Routino : Installation ====================== Quick Start Guide ----------------- The instructions below are a complete list of the minimum required to get Routino installed and running under Apache on Debian Linux. Other Linux versions will be similar and other UNIX based systems will also be similar although may have distinct differences. There is some support in Routino for compiling on Microsoft Windows which has its own installation instructions. *********************************************************************** *** These instructions should not be considered as complete or a *** *** secure installation for the reasons given in more detail below. *** *********************************************************************** The starting point for the installation is in the Routino source code directory after it has been uncompressed. Most of the steps will need to be run as the root user. The first thing to do is to install the packages which are required for compilation of Routino as described in the Pre-Requisites section below. apt-get install gcc make libc6-dev libz-dev libbz2-dev After this the programs can be compiled: make The files for the web interface can now be copied to the web server directory. On Debian this is '/var/www' and the files changed to be owned by the user Apache runs as. cp -a web /var/www/routino chown -R www-data:www-data /var/www/routino To be able to use Routino some data will need to be processed and a script is provided for this. This will download the data for the UK which may take a while and then process it. cd /var/www/routino/data sh -x create.sh The routino web pages also requires either the OpenLayers or Leaflet Javascript library to be downloaded and installed and scripts are provided for this. cd /var/www/routino/www/openlayers sh -x install.sh cd /var/www/routino/www/leaflet sh -x install.sh To make full use of the location search feature on the Routino web page you will need to install some extra perl packages. apt-get install libwww-perl liburi-perl libjson-pp-perl Finally to make the web pages work you will need to add the extra lines to the Apache configuration file as described in the Configuration of Web Server section below. You don't have to use 'vi' and can use any text editor. vi /etc/apache2/sites-enabled/000-default apache2ctl restart Now everything should be set up and the web page should work if accessed at 'http://localhost/routino/www/routino/router.html'. When everything is working you should read the rest of this document carefully and make the following changes: * Download your choice of OSM data - edit the file data/create.sh and run it again. * Edit the www/routino/mapprops.js file to match the downloaded data and personal map preferences. * Move the files in the web server directory so that only the contents of the www directory are accessible by the web server. * Edit the file www/routino/paths.pl to reference the new file locations. Pre-Requisites -------------- The programs are written in standard C language with minimal external requirements so only a small set of development tools are required (gcc, make). The compilation tools to use and the command line options are defined in the file 'Makefile.conf'. There is some support for multi-threading that uses pthreads and additional development libraries for this may be required (on Linux this might be part of the standard C language development files). The multi-threading is enabled by default but can be disabled at compile time by commenting out two lines in the file 'Makefile.conf'. To use the built-in gzip file decompression function and to process all PBF format files the zlib (or libz) development library is required (on Linux this might be in a package called libz-dev). The gzip function is enabled by default but can be disabled by commenting out two lines in the file 'Makefile.conf'. To use the built-in bzip2 file decompression functions the bzip2 (or libbz2) development library is required (on Linux this might be in a package called libbz2-dev). The bzip2 function is enabled by default but can be disabled by commenting out two lines in the file 'Makefile.conf'. To use the built-in xz file decompression functions the liblzma development library is required (on Linux this might be in a package called liblzma-dev). The xz function is not enabled by default but can be enabled by uncommenting two lines in the file 'Makefile.conf'. To compile the source code from subversion requires the Perl Graphics::Magick module to generate the web page icons (on Linux this might be in a package called libgraphics-magick-perl). The released source code packages contains the icons so this package is not required for compilation. To use the web page interface an http server is required. Instructions below are for Apache but any server that supports CGIs should work. The web pages use the Perl scripting language and a number of the default Perl modules. To use the search function on the router web page the Perl module JSON::PP must be installed (on Linux this might be in a package called libjson-pp-perl if not part of the standard Perl installation). Compilation ----------- To compile the programs just type 'make' at the top level of the source tree. This program has been written to run on Linux, no cross-platform compatibility has been specifically included but on the other hand other platforms have not knowingly been excluded either. Any information on improving the compilation process on anything other than x86 Linux is welcome. Installation ------------ After compilation the executable files are copied into the directory web/bin and the default XML configuration files are copied into the directory web/data. This is in preparation for using the supplied example web pages but is also a useful location to copy the files from for normal use. The required executable files are 'planetsplitter', 'router' and 'filedumper' and the '*-slim' versions of the same files. They can be copied to any location and need no special installation environment. The 'filedumperx' executable is for debugging and not required. The configuration files are called 'profiles.xml', 'tagging.xml' and 