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Configuring Apache before Installing the Load Balancer
Plug-in
The Apache source must be compiled and built to run with SSL. This section
describes the minimum requirements and high-level steps needed to successfully
compile Apache Web Server to run the load balancer plug-in. These requirements
and steps only apply to the Solaris and Linux versions of the software. For
information on the Windows version of Apache, see the Apache web site.
Note –
The instructions included here are adapted from the instructions
at http://httpd.apache.org/docs. For detailed
instructions on installing SSL-aware Apache, please see that web site.
To Install SSL-aware Apache
Before You Begin
You must have already downloaded and uncompressed the Apache software.
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Download and unpack the OpenSSL source, available at http://openssl.org.
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Compile and build OpenSSL.
For full installation
instructions, see the file named INSTALL in the directory
where you uncompressed OpenSSL. That file has information on installing OpenSSL
in a user-specified location.
For more information about OpenSSL,
see the http://www.openssl.org/.
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Download and unpack Apache.
Apache is available from http://httpd.apache.org.
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Compile and build Apache. Configure the source tree:
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cd http-2.0_x.
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Run the following command:
./configure --with-ssl= OpenSSL-install-path --prefix= Apache-install-path --enable-ssl --enable-so
In the above commands, x is the Apache version
number, open-ssl-install-path is the absolute path
to directory where OpenSSL is installed, and Apache-install-path is
the directory in which to install Apache.
Note that you only need
to use the --enable-ssl --enable-so options if your Apache
2 server will be accepting HTTPS requests.
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For Apache on Linux 2.1, before compiling:
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Open src/MakeFile and find the end of the automatically
generated section.
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Add the following lines after the first four lines after the automatically
generated section:
LIBS+= -licuuc -licui18n -lnspr4 -lpthread -lxerces-c
-lsupport -lnsprwrap -lns-httpd40
LDFLAGS+= -L/application-server-install-dir/lib -L/opt/sun/private/lib
Note that -L/opt/sun/private/lib is only required
if you installed Application Server as part of a Java Enterprise System installation.
For example:
## (End of automatically generated section)
##
CFLAGS=$(OPTIM) $(CFLAGS1) $(EXTRA_CFLAGS)
LIBS=$(EXTRA_LIBS) $(LIBS1)
INCLUDES=$(INCLUDES1) $(INCLUDES0) $(EXTRA_INCLUDES)
LDFLAGS=$(LDFLAGS1) $(EXTRA_LDFLAGS)
"LIBS+= -licuuc -licui18n -lnspr4 -lpthread
-lxerces-c -lsupport -lnsprwrap -lns-httpd40
LDFLAGS+= -L/application-server-install-dir /lib -L/opt/sun/private/lib
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Set environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH.
With stand–alone installations, set it to the Application Server: as-install/lib
With Java Enterprise System installations, set it
to the Application Server: as-install/lib:opt/sun/private/lib.
If you are using Solaris 9, add /usr/local/lib to
the LD_LIBRARY_PATH.
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Compile Apache as described in the installation instructions for
the version you are using.
For more information, see the http://httpd.apache.org/
In
general, the steps are:
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make
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make install
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Make sure Apache's ssl.conf and httpd.conf files contain the correct values for your environment.
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In ssl.conf, for VirtualHost default:port replace
the default hostname and port with the hostname of the local system where
Apache is installed and the server's port number.
Without this
change, the load balancer will not work. On Solaris Apache may not start and
on Linux, HTTPS requests may not work.
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In ssl.conf, for ServerName www.example.com:443, replace www.example.com with the hostname of
the local system where Apache is installed.
Without this change,
the following warning appears when you start Apache if a security certificate
is installed:
[warn] RSA server certificate CommonName (CN)
hostname does NOT match server name!
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For more information on installing certificates for Apache, see To Create a Security Certificate for Apache .
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In httpd.conf, for ServerName
www.example.com:80, replace www.example.com with
the hostname of the local system where Apache is installed.
Without
this change, you see warnings when you start Apache that the system could
not determine the server's fully qualified domain name, and that there are
overlapping VirtualHost entries.
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Ensure that the Apache user has the required access permissions
to the apache-install-location/conf/ directory
and files in this directory.
The Apache user is the UNIX user
under which the Apache server responds to requests. This user is defined in
the file httpd.conf.
If you installed Apache
as a root user, read the note about configuring the Apache user and group
in apache-install-location/conf/httpd.conf.
Note –
Ensure that your configuration of users and groups meets the security
requirements for this directory. For example, to restrict access to this directory,
add the Apache user to the same user group as the owner of the directory.
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To ensure that the Auto Apply feature operates correctly, grant
the Apache user read access, write access, and execute access to the apache-install-location/conf/ directory.
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If the Apache user is in the same group as the owner of this directory,
change the mode to 775.
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If the Apache user is in a different group than the owner of this
directory, change the mode to 777.
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To ensure that the load balancer plug-in is initialized when Apache
is started, grant the Apache user read access and write access to the following
files:
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