The DXSpider Installation Manual v1.48 Iain Philipps, G0RDI (g0rdi@77hz.com) and Ian Maude, G0VGS, (ianmaude@btinternet.com) Version 1.48, July 2001 revision 1.1 A reference for SysOps of the DXSpider DXCluster program. ______________________________________________________________________ Table of Contents 1. Linux Installation 1.1 Introduction 1.2 Preparation 1.3 Installing the software 1.4 Setting callsigns etc 1.5 Starting up for the first time 1.6 The Client program 2. Linux quick installation guide 3. Configuration 3.1 Allowing ax25 connects from users 3.2 Allowing telnet connects from users 3.3 Setting up telnet connects (from 1.47 onwards) 3.4 Setting up for AGW Engine (1.47 onwards) 3.5 Setting up node connects 3.6 Connection scripts 3.7 Starting the connection 3.8 Telnet echo 3.9 Autostarting the cluster 4. Microsoft Windows Installation 4.1 Introduction 4.2 The requirements 4.3 The system 4.4 Perl 4.5 Additional packages 4.6 Getting Spider 5. Installing the software 5.1 The AGW packet engine 5.2 Setting up the initial user files 5.3 Incoming telnets 5.4 Connecting to other clusters 6. General Information 6.1 The crontab file ______________________________________________________________________ 1. Linux Installation 1.1. Introduction This section describes the installation of DX Spider v1.47 on a RedHat Linux Distribution. Wherever possible I will try to include differences for other distributions. I do not intend to try and cover the installation of Linux or the setup of the AX25 utilities. If you need help on this then read Iains original installation guide that comes with the Spider distribution. I am assuming a general knowledge of Linux and its commands. You should know how to use tar and how to edit files using your favourite editor. The crucial ingredient for all of this is Perl. Earlier versions of Spider required perl 5.004, however it is now STRONGLY recommended that you use at least version 5.005_03 as this is the version being used in the development of Spider. In addition to the standard Red Hat distribution you will require the following modules from http://www.cpan.org/CPAN.html ... o Data-Dumper-2.10.tar.gz o TimeDate-1.10.tar.gz o IO-1.20.tar.gz (for perl 5.00403 and lower) o Net-Telnet-3.02.tar.gz o Curses-1.05.tar.gz o Time-HiRes-01.20.tar.gz Copy the CPAN modules listed above to a convenient place on your computer. One good place would be /usr/local/packages, and the instructions which follow will assume that that's where you have put them. Log in as 'root', and make sure you're at '/root' before you continue. Here are exactly the commands you must issue next: - # tar xvfz /usr/local/packages/Data-Dumper-2.10.tar.gz # cd Data-Dumper-2.10 # perl Makefile.PL # make test # make install # cd .. # # tar xvfz /usr/local/packages/TimeDate-1.10.tar.gz # cd TimeDate-1.10 # perl Makefile.PL # make test # make install # cd .. # # tar xvfz /usr/local/packages/IO-1.20.tar.gz # cd IO-1.20 # perl Makefile.PL # make test # make install UNINST=1 # cd .. # # tar xvfz /usr/local/packages/Net-Telnet-3.02.tar.gz # cd Net-Telnet-3.02 # perl Makefile.PL # make test # make install # cd .. # # tar xvfz /usr/local/packages/Curses-1.05.tar.gz # cd Curses-1.05 # perl Makefile.PL # make test # make install # cd .. # # tar xvfz /usr/local/packages/Time-HiRes-01.20.tar.gz # cd Time-HiRes-01.20 # perl Makefile.PL # make test # make install # cd .. Do not fall into the trap of thinking they're all the same, just because they nearly are! Pay particular attention to the instructions of IO, above. 1.2. Preparation I will assume that you have already downloaded the latest tarball of the DXSpider software and are ready to install it. I am assuming version 1.47 for this section but of course you would use the latest version. Login as root and create a user to run the cluster under. UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCES USE ROOT AS THIS USER!. I am going to use the name sysop. You can call it anything you wish. Depending on your security requirements you may wish to use an existing user, however this is your own choice. # adduser -m sysop Now set a password for the user ... # passwd sysop # New UNIX password: # Retype new UNIX password: passwd: all authentication tokens updated successfully 1.3. Installing the software Now to unpack the DX Spider distribution, set symbolic links and group permissions. Copy the tarball to /home/sysop and do the following. # cd ~sysop # tar xvfz spider-1.47.tar.gz # ln -s ~sysop/spider /spider # groupadd -g 251 spider (or another number) If you do not have the command