Ding2 is a continuation of ding.TING Drupal distribution for libraries as part of the TING concept.
This README assumes that you have install a configured your server with a working Apache/Nginx, APC, Memcached, PHP 5.4 and Varnish 3.x (optional). The stack should be optimized to run a Drupal site.
If you want to try out Ding2 you can download the latest release. The ding2-7.x-[version].tar.gz
file contain a full Drupal installation including Drupal Core, third party modules and Ding2 code needed to run the site.
The reset of this document explains how to download Drupal and patch the core to run a Ding2 based site.
- Drupal 7.43 - latest stable version of Drupal Core that ding2 have been tested on and the last stable release when this was written.
- Drush 6.1.0 - latest release when this was written. See its README for installation instructions.
Go into your web-root (from now on named DRUPAL) and execute this drush command to download a fresh copy of Drupal version 7.43. If you omit the version number the newest version of Drupal will be downloaded.
~$ drush dl drupal-7.43
~$ mv drupal-7.43/* .
~$ mv drupal-7.43/.* .
~$ rm -r drupal-7.43
You need to apply a set of patches to Drupal core to run the installation and the site after the installation. To apply the patch go into your Drupal root path and execute the commands below.
This patch fixes a problem with recursive menu rebuilds.
~$ wget -qO- http://drupal.org/files/menu-get-item-rebuild-1232346-22_0.patch | patch -p1
This patch fixes issue with permissions and translation of role names.
~$ wget -qO- http://drupal.org/files/issues/translate_role_names-2205581-1.patch | patch -p1
This patch ensure that communication with web-services that runs OpenSSL v1.0.x or newer works.
~$ wget -qO- http://drupal.org/files/ssl-socket-transports-1879970-13.patch | patch -p1
Optional,but recommended patch that ensures that Ajax errors only are displayed when not in readystate 4. So when the user presses enter to perform a search before auto-complete Ajax is call is completed an error will not be displayed.
~$ wget -qO- https://drupal.org/files/issues/autocomplete-1232416-17-7x.patch | patch -p1
Ding2 comes in the form of a Drupal installation profile and the first step is to build that profile. So go into your Drupal installations profiles folder.
~$ cd DRUPAL/profiles
Clone the ding2 repository from http://github.com/ding2/ding2.
~$ git clone [email protected]:ding2/ding2.git ding2
Now that you have cloned the installation profile you need to run the build process using drush make. It will download all the modules and the theme from the different repositories at http://github.com/ding2
~$ cd DRUPAL/profiles/ding2
~$ drush make --no-core --contrib-destination=. ding2.make
If you want a developer version with working copies of the Git repositories, run this command instead. It is because drush automatically deletes .git folders after it has cloned the repositories and by adding --working-copy, it will not delete these.
~$ drush make --no-core --working-copy --contrib-destination=. ding2.make
Next goto your sites URL and run the ding2 installation profile and fill out all the questions.
If you are using an deployment system you may not want to patch Drupal core manually in a production environment.
~$ wget https://raw.github.com/ding2/ding2/release/drupal.make
~$ drush make --working-copy --contrib-destination=profiles/ding2/ drupal.make htdocs
After you have finished the installation there are some performance optimization that you should put into your settings.php file.
This ensures that caching is enforced and that it can not be disabled in the administration interface.
$conf['cache'] = 1;
$conf['block_cache'] = 1;
$conf['preprocess_css'] = 1;
$conf['preprocess_js'] = 1;
// Ensures that form data is not moved out of the database. It's important to
// keep this in non-volatile memory (e.g. the database).
$conf['cache_class_cache_form'] = 'DrupalDatabaseCache';
// Ensure fast tracks for files not found.
drupal_fast_404();
The base theme for the installation is DDBasic and is located within themes/ddbasic
.
The JavaScript and stylesheet files for the files are processed orchestracted by Gulp. To work with these aspects of the installation you must have Node.js, Gulp and a number of packages installed.
Install Node.js if it is not already available on your platform.
Install Gulp and other packages:
~$ cd DRUPAL/profiles/ding2/themes/ddbasic
~$ npm install
Gulp can watch your source files so they are processed on every change:
~$ cd DRUPAL/profiles/ding2/themes/ddbasic
~$ gulp watch
Note that developers changing the source JavaScript and SCSS files are also responsible for changing the processed files in their commits.
This project assumes that you are using Varnish as a revers proxy and the project comes with a specially design VCL file, so that authenticated library users can be served cached pages (ding_varnish). It also allows Varnish to have paths purged when content is edited (varnish and expire modules).
The other varnish configurations (not listed here) are added by ding_base feature with the strong arm module.
// Tell Drupal it's behind a proxy.
$conf['reverse_proxy'] = TRUE;
// Tell Drupal what addresses the proxy server(s) use.
$conf['reverse_proxy_addresses'] = array('127.0.0.1');
// Bypass Drupal bootstrap for anonymous users so that Drupal sets max-age < 0.
$conf['page_cache_invoke_hooks'] = FALSE;
// Set varnish configuration.
$conf['varnish_control_key'] = 'THE KEY';
$conf['varnish_socket_timeout'] = 500;
// Set varnish server IP's sperated by spaces
$conf['varnish-control-terminal'] = 'IP:6082 IP:6082';
If you do not use varnish, you should disable varnish, exipre and ding_varnish modules as they may give you problems.
This optimization assumes that you have APC installed on your server.
More information on the way
This optimization assumes that you have memcached installed on your server. Alternatively you can use redis as a key/value store, but it will not give you advantages as the more advanced stuff that redis as is not used by Drupal. So from a performance point it's more what you are use to setup.
$conf += array(
'memcache_extension' => 'Memcache',
'show_memcache_statistics' => 0,
'memcache_persistent' => TRUE,
'memcache_stampede_protection' => TRUE,
'memcache_stampede_semaphore' => 15,
'memcache_stampede_wait_time' => 5,
'memcache_stampede_wait_limit' => 3,
'memcache_key_prefix' => YOUR_SITE_NAME,
);
$conf['cache_backends'][] = 'profiles/ding2/modules/contrib/memcache/memcache.inc';
$conf['cache_default_class'] = 'MemCacheDrupal';
// Configure cache servers.
$conf['memcache_servers'] = array(
'127.0.0.1:11211' => 'default',
);
$conf['memcache_bins'] = array(
'cache' => 'default',
);
The ding_wayf module that is used to connect to WAYF services through SimpleSAMLphp requires that the providers (alma and openruth) set a special hash value as default password togehter with the social security number from WAYF.
This is done in settings.php by setting.
$conf['wayf_hash'] = "HASH_VALUE";
It is recommended that you run the site behind an https end-point proxy and with varnish.
Client -> Nginx -> Varnish -> Apache
The installation profile contains an example configuration (example-nginx.conf) for nginx that works as an SSL Proxy.
The installation profile also contains a Vanish configuration file (ding2.vcl), which is created to match the ding_varnish module's communication with varnish about which pages to cache for users (even logged in users).
The configuration file also limits which server are authenticated/allowed to be upstream proxy for Varnish. This is to ensure that sensitive information is not forwarded to an un-secure proxy as until the SSL proxy the information is not encrypted.
Apache do not have the SSL module enabled, so it will not set the "X-Forwarded-Proto" header from the SSL proxy and Drupal will not be able to detect that it's behind a SSL Proxy. So you have to set the HTTPS flag in your vhost configuration file as shown below.
SetEnvIf X-Forwarded-Proto https HTTPS=on