<?xml version="1.0" encoding="latin1" ?> <!DOCTYPE chapter SYSTEM "chapter.dtd"> <chapter> <header> <copyright> <year>2001</year><year>2009</year> <holder>Ericsson AB. All Rights Reserved.</holder> </copyright> <legalnotice> The contents of this file are subject to the Erlang Public License, Version 1.1, (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You should have received a copy of the Erlang Public License along with this software. If not, it can be retrieved online at http://www.erlang.org/. Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations under the License. </legalnotice> <title>WebTool User Guide</title> <prepared></prepared> <docno></docno> <date></date> <rev></rev> <file>webtool_chapter.xml</file> </header> <section> <title>Introduction </title> <p>WebTool provides an easy and efficient way to implement web based tools with Erlang/OTP. WebTool configures and starts the webserver and the various web based tools.</p> <p>All tools that shall run under WebTool must have a *.tool file in the code path or in its priv directory. When WebTool starts it searches the code path for such files. For each <c>ebin</c> directory in the path, the <c>priv</c> directory is also searched. The *.tool files contain the configuration data for each web based tool.</p> </section> <section> <title>Starting WebTool</title> <p>Start WebTool by calling the function <c>webtool:start/0</c> or <c>webtool:start/2</c>. If <c>webtool:start/0</c> is used the start page of WebTool is available at <em>http://localhost:8888/</em> or <em>http://127.0.0.1:8888/</em>, and the directory containing the root directory for the webserver, is assumed to be <c><![CDATA[webtool-<vsn>/priv]]></c>.</p> <p>Use <c>webtool:start/2</c> if the default path for the root directory, port, ip-number or server name can not be used. See the Reference Manual for <seealso marker="webtool">webtool</seealso> for more information.</p> <p>WebTool, with the default configuration as in <c>start/0</c>, can also be started with the <c>start_webtool</c> script which is available in the <c>priv</c> directory of the WebTool application. See the Reference Manual for <seealso marker="start_webtool">start_webtool</seealso> for further information about this script. For Windows users, the batch file <c>start_webtool.bat</c> can be used for the same purpose.</p> </section> <section> <title>Using WebTool</title> <p>Start WebTool and point the browser to the corresponding URL. At the top of the page there is a frame with a link named <em>WebTool</em>. Click that link and a page where it is possible to start the available tools will appear in the main frame.</p> </section> <section> <title>Start a web based tool</title> <p>Click on the link labeled <em>WebTool</em> in the topmost frame, select the checkbox for each tool to start and click on the button labeled <em>Start</em>. A link to each tool that WebTool succeeded to start will appear in the topmost frame.</p> </section> <section> <title>Stop a web based tool</title> <p>Click on the link labeled <em>WebTool</em> in the topmost frame. Select <em>Stop Tools</em> in the left frame. Select the checkbox for each tool to stop and click on the button labeled <em>Stop</em>.</p> </section> <section> <title>Develop new web based tools</title> <p>WebTool can be used as a framework when developing new web based tools.</p> <p>A web based tool running under WebTool will typically consist of three parts.</p> <list type="bulleted"> <item>A *.tool file which defines how WebTool can find the tool's configuration data</item> <item>The Erlang code generating the web interface to the tool (HTML code)</item> <item>The tool itself.</item> </list> <p>In most cases it is a good idea to separate the code for creation of the html-pages and the code for the logic. This increases the readability of the code and the logic might be possible to reuse.</p> <section> <title>The *.tool file</title> <p>When WebTool starts it searches the current path for <c>*.tool</c> files to find all available tools. The *.tool file contains a version identifier and a list of tuples which is the configuration data. The version identifier specifies the *.tool file version, i.e. not the version of webtool. Currently the only valid version is "1.2" and the only valid configuration tag is <c>config_func</c>. <c>config_func</c> specifies which function WebTool must call to get further configuration data for the tool. This means that a *.tool file generally must look like this:</p> <code type="none"> {version,"1.2"}. [{config_func,{Module,Function,Arguments}}]. </code> <p><c>Module</c> is the name of the module where the callback function is defined. <c>Function</c> is the name of the callback function, and <c>Arguments</c> is the list of arguments to the callback function.