groupadd available to you simply add a line in /etc/group by hand. # vi /etc/group (or your favorite editor) You also need to add some others to the group, including your own callsign (this will be used as an alias) and root. The finished line in /etc/group should look something like this spider:x:251:sysop,g0vgs,root The next step is to set the permissions on the Spider directory tree and files .... # chown -R sysop.spider spider # find . -type d -exec chmod 2775 {} \; # find . -type f -exec chmod 775 {} \; This last step allows various users of the group spider to have write access to all the directories. This is not really needed just yet but will be useful when web interfaces start to appear. Finally, you need to fix the permissions on the ax25_call and netrom_call programs. Check where they are with the locate command and alter the permissions with the chmod command like this .. # chown root ax25_call netrom_call # chmod 4775 ax25_call netrom_call 1.4. Setting callsigns etc Now login to your machine as the user you created earlier. In my case that user is called sysop. Once logged in, issue the following commands .... $ cd /spider $ mkdir local $ mkdir local_cmd $ cp perl/DXVars.pm.issue local/DXVars.pm $ cd local $ vi DXVars.pm (or your favourite editor) Using the distributed DXVars.pm as a a template, set your cluster callsign, sysop callsign and other user info to suit your own environment. Note that this a perl file which will be parsed and executed as part of the cluster. If you get it wrong then perl will complain when you start the cluster process. It is important only to alter the text of any section. Some of the lines look a little odd. Take this line for example .... $myemail = "ianmaude\@btinternet.com"; There appears to be an extra slash in there. However this has to be there for the file to work so leave it in. PLEASE USE CAPITAL LETTERS FOR CALLSIGNS DON'T alter any file in /spider/perl, they are overwritten with every release. Any files or commands you place in /spider/local or /spider/local_cmd will automagically be used in preference to the ones in /spider/perl EVEN while the cluster is running! Save the new file and change directory to ../perl .... $ cd ../perl Now type the following command which creates the basic user file with you as the sysop. $ ./create_sysop.pl 1.5. Starting up for the first time We can now bring spider up for the first time and see if all is well or not! It should look something like this ... $ ./cluster.pl DXSpider DX Cluster Version 1.47 Copyright (c) 1998 Dirk Koopman G1TLH loading prefixes ... loading band data ... loading user file system ... starting listener ... reading existing message headers reading cron jobs orft we jolly well go ... If all is well then login on another term or console as sysop and cd to /spider/src. Now issue the following command ... $ ./client This should log you into the cluster as the sysop under the alias callsign we set earlier. In this case the callsign is G0VGS. The cluster callsign is set in the DXVars.pm file in /spider/local. In this case we will assume that this was set as GB7MBC. You should therefore see this when you login .... G0VGS de GB7MBC 19-Nov-1999 2150Z > If you do, congratulations! If not, look over the instructions again, you have probably missed something out. You can shut spider down again with the command .... shutdown and both the cluster and the client should return to Linux prompts. 1.6. The Client program In earlier versions of Spider, all the processes were Perl scripts. This was fine but with a lot of users your computer memory would soon be used up. To combat this a new client was written in "C". This client only works for incoming connects at the moment. Before you can use it though it has to be "made". CD to /spider/src and type make. You should see the output on your screen and hopefully now have a small C program called client. Leave it in this directory. 