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$Id: README,v 1.4 2012/07/26 20:26:00 rescorla1 Exp $ nrappkit 1.0? [Fill in on next drop] Copyright (C) 2006 Network Resonance, Inc. nrappkit is a toolkit for building standalone applications and appliances. It provides: - registry-based configuration (with change callbacks) - extensible command and configuration shell - extensible statistics system - configurable logging system - event and timer handling - generic plugin system - launcher daemon The contents of nrappkit were extracted from Network Resonance's product on the theory that they were generally useful for application developers. THIS PACKAGE DOES NOT GRANT A LICENSE OR RIGHT TO ANY OTHER NETWORK RESONANCE TECHNOLOGY OR SOFTWARE. 32/64-bit WARNING This code was developed on 32-bit platforms. It has not yet been ported to 64-bit platforms and will most likely fail. If you get it working on 64-bits, please provide patches. BUILDING Builds are done semi-manually with port directories for each platform. There are pre-existing ports to FreeBSD, Linux (Ubuntu and Fedora Core), and Darwin (MacOSX). To build the system: cd src/make/<platform> gmake Some of the platforms come in several variants. Most notably, if a platform exists in "regular" and "-appliance" variant, this means that the regular variant just builds binaries intended to be run out of the make directory (for development) and the appliance variant is intended to be installed in a real system. By default we want to install things owned as user "pcecap". Either make this user or edit the Makefile to be a user you like (e.g., nobody). If you want to include the 'nrsh' command-line configuration tool in your build, you will need to make sure the line BUILD_NRSH=yes appears (uncommented-out) in your platform Makefile. You will also need to to build OpenSSL and libedit and point your nrappkit Makefile to the correct paths. You can obtain these packages at: openssl-0.9.7l http://www.openssl.org/source/openssl-0.9.7l.tar.gz libedit-20060829-2.9 http://freshmeat.net/redir/editline/53029/url_tgz/libedit-20060829-2.9.tar.gz INSTALLING If you're doing an appliance as opposed to a development build, you'll want to install it. This is easy: su gmake install Most binaries and libraries ends up in /usr/local/pcecap while data files are in /var/pcecap. However, you can tweak this in the Makefile. By default it's all owned by pcecap. To ensure that dynamic libraries are loaded correctly at runtime, you'd want to make sure the right directory is included in your LD_LIBRARY_PATH or via ldconfig. QUICK TOUR The build makes the following binaries that you may find useful: - captured -- the launcher (the name is historical) - registryd -- the registry daemon. This is shared by all users on the system. - nrregctl -- a registry control program - nrsh -- the command shell (when included in build) - nrstatsctl -- the stats control program Using the nrcapctl script is the easiest way to interact with the applications. It is run as "nrcapctl <command>" with the following commands recognized: startup -- fires up captured, which in turn runs and initializes the registry shutdown -- kills captured and its child processes status -- prints the running status of captured in human-readable form stat -- prints the running status of captured in a form easily parsed by scripts enable -- alters the mode.txt file so that captured starts disable -- alters the mode.txt file so that captured does not start clear-statistics -- equivalent to "nrstatsctl -z" (requires that captured be running) Note: the "start" and "stop" nrcapctl commands do nothing as they use components not included in nrappkit. However the associated script logic in nrcapctl demonstrates how additional applications might be launched using nrcapctl and particular registry settings. EXTENDING When things come up, they're pretty dumb. You'll probably want to write your own applications, otherwise it's not clear why you're doing this. The general idea is that you write your application using the facilities that nrappkit provides and then write plugins to the nrappkit components as necessary. So, for example, say you want to write a network daemon. You would: - configure the launcher to launch your daemon (using the registry, naturally). - make calls to the registry to get configuration data - make calls to the logging system to log data - implement a stats module to record statistics - write a plugin to nrsh to let people configure your parameters Examples of some of this stuff can be found in examples/demo_plugin. Otherwise, read the source. More documentation will be on the way, hopefully.
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