195 lines
7.1 KiB
Text
195 lines
7.1 KiB
Text
LibreOffice On-Line WebSocket server
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====================================
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Dependencies
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------------
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LibreOffice On-Line WebSocket server has the following dependencies:
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* libpng
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* Poco library: http://pocoproject.org/index.html.
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* libcap-progs
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Poco can be built with ./configure --prefix=/opt/poco && make install, but
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distro packages exist too.
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On openSUSE, you can use:
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zypper ar http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/devel:/libraries:/c_c++/openSUSE_13.2/devel:libraries:c_c++.repo
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zypper in poco-devel libcap-progs
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Building
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--------
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loolwsd uses autoconf/automake, so build using the usual:
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MASTER=/path/to/built/core.git # configure for your system
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autoreconf
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automake --add-missing
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./configure --enable-silent-rules --with-lokit-path=${MASTER}/include
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make
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where ${MASTER} is the location of the LibreOffice source tree.
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Note that the loolwsd program needs the CAP_SYS_CHROOT capability,
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thus you will be asked the root password when running make as it
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invokes sudo to run /sbin/setcap.
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If you have self-built Poco, add the following to ./configure:
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--with-poco-includes=<POCOINST>/include --with-poco-libs=<POCOINST>/lib
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where <POCOINST> means the Poco installation location.
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If you have the Poco debugging libraries (eg. you have a self-built
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Poco), you can add --enable-debug to the configure options for
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additional debugging.
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For Windows, a proper VS2013 project is needed.
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There is still unconditional debugging output etc. This is a work in
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progress.
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Running
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-------
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First create the directory used for caching tiles. It is set as
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"${localstatedir}/cache/${PACKAGE}" in the configure.ac, so if you did
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not pass any switch to the configure script that affects
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"localstatedir, it will be /usr/local/var/cache/loolwsd . If you did
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pass such a switch, like --prefix, check config.h for the exact value.
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If you're using the defaults you'll need to:
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sudo mkdir -p /usr/local/var/cache/loolwsd
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sudo chown `whoami` /usr/local/var/cache/loolwsd
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Now you need to set up a minimal chroot system, and directory for the jails:
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SYSTEMPLATE=`pwd`/systemplate # or tweak for your system
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ROOTFORJAILS=`pwd`/jails # or tweak for your system
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rm -Rf ${SYSTEMPLATE} # clean
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./setup-sys-chroot ${SYSTEMPLATE} ${MASTER}/instdir # build template
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mkdir -p ${ROOTFORJAILS} # create location for transient jails.
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To run loolwsd the way it is supposed to eventually be run "for real", you can
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now do:
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./loolwsd --systemplate=${SYSTEMPLATE} --lotemplate=${MASTER}/instdir --childroot=${ROOTFORJAILS}
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and connect loleaflet to that (see loleaflet/README for more info).
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Again, ${MASTER} is location of the LibreOffice source tree with a built
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LibreOffice. This is work in progress, and consequently needs the latest
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LibreOffice master.
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The ${SYSTEMPLATE} is a directory tree set up using the
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setup-sys-chroot script here. (It should not exist before running the
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script.) It will contain the runtime environment needed by the
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LibreOffice dynamic libraries used through LibreOfficeKit.
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Improvements to that script are very likely needed on various
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distros.
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The ${ROOTFORJAILS} directory above is a presumably initially empty
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directory under which loolwsd will create chroot jails for editing
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each specific document.
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As loolwsd uses hardlinks to "copy" the contents of both
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${SYSTEMPLATE} and the ${MASTER}/instdir directories into each chroot
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jail, ${SYSTEMPLATE} and ${MASTER}/instdir need to be on the same file
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system as ${ROOTFORJAILS}.
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If you plan to hack on loolwsd, you probably want to familiarize
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yourself with loolwsd's --test and --numprespawns switches, and the
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'connect' test program.
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For interactive testing, you can use the loolwsd --test switch, or you
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can use the 'connect' program. Both accept "commands" from the
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protocol on standard input. You can either used them tuly
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interactively, or edit input lines into a file, or use shell
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scripting, etc. For instance:
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(echo load /some/where/foo.odt; echo tile part=0 width=500 height=500 tileposx=0 tileposy=0 tilewidth=10000 tileheight=10000; sleep 10) |
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./loolwsd --test --systemplate=/home/tml/lo/master/lool-sys-template --lotemplate=/home/tml/lo/master/instdir --childroot=/home/tml/lo/master/lool-child-root
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Debugging
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---------
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When debugging, you want to add --numprespawns=1 to the loolwsd parameters to
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limit the amount of concurrently running processes.
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When the crash happens too early, you also want to
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export SLEEPFORDEBUGGER=<number of seconds>
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so that you have time to attach to the process.
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Then run loolwsd, and attach your debugger to the process you are
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interested in. Note that as the loolwsd executable file has the
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cap_sys_chroot capability set, you most likely need to run the
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debugger with super-user privilege (use the sudo command) to be able
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to attach a running loolwsd process. (This is a bit odd, as a child
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loolwsd process gives up its chroot capability after using it, and the
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master loolwsd process doesn't ebven use it, but gies it up right
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away.)
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Also, note that as the child processes run in a chroot environment,
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they see the LibreOffice shared libraries as being in a directory tree
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/lo , but your debugger does not. So in order to be able to
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effectively debug the LibreOffice code as used through LibreOfficeKit
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by a child loolwsd process, you need to symlink the "lo" subdirectory
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of a running child loolwsd process's chroot jail as /lo. Something like:
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sudo ln -s ~/libreoffice/master/lool-child-roots/1046829984599121011/lo /lo
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Use the ps command to find out exactly the path to use.
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Protocol description
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--------------------
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See protocol.txt for a description of the protocol to be used over the
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websocket.
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Coding style
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------------
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There is not really any serious rationale why the code ended up being
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written in the style it is... but unless you plan to change some style
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detail completely and consistenly all over, please keep to the style
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of the existing code when editing.
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The style is roughly as follows, in rough order of importance:
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- As in LO, no hard TABs in source files. Only spaces. Indentation
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step is four columns.
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- As in LO, the braces { and } of the block of if, switch, and while
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statements go on separate lines.
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- Following Poco conventions, member variables are prefixed with an
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underscore. But I am not opposed to changing this to 'm_' for
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instance.
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- Do use C++11. I admit in some places (out of laziness or ignorance)
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I use Poco API even if there probably is an equivalent std::
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API. (Like for threads.) Feel free to change those, if the std:: API
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is not much more verbose or ugly, and you are sure it is equivalent.
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- Always prefer the C++ wrapped version of a C library
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API. I.e. include <cstring> instead of <string.h>, use std::memcpy()
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instead of memcpy(), etc.
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- Use std:: prefix for all std API, i.e. don't ever do "using
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std;". But it's OK to use "using Poco::Foo;" all over. Maybe that is
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not a good idea?
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- Be as portable as possible, i.e. don't intentionally write Unix-only
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code if there is a choice. Obviously some parts of the code
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currently use Unix-only things like chroot() and link() though.
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- Member functions use camelCaseWithInitialLowerCase. I don't like
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CamelCaseWithInitialUpperCase.
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- No kind of Hungarian prefixes.
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