2. Linux quick installation guide This section is designed for experienced Spider sysops who want to install Spider from scratch. It is simply a check list of things that need to be done without any explanations. The name in brackets at the end of each line is the user that should be doing that process. o Login as root o Get the additional CPAN modules and install them (root) o Create the "sysop" user and set a password (root) o Put the Spider tarball in sysop and untar it (root) o ln -s sysop/spider /spider (root) o groupadd -g 251 spider (root) o Add any more users you need to the group entry in /etc/group (root) o Set the permissions on the spider tree (root) o Fix permissions on ax25_call and netrom_call (root) o Login as the sysop user o cd to /spider (sysop) o mkdir local (sysop) o mkdir local_cmd (sysop) o cp perl/DXVars.pm.issue local/DXVars.pm (sysop) o cd to /spider/local and edit DXVars to set your details (sysop) o cd ../perl (sysop) o ./create_sysop.pl (sysop) o ./cluster.pl (sysop) Spider should now be running and you should be able to login using the client program. o Login as root o Enter the correct line in ax25d.conf (root) o Enter the correct line in /etc/services (root) o Enter the correct line in /etc/inetd.conf (root) o killall -HUP inetd (root) Spider should now be able to accept logins via telnet, netrom and ax25. o Login as sysop o Start the cluster (sysop) o set/node and type for links (sysop) o Write any connect scripts (sysop) o Edit /spider/crontab as required (sysop) o Edit any other files as necessary (sysop) o Set filters, hops and forwarding files (sysop) o Login as root o Enter the correct line in /etc/inittab (root) 3. Configuration 3.1. Allowing ax25 connects from users As stated previously, the aim of this document is not to tell you how to configure Linux or the ax25 utilities. However, you do need to add a line in your ax25d.conf to allow connections to DXSpider for your users. For each interface that you wish to allow connections on, use the following format ... default * * * * * * - sysop /spider/src/client client %u ax25 or, if you wish your users to be able to use SSID's on their callsigns .. default * * * * * * - sysop /spider/src/client client %s ax25 For most purposes this is not desirable. The only time you probably will need this is when you need to allow other cluster nodes that are using SSID's in. In this case it would probably be better to use the first example and then add a specific line for that node like this: GB7DJK-2 * * * * * * - sysop /spider/src/client client gb7djk-2 ax25 default * * * * * * - sysop /spider/src/client client %u ax25 3.2. Allowing telnet connects from users From version 1.47 there is a new (more efficient) way of doing this (see next section) but, if you prefer, the method of doing it described here will continue to work just fine. Allowing telnet connections is quite simple. Firstly you need to add a line in /etc/services to allow connections to a port number, like this .... spdlogin 8000/tcp # spider anonymous login port Then add a line in /etc/inetd.conf like this .... spdlogin stream tcp nowait root /usr/sbin/tcpd /spider/src/client login telnet Once this is done, you need to restart inetd like this .... killall -HUP inetd Now login as sysop and cd spider/src. You can test that spider is accepting telnet logins by issuing the following command .... ./client login telnet You should get a login prompt and on issuing a callsign, you will be given access to the cluster. Note, you will not get a password login. There seems no good reason for a password prompt to be given so it is not asked for. Assuming all is well, then try a telnet from your linux console .... telnet localhost 8000 You should now get the login prompt and be able to login as before. 3.3. Setting up telnet connects (from 1.47 onwards) From version 1.47 you can choose to allow the perl cluster.pl program to allow connections directly (i.e. not via the /spider/src/client interface program). If you are using Windows then this is the only method available of allowing incoming telnet connections. To do this you need first to remove any line that you may previously have set up in /etc/inetd.conf. Remember to:- killall -HUP inetd to make the change happen... Having done that, you need to copy the file /spider/perl/Listeners.pm to /spider/local and then edit it. You will need to uncomment the line containing "0.0.0.0" and select the correct port to listen on. So that it looks like this:- @listen = ( ["0.0.0.0", 8000], ); As standard, the listener will listen on all interfaces simultaneously. If you require more control than this, you can specify each interface individually:- @listen = ( ["gb7baa.dxcluster.net", 8000], ["44.131.16.2", 6300], ); This will only be successful if the IP addresses on each interface are static. If you are using some kind of dynamic IP addressing then the 'default' method is the only one that will work. Restart the cluster.pl program to enable the listener. One important difference with the internal listener is that no echoing is done by the cluster program. Users will need to set 'local-echo' on in their telnet clients if it isn't set automatically (as per the standards). Needless to say this will probably only apply to Windows users. 