The Queen Mum of Weblog Hosting Systems – written in server-side JavaScript since 2001.
https://about.antville.org
austriablogblog-engineblogshelmahostingindiewebjavajavascriptrhino-jsself-hostedserver-side-javascriptvintageweblogweblogs
- changed all preferences related macros since the site preferences are xml-encoded now - discussions_macro() and addtofront_macro() now don't need an input type hidden anymore to preserve the submitted state |
||
---|---|---|
code | ||
db | ||
.gitattributes | ||
.gitignore | ||
bookmarklet.txt | ||
images.zip | ||
license.txt | ||
macro.help | ||
readme.txt |
==============
ABOUT ANTVILLE
==============
Antville is an open source project aimed to the development of an
"easy to maintain and use" weblog-hosting system. It can easily host
up to several hundred or thousand weblogs (the number of weblogs is
more limited by the site owner's choice and server power than software
limitations).
Antville is entirely written in JavaScript (ECMAScript, to be precise)
and based on Helma Object Publisher, a powerful and fast scriptable
open source web application server (which itself is written in Java).
Antville works with a relational database in the backend.
Check out http://project.antville.org/ for more information.
============================
ABOUT HELMA OBJECT PUBLISHER
============================
Helma Object Publisher is a web application server.
With Helma Object Publisher (sometimes simply referred to as Helma or
Hop) you can define Objects and map them to a relational database
table. These so-called HopObjects can be created, modified and deleted
using a comfortable object/container model. Hence, no manual fiddling
around with database code is necessary.
HopObjects are extended JavaScript objects which can be scripted using
server-side JavaScript. Beyond the common JavaScript features, Helma
provides special "skin" and template functionalities which facilitate
the rendering of objects via a web interface.
Thanks to Helma's relational database mapping technology, HopObjects
create a hierarchical structure, the URL space of a Helma site. The
parts between slashes in a Helma URL represent HopObjects (similar to
the document tree in static sites). The Helma URL space can be thought
of as an analogy to the Document Object Model (DOM) in client-side
JavaScript.
======
STATUS
======
Antville should be considered pre-release quality code. Although it is
heavily used by several thousands of users at http://www.antville.org
chances are that there are still bugs hidden somewhere in this
application (if you found one please report it at
http://helma.org/bugs).
Antville can be used for production purposes, but please mind that the
creators of Antville and Helma do not take any warranty (whichever
kind).
===================
SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS
===================
To run Antville you need Helma Object Publisher (http://helma.org) and
a relational database in the backend. Antville was tested with MySQL
(http://www.mysql.com) and Oracle (v.8.1.7). For setting up Helma
Object Publisher and the database of your choice please refer to their
installation instructions. Since Antville sends confirmation mails to
users (i.e. after registration or if they were added to the list of
members of a site), you'll also need access to an SMTP server.
Helma comes with its own embedded webserver (Jetty) so you don't need
to install one, although you can easily use Apache httpd as front-end
webserver too (this might be necessary for really big Antville
installations or if you need advanced features like URL rewriting).
============
INSTALLATION
============
Unpack the distribution file. Move the resulting directory "antville"
into the directory "apps" of your Helma Object Publisher installation.
Inside the directory "antville" you will find a zipped archive called
"db_support.zip". This archive contains all database-related files,
ie. several SQL scripts for creating the database needed by the
application. So first unpack db_support.zip which will create a
directory called "db_support". Change to that directory.
Antville comes with scripts for MySQL (antville_mysql.sql) and for
Oracle databases (antville_oracle.sql) - the third one,
antville_mckoi.sql, is only used for the Mckoi database used in the
AntClick distribution.
Each of these scripts are not only creating the tables, indexes and
initial records, but also the account used by the application to
communicate with the database. Both the default username and password
of this account are "antville", so you probably want to change that
(you should!). Open the appropriate script and scroll down to the
section called "Database-User". Search for "identified by" and change
the value in quotes to the password of your choice.
Please refer to the documentation of your database on how to run the
appropriate script. After done so you'll have to tell Antville how it
can access your database. This is done in a configuration file named
"db.properties".
Antville comes with two templates for db.properties, one for MySQL
(db.properties.mysql) and one for Oracle (db.properties.oracle). Open
the template for your database and ensure that the line beginning with
"antville.url=" points to the server that runs the database (for MySQL
this will in most cases look like http://localhost:3306/antville,
assuming that the database is running on the same machine as the
application).
Check that user and password are correct and save the file as
"db.properties" (without the quotes) in the root directory of the
Antville application (if it is already existing you can safely
overwrite it).
NOTE: If you're using Oracle you need to install the JDBC driver for
your database by placing the appropriate zip file into the
subdirectory "lib/ext" located in Helma's installation directory (you
can download the JDBC driver for your Oracle-database at
http://technet.oracle.com/software/tech/java/sqlj_jdbc/content.html).
The driver for MySQL is already contained in the distribution of Helma
Object Publisher.
Next you need to copy the default images of Antville to the
appropriate place. If you are planning to use the embeded webserver of
Helma Object Publisher, change to the directory "static" of your Helma
installation. Create a directory called "antville" and in there two
subdirectories: "images" and "files" (of course you can use any other
schema too, you just need to adapt the application properties in the
next step). Unpack the archive "images.zip" located in the application
directory of Antville to your newly created directory images. NOTE:
Don't place your images outside the directory "static" if you're using
Helma's embedded webserver, otherwise it won't find them.
Open the file "apps.properties" located in the directory where you
installed Helma and append the word "antville" (without quotes) in a
new line. Then start up Helma, and after pointing your browser to
http://localhost:8080/antville (assuming that Helma is running on the
same machine and uses port 8080) you should see Antville's welcome
page. It will tell you about the two additional configuration steps
necessary: you need to register once to gain system administration
rights and then you must configure the basic preferences (like
language settings, date formats etc.)
If everything went fine you can safely delete the directory
"db_support".
=====================================
DOCUMENTATION AND FURTHER INFORMATION
=====================================
To get the documentation and further information regarding Antville
please refer to:
http://project.antville.org
http://macros.antville.org (the documentation of Antville macros)
http://help.antville.org
Feel free to ask any question regarding the application at
http://project.antville.org
For further information about Helma http://helma.org generally is a
good place. There is also a mailing-list about Helma-related stuff
available at http://helma.org/lists/listinfo/hop.
==================================
BUG REPORTING AND FEATURE REQUESTS
==================================
If you find any bug please report it at http://helma.org/bugs. Please
post feature requests or proposals to http://project.antville.org.
Since Antville is open-source, you're definetly encouraged to modify
the application, but please keep us informed on what you do/did
(either by posting at http://project.antville.org or by sending a mail
to antville@helma.org). For those of you who demonstrated a commitment
to collaborative open- source development through sustained
participation and contributions within the development of Antville,
there will also be other ways to participate.
--
<0A> 2002, antville@helma.org
http://project.antville.org
This document was last modified on Tuesday 12 January 2003 by
robert@helma.org