tools and libraries. They are listed below.
<note>
- <title>Note for Debian users</title>
-
- <para>If you are running a <ulink type="http"
- url="http://www.debian.org">Debian GNU/Linux</ulink> distribution
- you can have APT install all the required tools and libraries by
- adding the following repository to your
- <filename>/etc/apt/sources.list</filename>: <programlisting>
- deb <ulink type="http"
- url="http://people.debian.org/~zack">http://people.debian.org/~zack</ulink> unstable helm
- </programlisting> and installing the
- <application>helm-matita-deps</application> package.</para>
+ <title>Note for Debian (and derivatives) users</title>
+
+ <para>If you are running a
+ <ulink type="http"
+ url="http://www.debian.org">Debian GNU/Linux</ulink>
+ distribution,
+ or any of its derivative like <ulink type="http"
+ url="http://ubuntu.com">Ubuntu</ulink>,
+ you can use APT to install all the required tools and
+ libraries since they are all part of the Debian archive.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ apt-get install ocaml ocaml-findlib libgdome2-ocaml-dev liblablgtk2-ocaml-dev liblablgtkmathview-ocaml-dev liblablgtksourceview-ocaml-dev libsqlite3-ocaml-dev libocamlnet-ocaml-dev libzip-ocaml-dev libhttp-ocaml-dev ocaml-ulex08 libexpat-ocaml-dev libmysql-ocaml-dev camlp5
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ An official debian package is going to be added to the
+ archive too.
+ </para>
</note>
<para> SQL database and OCaml bindings for its client-side library
</para>
<para> The SQL database itself is not strictly needed to run
- &appname;, but we stronly encourage its use since a lot of
- features are disabled without it. Still, the OCaml bindings of
- the library are needed at compile time.</para>
+ &appname;, but the client libraries are.</para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term> &Sqlite; </term>
+ <term>
+ <application>
+ <ulink type="http"
+ url="http://ocaml.info/home/ocaml_sources.html">
+ OCaml Sqlite3
+ </ulink> </application>
+ </term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para> Sqlite database and OCaml bindings
+ </para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</sect2>
<sect2 id="database_setup">
- <title>Database setup</title>
+ <title>(optional) &MYSQL; setup</title>
- <para> To fully exploit &appname; indexing and search capabilities you
- will need a working &MYSQL; database. Detalied instructions on how to do
+ <para> To fully exploit &appname; indexing and search capabilities
+ on a huge metadata set you may
+ need a working &MYSQL; database. Detalied instructions on how to do
it can be found in the <ulink type="http"
url="http://dev.mysql.com/doc/">MySQL documentation</ulink>. Here you
can find a quick howto. </para>
</sect1>
<sect1 id="matita.conf.xml">
- <title>Configuring Matita</title>
+ <title>Configuring &appname;</title>
<para>
- The file <emphasis>matita.conf.xml</emphasis>...
- &TODO;
+ The configuration file is divided in four sections. The user and
+ matita ones are self explicative and does not need user
+ intervention. Here we report a sample snippet for these two
+ sections. The remaining db and getter sections will be explained in
+ details later.
+ <programlisting>
+<![CDATA[
+ <section name="user">
+ <key name="home">$(HOME)</key>
+ <key name="name">$(USER)</key>
+ </section>
+ <section name="matita">
+ <key name="basedir">$(user.home)/.matita</key>
+ <key name="rt_base_dir">/usr/share/matita/</key>
+ <key name="owner">$(user.name)</key>
+ </section>
+]]></programlisting>
</para>
+ <para>
+ &appname; needs to store/fetch data and metadata. Data is essentially
+ composed of XML files, metadata is a set of tuples for a relational
+ model. Data and metadata can produced by the user or be already
+ available. Both kind of data/metadata can be local and/or remote.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The db section tells &appname; where to store and retrieve metadata,
+ while the getter section describes where XML files have to be
+ found. The following picture describes the suggested configuration.
+ Dashed arrows are determined by the configuration file.
+ </para>
<figure><title>Configuring the Databases</title>
<mediaobject>
<imageobject>
<textobject><phrase>How to configure the databases.</phrase></textobject>
</mediaobject>
</figure>
+ <para>The getter</para>
+ <para>
+ Consider the following snippet and the URI
+ <userinput>cic:/matita/foo/bar.con</userinput>. If &appname;
+ is asked to read that object it will resolve the object trough
+ the getter. Since the first two entries are equally specific
+ (longest match rule applies) first the path
+ <userinput>file://$(matita.rt_base_dir)/xml/standard-library/foo/bar.con</userinput>
+ and then <userinput>file://$(user.home)/.matita/xml/matita/foo/bar.con</userinput>
+ are inspected.
+ <programlisting>
+<![CDATA[
+ <section name="getter">
+ <key name="cache_dir">$(user.home)/.matita/getter/cache</key>
+ <key name="prefix">
+ cic:/matita/
+ file://$(matita.rt_base_dir)/xml/standard-library/
+ ro
+ </key>
+ <key name="prefix">
+ cic:/matita/
+ file://$(user.home)/.matita/xml/matita/
+ </key>
+ <key name="prefix">
+ cic:/Coq/
+ http://mowgli.cs.unibo.it/xml/
+ legacy
+ </key>
+ </section>
+]]>
+ </programlisting>
+ if the same URI has to be written, the former prefix is skipped
+ since it is marked as readonly (<userinput>ro</userinput>).
+ Objects resolved using the third prefix are readonly too, and are
+ retrieved using the network. There is no limit to the number of
+ prefixes the user can define. The distinction between prefixes marked
+ as readonly and legacy is that, legacy ones are really read only, while
+ the ones marked with <userinput>ro</userinput> are considered for
+ writing when &appname; is started in system mode (used to publish user
+ developments in the library space).
+ </para>
+ <para>The db</para>
+ <para>
+ The database subsystem has three fron ends: library, user and
+ legacy. The latter is the only optional one. Every query is done on
+ every frontend, making the duplicate free union of the results.
+ The user front end kepps metadata produced by the user, and is thus
+ heavily accessed in read/write mode, while the library and legacy
+ fron ends are read only. Every front end can be connected to
+ backend, the storage actually.
+ Consider the following snippet.
+ <programlisting>
+<![CDATA[
+ <section name="db">
+ <key name="metadata">mysql://mowgli.cs.unibo.it matita helm none legacy</key>
+ <key name="metadata">file://$(matita.rt_base_dir) metadata.db helm helm library</key>
+ <key name="metadata">file://$(matita.basedir) user.db helm helm user</key>
+ </section>
+]]>
+ </programlisting>
+ Here the usr database is a file (thus locally accessed trough the
+ Sqlite library) placed in the user's home directory. The library one is
+ placed in the &appname; runtime directory. The legacy fron end is
+ connected to a remote &MYSQL; based storage. Every metadata key
+ takes a path to the storage, the name of the database, the user name,
+ a password (or <userinput>none</userinput>) and the name of the front
+ end to which it is attached.
+ </para>
</sect1>
</chapter>