3.4. Setting up for AGW Engine (1.47 onwards) AGW Engine is a Windows based ax25 stack. You can connect to an AGW engine from Linux as well as Windows based machines. In order to enable access to an AGW Engine you need to copy /spider/perl/AGWConnect.pm to /spider/local and edit it. Specifically you must:- o set $enable to 1. o set $login and $passwd to the values set up in your AGW installation. If you haven't set any there, then you should not touch these values. o You can connect to a remote AGW engine (ie on some other machine) by changing $addr and $port appropriately. o Restart the cluster.pl program 3.5. Setting up node connects In order to allow cluster node connections, spider needs to know that the connecting callsign is a cluster node. This is the case whether the connect is incoming or outgoing. In spider this is a simple task and can be done in runtime. Later versions of Spider can distinguish different software and treat them differently. For example, the WCY beacon cannot be handles by AK1A type nodes as AK1A does not know what to do with PC73. There are 4 different types of node at present and although they may not have any major differences at the moment, it allows for compatibility. The 4 types are ... set/node (AK1A type) set/spider set/dxnet set/clx For now, we will assume that the cluster we are going to connect to is an AK1A type node. Start up the cluster as you did before and login as the sysop with client. The cluster node I am wanting to make a connection to is GB7BAA but you would obviously use whatever callsign you required. At the prompt type ... set/node gb7baa The case does not matter as long as you have a version of DXSpider later than 1.33. Earlier versions required the callsign to be in upper case. That is now set, it is as simple as that. To prove it, login on yet another console as sysop, cd to spider/src and issue the command ... ./client gb7baa (using the callsign you set as a node) You should get an initialisation string from DXSpider like this ... ./client gb7baa PC38^GB7MBC^~ If the callsign you just set up as a cluster node is for an incoming connect, this is all that needs to be done. If the connection is to be outgoing then a connection script needs to be written. Sometimes you make a mistake... Honest, it does happen. If you want to make a node back to being a normal user, regardless of what type it is, do: unset/node gb7baa 3.6. Connection scripts Because DXSpider operates under Linux, connections can be made using just about any protocol; AX25, NETRom, tcp/ip, ROSE etc are all possible examples. Connect scripts live in the /spider/connect directory and are simple ascii files. Writing a script for connections is therefore relatively simple. The connect scripts consist of lines which start with the following keywords or symbols:- # All lines starting with a # are ignored, as are completely blank lines. timeout timeout followed by a number is the number of seconds to wait for a command to complete. If there is no timeout specified in the script then the default is 60 seconds. abort abort is a regular expression containing one or more strings to look for to abort a connection. This is a perl regular expression and is executed ignoring case. connect connect followed by ax25, agw (for Windows users) or telnet and some type dependent information. In the case of a telnet connection, there can be up to two parameters. The first is the ip address or hostname of the computer you wish to connect to and the second is the port number you want to use (this can be left out if it is a normal telnet session). In the case of an ax25 session then this would normally be a call to ax25_call or netrom_call as in the example above. It is your responsibility to get your node and other ax25 parameters to work before going down this route! ' line in a chat type script. The words/phrases normally come in pairs, either can be empty. Each line reads input from the connection until it sees the string (or perl regular expression) contained in the left hand string. If the left hand string is empty then it doesn't read or wait for anything. The comparison is done ignoring case. When the left hand string has found what it is looking for (if it is) then the right hand string is sent to the connection. This process is repeated for every line of chat script. client client starts the connection, put the arguments you would want here if you were starting the client program manually. You only need this if the script has a different name to the callsign you are trying to connect