[foo ganesh**Sun Oct 20 18:12:24 GMT 2002] { hunk ./Makefile 32 - echo "%_build_name_fmt %%{ARCH}/%%{NAME}-%%{VERSION}-%%{RELEASE}.rh7.%%{ARCH}.rpm" >> dist/redhat/rpmmacros + echo "%_build_name_fmt %%{ARCH}/%%{NAME}-%%{VERSION}-%%{RELEASE}.%%{ARCH}.rpm" >> dist/redhat/rpmmacros hunk ./Makefile 35 - cp redhat/RPMS/noarch/photopub-$(VERSION)-1.rh7.noarch.rpm \ + cp redhat/RPMS/noarch/photopub-$(VERSION)-1.noarch.rpm \ hunk ./TODO 3 +* Packaging: + - sort out RH5/6/7/8 versions + - sort out dist/Makefile + hunk ./dist/Makefile 23 -for d in album range display embed +for d in album range display hunk ./dist/Makefile 29 -for d in probe +for d in checkconfig hunk ./dist/debian/postinst 20 +# Do not alter the delimiters above and below or bad things will happen! hunk ./dist/mungefile.pl 8 -if($ARGV[0] eq '-a') { +if(exists $ARGV[0] && $ARGV[0] eq '-a') { hunk ./dist/mungefile.pl 37 +die "end of section not found" if $insection; + hunk ./dist/redhat/photopub.spec 95 +# Do not alter the delimiters above and below or bad things will happen! hunk ./doc/manual.html 1 - - - - - - + + hunk ./doc/manual.html 10 -

Contents

+

Installation

hunk ./doc/manual.html 12 -
-1. About Photopub
-2. Installation
-     2.1 Installing from the tarball
-     2.2 Installing from an RPM package
-     2.3 Installing from a Debian package
-3. Configuration
-     3.1 Quick start
-          3.1.1 Configuring /etc/photopubrc
-          3.1.2 Creating ~/.photopubrc
-          3.1.3 .info files
-     3.2 Webserver configuration
-     3.3 General guide
-4. Reference
-
- - -

1. About Photopub

-

- Photopub is a CGI application to publish photographs on the World Wide Web. -

-

- It was originally concieved as a way of automatically generating thumbnailed previews of digital camera photographs, as soon - as they were placed in a specific directory. Since then, photopub has expanded to incorporate many features such as photograph - captions, multliple picture formats, html templates, and most importantly, multiple users. This manual explains how to install, - configure and use photopub. -

-

- [Back to Contents] -

-
+

Redhat

hunk ./doc/manual.html 14 -

2. Installation

-

- Currently, photopub can be installed manually, by downloading a release as a set of tarballed files, or it can be - installed from a ready-made RPM or Debian package. -

+

Debian

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- 2.1 Installing from the tarball

+

Configuration

+

Quick start guide

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- 2.2 Installing from an RPM package

- -

- 2.3 Installing from a Debian package

- -

- [Back to Contents] -

-
- -

- 3. Configuration

- -

- 3.1 Quick start

- -

- 3.1.1 Configuring /etc/photopubrc

- -

- The only changes that should be initially required to the main config file - are to enable PhotoPub for each individual user that you wish. - In the following fragment, - each user should be added to the "users" line, separated by spaces: -

- -
-<path /users>
-   <userconfig>
-   #  allusers # not implemented
-      users ganesh nick
-      file $HOME/.photopubrc
-   </userconfig>
-</path>
-    
- -

- This gives each user control over the /users/username namespace, using - their ~/.photopubrc file. -

- -

- Next, add a link to each user's main album, if you so wish. By convention, - this album is called /users/username/all. - This link will be added to the default album /all and will thus - appear on the page at http://hostname/photopub/album. -

- -
-<album all>
-# insert links to users here, e.g.
-#   <link /users/foo/all>
-#      title "Joe Bloggs"
-#      level 1
-#   </link>
-   <link /users/foo/all>
-      title "Ganesh Sittampalam"
-      level 1
-   </link>
-   <link /users/foo/all>
-      title "Nick Burch"
-      level 1
-   </link>
-</album>
-    
- -