'translations.xml'. The names of the configuration files can be specified on the command line but by default are also looked for in the directory that contains the routing database with these names. Example Web Page ---------------- The directory 'web' contains a set of files that can be used to create a working set of web pages with interfaces to the routing algorithm. The files in the 'web' directory will require copying to a location that is accessible by a web server. After copying the files some of them need to be edited; search through the files for lines that contain the words "EDIT THIS" and make appropriate edits. The files that need editing are 'paths.pl' (to set the directory paths) and 'mapprops.js' (to set the map properties). Configuration of web files -------------------------- The assumption in this description is that the whole of the directory called web is copied into a directory that is accessible by an Apache web server. ************************************************************************** **** This is not a secure configuration but an easy one to configure. **** **** Only the directory 'www' should be accessible by the web server. **** **** Do not use this configuration unmodified in a public web server. **** ************************************************************************** The directory structure is as follows: web/ | + /bin/ <- The Routino executable files (when compiled). | + /data/ <- The Routino database and default configuration | files. | + /results/ <- An empty directory to store the results. | + /www/ <- The files that must be available to the web | server are below this level. | + /openlayers/ <- A directory to hold the OpenLayers library | (optional; leaflet can be used instead). | + /leaflet/ <- A directory to hold the Leaflet library. | (optional; openlayers can be used instead). | + /routino/ <- The main HTML, Javascript, CSS and CGI files. | + /documentation/ <- The HTML version of the Routino documentation. The directory 'bin' will be filled by running the compilation process. For a secure installation the 'bin' directory should be outside of the web server, the file 'www/routino/paths.pl' contains the path to the 'bin' directory. The directory 'data' must contain the Routino database and is also the default location for the configuration files. The routing database is created by downloading the OSM files for the region of interest and running the 'planetsplitter' program. There is a script in the directory that will download the OSM files and create the required database. The script should be edited to set the names of the files to be downloaded. For a secure installation the 'data' directory should be outside of the web server, the file 'www/routino/paths.pl' contains the path to the 'data' directory. The directory 'results' is a temporary directory that it used to hold the GPX and text files generated by the Routino router. The directory must be writable by the web server process since it is the CGI scripts that are run by the web server that writes the results here. For a secure installation the results directory should be outside of the web server, the file 'www/routino/paths.pl' contains the path to the results directory. The directory 'www' and its sub-directories are the only ones that need to be within the web server accessible directory. A Javascript map drawing library is required and either OpenLayers or Leaflet can be used. The library is loaded dynamically when the HTML is opened based on the value that is selected in 'mapprops.js'. The directory 'www/openlayers' is for the OpenLayers Javascript library that can be downloaded from 'http://www.openlayers.org/'. (This version of Routino has been tested with OpenLayers library versions 2.12 and 2.13.1). The file 'www/openlayers/OpenLayers.js' and the directories 'www/openlayers/img/' and 'www/openlayers/theme/' must all exist. There is a script in the 'www/openlayers' directory that will automatically download the files, create an optimised 'OpenLayers.js' and copy the files to the required locations. The directory 'www/leaflet' is for the Leaflet Javascript library that can be downloaded from 'http://leafletjs.com/'. (This version of Routino has been tested with Leaflet library versions 0.7.1 and 0.7.2). The files 'www/leaflet/leaflet.js' and 'www/leaflet/leaflet.css' and the directory 'www/leaflet/images/' must all exist. There is a script in the 'www/leaflet' directory that will automatically download the files. The directory 'www/routino' contains the main HTML, Javascript and CSS files as well as the CGI scripts that perform the server-side routing functions. The description below lists all of the files that contain editable information. paths.pl This contains the names of the directories that contain the executable files, router database and temporary results; the prefix for the routing database; and the names of the executables. mapprops.js The parameters in this file control the Javascript map library (defaults to OpenLayers), the boundary of the visible map (defaults to UK), the minimum and maximum zoom levels (defaults to between 4 and 15 inclusive), the source of map tiles (defaults to the main OpenStreetMap tile server), the data editing and browsing URLs (default to the OpenStreetMap website) and the number of waypoints allowed (defaults to 9). The directory www/routino/documentation contains the HTML version of the Routino documentation. Configuration of Web Server --------------------------- The file 'www/routino/.htaccess' contains all of the Apache configuration options that are required to get the example web pages running. The only problem is that because of the way that the "AllowOverride" option works one of the configuration options has been commented out. This must be enabled in the main Apache server configuration file. If you have copied the routino 'web' directory into '/var/www' and named it 'routino' then the entry that you need in your Apache configuration file is this one: AllowOverride All Options +ExecCGI This can be placed anywhere between the and tags which should be at the start and end of the file. -------- Copyright 2008-2015 Andrew M. Bishop.