to (i.e. you have a script called other which actually connects to GB7DJK-1 [instead of a script called gb7djk-1]). There are many possible ways to configure the script but here are three examples, one for a NETRom/AX25 connect, one for AGW engines and one for tcp/ip. timeout 60 abort (Busy|Sorry|Fail) # don't forget to chmod 4775 netrom_call! connect ax25 /usr/sbin/netrom_call bbs gb7djk g1tlh # you can leave this out if you call the script 'gb7dxm' client gb7dxm ax25 timeout 60 abort (Busy|Sorry|Fail) # this does exactly the same as the previous example # the '1' is the AGW port number to connect thru for g1tlh connect agw 1 g1tlh # you can leave this out if you call the script 'gb7dxm' client gb7dxm ax25 timeout 15 connect telnet dirkl.tobit.co.uk # tell GB7DJK-1 that it is connected to GB7DJK # you can leave this out if you call this script 'gb7djk' client gb7djk telnet Both these examples assume that everything is set up properly at the other end. You will find other examples in the /spider/examples directory. 3.7. Starting the connection You start the connection, from within a sysop enabled cluster login, by typing in the word connect followed by a script name like this .... G0VGS de GB7MBC 13-Dec-1998 2041Z >connect gb7djk-1 connection to GB7DJK-1 started G0VGS de GB7MBC 13-Dec-1998 2043Z > This will start a connection using the script called gb7djk-1. You can follow the connection by watching the term or console from where you started cluster.pl. From version 1.47 onwards, you will need to set/debug connect first. You should see something like this ... <- D G1TLH connect gb7djk-1 -> D G1TLH connection to GB7DJK-1 started -> D G1TLH G1TLH de GB7DJK 13-Dec-1998 2046Z > timeout set to 15 CONNECT sort: telnet command: dirkl.tobit.co.uk CHAT "login" -> "gb7djk" received " Red Hat Linux release 5.1 (Manhattan) Kernel 2.0.35 on an i586 " received "login: " sent "gb7djk" CHAT "word" -> "gb7djk" received "gb7djk" received "Password: " sent "gb7djk" Connected to GB7DJK-1, starting normal protocol <- O GB7DJK-1 telnet -> B GB7DJK-1 0 GB7DJK-1 channel func state 0 -> init <- D GB7DJK-1 <- D GB7DJK-1 Last login: Sun Dec 13 17:59:56 from dirk1 <- D GB7DJK-1 PC38^GB7DJK-1^~ <- D GB7DJK-1 PC18^ 1 nodes, 0 local / 1 total users Max users 0 Uptime 0 00:00^5447^~ etc With later versions of Spider there is a set/login command for users. This tells them when a user or node logs in or out. If you do not add a line to your scripts after the final line (or before the client line which should always be last if needed) then the login/logout information will be sent to users before the login actually completes. This means if a node is unreachable, it will continue sending logins and logouts to users even though it is not actually connecting. To avoid this use the following line ... In a script, this might look like ... timeout 35 abort (Busy|Sorry|Fail) connect telnet mary 3000 3.8. Telnet echo Cluster links in particular suffer greatly from the presence of telnet echo. This is caused by the telnet negotiation itself and can create at worst severe loops. At best it creates unnecessary bandwidth and large logfiles! There are things that can be done to limit this problem but will not always work dependent on the route taken to connect. Telnet echo itself should only be a problem if the connection is being made to the telnet port (23). This port uses special rules that include echo negotiation. If the connection is to a different port, such as 7300, this negotiation does not happen and therefore no echo should be present. Sometimes it is not possible to make a direct connection to another node and this can cause problems. There is a way of trying to suppress the telnet echo but this will not always work, unfortunately it is difficult to be more specific. Here is an example of what I mean ... timeout 35 abort (Busy|Sorry|Fail) connect telnet mary.lancs.ac.uk So, the first connection is made by Spider. This is fine as Spider uses the Net_Telnet script from within perl. This actually uses TCP rather than TELNET so no negotiation will be done on the first connection. Once connected to mary.lancs.ac.uk, the command is sent to suppress echo. Now a telnet is made to a cluster node that is accepting connections on port 23. The problem with this link is that the negotiation is made by the remote machine, therefore you have no control over it. The chances are that this link will create echo and there will be no way you can stop it. 3.9. Autostarting the cluster Ok, you should now have DXSpider running nicely and allowing connects by cluster