- 3.1.2 Creating ~/.photopubrc

- -

- Each user should create such a file, as follows. You - should first decide how you - wish to organise the /users/username namespace. The recommended - arrangement is for photos from camera "foo" to go into /users/username/foo; - even if you only have one camera now, it makes sense to plan for the - future or for importing photos from other sources. -

- -

- Suppose that your pictures are stored in /home/username/photos/foo. If your - camera resets the numbering every so often (e.g. after you download - pictures), then each group should be put in subdirectories, which will - end up mapped to subpaths in PhotoPub namespace. If you want to use an - alternative structure (perhaps because you already have your photos in - such a structure), that should work fine, but these instructions don't - yet cover it. -

- -

- Here is a sample ~/.photopubrc for camera "foo", with pictures in - /home/username/photos/foo: -

- -
-<path foo>
-   <imagedirs>
-     dir /home/username/photos/foo
-     prefix p
-     digits 7
-     suffix .jpg
-   </imagedirs>
-   <infofile>
-     dir /home/username/photos/foo
-     filename .info
-     allowhtml no
-     makealbum all
-   </infofile>
-</path>
-
-<album all>
-   include foo/all
-</album>
-    
- -

- The most important bits to change, apart from the paths and directory - names, are the "prefix", "digits" and "suffix" options. Together these - determine the format expected from picture file names. For example, the - settings above will map "p0000001.jpg" to picture number 1, etc. If the - numeric element isn't zero-padded, set "digits" to 0. -

- -

- 3.1.3 .info files

-

- These files are used to annotate your photos with extra information, - such as descriptions, which photos should be grouped together in the - album page, and how the photo should be adjusted when presented to the - user. The file should be placed in the same directory as the photos - it describes. If you don't like the name, use whatever you like (and - change the "filename" option above). - - Here's a short sample of such a file: -

-
-    group 1-5 My first photos
-    describe 1 Me
-    rotate 1 90
-    adjust 1 1.1 1.1 1.1
-    
-

- The "group" item will cause an entry pointing to that range of photos to - go into the album page. The "describe" item will provide a caption for - the range page. Use "rotate" to turn the picture the right way up, and - adjust to change the colour balance - the values given should be gamma - correction values for red, green and blue respectively, with 1 meaning - no change. - -

-

3.2 Webserver configuration

- -

- Following the principles set out by Tim Berners-Lee in - "Cool URIs don't - change", every effort has been made to reduce - implementation dependencies (taking /cgi-bin/ out of the path, dropping the - .pl extensions on the perl scripts, etc) - in PhotoPub URLs, to allow for the - possibility of an entirely different implementation of the same interface - in future. -

- -

- Thus, a "standard" installation will be accessed at the URL -

-
http://hostname/photopub/{album|range|display}?...
-

- If you installed from a package and are using Apache as your webserver, - this should have been set up automatically, but you may need to deal with - this manually if your configuration is non-standard in some way that - collides with the assumptions we made. -

- -

- If for whatever reason you do not wish to do things in this way, you are - mostly on your own for now, but you may find the following settings in - /etc/photopubrc useful: -

-
-    albumlinkroot album
-    rangelinkroot range
-    displaylinkroot display
-    
-

- PhotoPub makes links to other PhotoPub pages using relative links, - so everything but the final element in the path of these links - is determined by the URL you access it at. - These settings control what that final element should be - you may for - example wish to change album to album.pl, etc. -

- -

- We will try our best to avoid incompatible changes in the - query parameters and script names, although it cannot be completely - ruled out, especially in development releases. -

- -

3.3 General guide

- -

- [Back to Contents] -

-
-

4. Reference

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-
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- Valid XHTML 1.1 -

+
+
Ganesh Sittampalam
+ + +Last modified: Wed Oct 2 10:35:54 BST 2002 + }