuntu package php-apc, but this is not required.
See Configuration for details.