nodes or users. However, it has to be shutdown and restarted manually. It would be much easier to have it start automatically. This is not only a way to start the cluster automatically, it also works as a watchdog, checking the sanity of DXSpider and respawning it should it crash for any reason. Before doing the following, shutdown the cluster as you did earlier. Login as root and bring up the /etc/inittab file in your favourite editor. Add the following lines to the file near the end ... ##Start DXSpider on bootup and respawn it should it crash DX:3:respawn:/bin/su -c "/usr/bin/perl -w /spider/perl/cluster.pl" sysop >/dev/tty7 This line works fine for RedHat distributions. It is also fine for SuSE up to 7.0. From Suse 7.1 you need to add runlevels 2 and 5 like this ... DX:235:respawn:/bin/su -c "/usr/bin/perl -w /spider/perl/cluster.pl" sysop >/dev/tty7 The line required for Slackware distributions is slightly different. My thanks to Aurelio, PA3EZL for this information. DX:23:respawn:/bin/su - sysop -c "/usr/bin/perl -w /spider/perl/cluster.pl" >/dev/tty7 This will automatically start DXSpider on tty7 (ALT-F7) on bootup and restart it should it crash for any reason. As root type the command telinit q. DXSpider should start up immediately. You will see the output on tty7 and if you login as sysop you should find everything running nicely. 4. Microsoft Windows Installation 4.1. Introduction IMPORTANT: What you'll be left with once you've followed these instructions is (hopefully) a working DX Spider v1.47 system that is capable of accepting or originating "internet" connections, plus inbound AX.25 and TCP/IP radio connections. If the absence of outbound radio connections is a serious limitation for you, it would be better for you to wait a couple more weeks until this support has been added. On the other hand, you may have an enquiring mind, or better yet, may be looking for a useful way of connecting your current (perhaps) AK1A cluster "to the internet" via some networking mechanism (BPQEther, etc) or other. I won't be producing instructions for the latter case, because I don't have an AK1A to play with. But someone might ... Whatever, this document is intended to get you started with DX Spider in a Microsoft Windows (TM) environment. It's not intended to teach you anything other than how to perform a minimum configuration of a DX Spider installation and have it able to connect across "the internet" to other DX Clusters, while accepting inbound TELNET and radio connections. 4.2. The requirements The very first things you're going to need are (in order of importance):- o A cup of good, strong tea o A supported Windows platform with an internet connection so you can download the necessary software bits and bobs directly to it. There are other ways, but this is preferable. o Another cup of good, strong tea o If all goes according to plan, about an hour to spare o Plenty of good, strong tea 4.3. The system The platform I used to generate these instructions was a "vanilla" Microsoft Windows Me 4.90.3000 system, with a 700MHz AMD Athlon processor and 96 Mb memory. I've also personally verified that it runs on my laptop (Pentium 266MHz, 32 Mb memory, Windows 98 SE v4.10.2222 A) and a computer that I assembled from a random pile of junk (AMD K6-2 333MHz, 64 Mb memory, Windows 98 v4.10.1998). As a result, I have reason to believe that what I'm about to describe will perform equally on any 32-bit MS Windows environment with 32 Mb of memory. Because of the changes that have recently been made to the core "cluster.pl" module and the introduction of a very lightweight "winclient.pl", I have a sneaking suspicion that this will now run on any platform that has reasonably complete support for Perl. Is there someone out there with both an enquiring mind and (say) a Macintosh, for instance? Please bear in mind, though, that my instructions relate solely to how to get this going under a Microsoft Windows environment, and I have zero intention of trying to make them say otherwise. 4.4. Perl Install your chosen Perl environment. Unless you have a very good reason for not doing so, I strongly suggest that you use ActivePerl v5.6. For my testing & development, I used build 623. You can get this from:- http://www.activestate.com/Products/ActivePerl/Download.html You will need to choose either the MSI or the AS package. My recommendation is that you choose the MSI package and deal with the consequences if your system isn't equipped with support for the latest MS Installer; you'll be better off in the long run. The build 623 download is 7,460 KB, so now is a really good time to have some tea if you're on a slow dial-up connection. During installation, please ensure that you do choose the options to "Add Perl to the PATH environment variable" and "Create Perl file extension association"; it will make your life so much easier. Once the installation is finished, be sure to reboot your PC. You probably won't be told anywhere else that this needs to be done now, but it does. Really. Once you've rebooted, open a "DOS box" (Start > Run > command might do it, if you can't find it elsewhere) and from wherever it lands, type PERL -v (it's better if that's a lower-case be rewarded with some interesting information about your Perl installation. If you're not, you must go back to the beginning and discover what went wrong and fix it. It's pointless to proceed unless this simple check is passed. Assuming it did work, you may now move on. 4.5. Additional packages Some extensions ("packages") need to be added to the base Perl distribution, and we'll do this next. If you're using the Perl I recommended, and don't know any better for yourself, then just blindly following these instructions will work just fine. If that didn't describe you, then you're on your own. Visit the following URL: http://www.activestate.com/PPMPackages/zips/6xx-builds-only/ and download the following files:- Data-Dumper.zip Net-Telnet.zip TimeDate.zip Time-HiRes.zip DB_File.zip Make yourself a convenient directory to unpack all of these zip files into (I put mine in "D:\ppm>") and do the following (the bits you type in are blue ). Note that where these files land will be directly related to where you chose to install your ActivePerl (mine, as you can probably guess from what follows, went into "D:\Perl"):- D:\ppm>ppm install Data-Dumper.ppd Installing package 'Data-Dumper.ppd' Installing D:\Perl\site\lib\auto\Data\Dumper\Dumper.bs Installing D:\Perl\site\lib\auto\Data\Dumper\Dumper.dll Installing D:\Perl\site\lib\auto\Data\Dumper\Dumper.exp Installing D:\Perl\site\lib\auto\Data\Dumper\Dumper.lib Installing D:\Perl\html\site\lib\auto\Data\Dumper\Dumper.html Installing D:\Perl\site\lib\Data\Dumper\Dumper.pm Writing D:\Perl\site\lib\auto\Data\Dumper\Dumper.packlist D:\ppm> I'm not going to bother you with exhaustive details of the rest of them, but suffice it to say you need to: ppm install DB_File.ppd ppm install Net-Telnet.ppd ppm install TimeDate.ppd ppm install Time-HiRes.ppd If all that seemed to work OK, time to move along. Before anyone who is familiar with PPM tells me that we didn't need to download and keep those files locally, I knew that. I also knew that PPM is sometimes awkward to configure via firewalls, and that sometimes the repositories don't always work the way we'd hope. I do it that way because it suits me. 4.6. Getting Spider Get the current version of the DX Spider distribution. This needs to be v1.47 or later. You've got two ways (currently) of getting this; either get a CVS update from sourceforge (if you don't know what this is, then it isn't for you) or get my package from:- http://www.dcc.rsgb.org/WinSpider.zip or if you want the lastest CVS version (which is produced every night) http://www.dxcluster.org/download/CVSlatest.tgz If you went down the CVS route, then everything will be nicely set out on your local disk. If you got the ZIP file, unpack it to somewhere convenient. The following examples assume that you put it on drive "C:\", for convenience. NOTE: This distribution method will go away as soon as the first v1.47 tarball is released. You can use WinZip to unpack that, and my life will be made easier by not needing to keep this .ZIP file updated. 5. Installing the software Ensure that your CVS session or your unZIPped file have left you with a directory "C:\spider\local"; if not, go to "C:\spider\" and create one. If "C:\spider" is missing, go back and figure out why, because it shouldn't be. Now create your own local copy of the DXVars.pm file by:- copy c:\spider\perl\DXVars.pm.issue c:\spider\local\DXVars.pm Now you'll need to edit this file using a text editor. If nothing else, you can simply cd \spider\local and then notepad DXVars.pm to bring up an editor window containing the file. As an absolute minimum you must adjust the following items in DXVars.pm:- o $mycall - Should hold the callsign of your DX Cluster o $myname - The SysOp's first name o $myalias - the SysOp's callsign. Cannot be the same as $mycall! You really also ought to update the $mylatitude, $mylongitude, $myqth and $myemail variables. And unless you are absolutely certain you know what you're doing, you should change nothing else in this file. 5.1. The AGW packet engine On the assumption that you'll be using the SV2AGW Packet Engine to interface your radios to the cluster, you should now create your own local copy of AGWConnect.pm by:- copy c:\spider\perl\AGWConnect.pm c:\spider\local\AGWConnect.pm and then notepad AGWConnect.pm to bring up an editor window containing the file. You must consider adjusting the following items in AGWConnect.pm:- o $enable - set to '1' to enable AGWPE interface o $login - the login ID you chose when you set up the SV2AGW security :-) o $passwd - password that matches $login 5.2. Setting up the initial user files Next you need to create the initial user files, etc. A tool is supplied which will do this for you. To run the tool:- cd \spider\perl perl create_sysop.pl If all goes according to plan, you will see no output from this program, and after a brief wait, your DOS prompt will be returned. Depending on how brave you are, you might now care to try the following:- perl cluster.pl If you did everything you were told, your DOS window will now hold a display which looks something like:- DXSpider DX Cluster Version 1.47 Copyright (c) 1998-2001 Dirk Koopman G1TLH loading prefixes ... loading band data ... loading user file system ... starting listeners ... Internal port: localhost 27754 load badwords: Ok reading in duplicate spot and WWV info ... reading existing message headers ... load badmsg: Ok load forward: Ok load swop: Ok @msg = 0 before delete @msg = 0 after delete reading cron jobs ...v cron: reading /spider/cmd/crontab cron: adding 1 0 * * 0 DXUser::export("$main::data/user_asc") reading database descriptors ... doing local initialisation ... orft we jolly well go ... queue msg (0) Now, if that's what you've got, you are very nearly home and dry (in as far as these particular experiments are concerned, anyhow) To access your new cluster (from the local machine) find yourself another "DOS box" and do the following:- cd \spider\perl perl winclient.pl If you are rewarded with a display which looks something like:- Hello Iain, this is GB7SJP in Amersham, Bucks running DXSpider V1.47 Cluster: 1 nodes, 1 local / 1 total users Max users 2 Uptime 0 00:00 M0ADI de GB7SJP 4-Mar-2001 1511Z > You've arrived. Try some commands, and see how they feel. (In case you were wondering, "Iain", "M0ADI" and "GB7SJP" all came from the version of DXVars.pm that was on the machine when I started the winclient.pl) 5.3. Incoming telnets If you want to enable inbound "TELNET" connections, you've got a little more work to do. From a handy "DOS box" that's not doing anything else, do the following:- copy \spider\perl\listeners.pm \spider\local cd \spider\local notepad listeners.pm The following lines need attention:- ["0.0.0.0", 7300], On my machine, I've simply uncommented the "0.0.0.0" entry by removing the '#' from the front of the line. If you don't have a static hostname for your machine, and you intend to allow folk to connect to your machine across the internet, then I'd suggest you pay a visit to www.dyndns.org and create one for yourself. While it's free, it will take a modest an amount of effort on your part to read, understand and implement what needs to be done to set this up. 5.4. Connecting to other clusters If you want to connect this to another cluster, then you'll want to negotiate a link with someone. For experimental purposes, I'm happy to allow folk to connect to GB7DXA (spud.ath.cx), on the understanding that the system may or may not be there and may or may not be connected to anything particularly useful at any given moment. Contact me by Email if you want me to set up a connection for you. 6. General Information The following relates to all versions of DXSpider and is not platform related. 6.1. The crontab file Login as sysop and create a file in /spider/local_cmd called crontab. Edit it with your favourite editor and add a line like this (I have included a comment) # check every 10 minutes to see if gb7xxx is connected and if not # start a connect job going 0,10,20,30,40,50 * * * * start_connect('gb7xxx') if unless connected('gb7xxx') The callsign involved will be the callsign of the cluster node you are going to connect to. This will now check every 10 minutes to see if gb7xxx is connected, if it is then nothing will be done. If it is not, then a connect attempt will be started. There are probably lots of other things you could use this crontab file for. If you want to know more about it, look at the DXSpider website at the cron page where it is explained more fully.