</p> </section> <section> <title>The configuration function</title> <p>The *.tool file points out a configuration function. This function must return a list of configuration parameters (see the Reference Manual for <seealso marker="webtool">webtool</seealso>).</p> <p>The <c>web_data</c> parameter is mandatory and it specifies the name of the tool and the link to the tool's start page. All other parameters are optional.</p> <p>If the tool requires any processes to run, the <c>start</c> parameter specifies the function that WebTool must call in order to start the process(es).</p> <p>The <c>alias</c> parameters are passed directly on to the webserver (INETS). The webserver has three ways to create dynamic web pages CGI, Eval Scheme and Erl Scheme. All tools running under WebTool must use Erl Scheme.</p> <p>Erl Scheme tries to resemble plain CGI. The big difference is that Erl Scheme can only execute Erlang code. The code will furthermore be executed on the same instance as the webserver.</p> <p>An URL which calls an Erlang function with Erl Scheme can have the following syntax:</p> <code type="none"><![CDATA[ http://Servername:Port/ErlScriptAlias/Mod/Func<?QueryString> ]]></code> <p>An <c>alias</c> parameter in the configuration function can be an ErlScriptAlias as used in the above URL. The definition of an ErlScripAlias shall be like this:</p> <p><c>{alias,{erl_alias,Path,[Modules]}}</c>, e.g.</p> <p><c>{alias,{erl_alias,"/testtool",[helloworld]}}</c></p> <p>The following URL will then cause a call to the function helloworld:helloworld/2 (if WebTool is started with default settings i.e. servername "localhost" and port 8888):</p> <p><c>http://localhost:8888/testtool/helloworld/helloworld</c></p> <p>Note that the module <c>helloworld</c> must be in the code path of the node running WebTool.</p> <p>Functions that are called via the Erl Scheme must take two arguments, <c>Environment</c> and <c>Input</c>. </p> <list type="bulleted"> <item><c>Environment</c> is a list of key/value tuples.</item> <item><c>Input</c> is the part of the URL after the "?", i.e. the part of the URL containing name-value pairs. If the page was called with the URL: <br></br> <c><![CDATA[http://localhost:8888/testtool/helloworld/helloworld?input1=one&input2=two]]></c> <br></br> <c>Input</c> will be the string <c><![CDATA["input1=one&input2=two"]]></c>. In the module <c>httpd</c> in the INETS application there is a function <c>parse_query</c> which will parse such a string and return a list of key-value tuples.</item> </list> <p>An <c>alias</c> parameter in the configuration function can also be a normal path alias. This can e.g. be used to point out a directory where HTML files are stored. The following definition states that the URL <c>http://localhost:8888/mytool_home/</c> really points to the directory <c>/usr/local/otp/lib/myapp-1.0/priv</c>:</p> <p><c>{alias,{"/mytool_home","/usr/local/otp/lib/myapp-1.0/priv"}}</c></p> <p>See the INETS documentation, especially the module <c>mod_esi</c>, for a more in depht coverage of Erl Scheme.</p> </section> <section> <title>A small example</title> <p>A Hello World example that uses Erl Scheme would look like this. Note that this example does not have a process running and thus does not need a <c>start</c> parameter in the configuration function. </p> <p><em>helloworld.erl:</em></p> <pre> -module(helloworld). -export([config_data/0]). -export([helloworld/2]). config_data()-> {testtool, [{web_data,{"TestTool","/testtool/helloworld/helloworld"}}, {alias,{erl_alias,"/testtool",[helloworld]}}]}. helloworld(_Env,_Input)-> [header(),html_header(),helloworld_body(),html_end()]. header() -> header("text/html"). header(MimeType) -> "Content-type: " ++ MimeType ++ "\r\n\r\n". html_header() -> "<HTML> <HEAD> <TITLE>Hello world Example </TITLE> </HEAD>\n". helloworld_body()-> "<BODY>Hello World</BODY>". html_end()-> "</HTML>". </pre> <p>To use this example with WebTool a *.tool file must be created and added to a directory in the current path, e.g. the same directory as the compiled <c>helloworld.beam</c>.</p> <p><em>testtool.tool:</em></p> <code type="none"> {version,"1.2"}. [{config_func, {helloworld,config_data,[]}}]. </code> <p>When <c>helloworld.erl</c> is compiled, start WebTool by calling the function <c>webtool:start()</c> and point your browser to <em>http://localhost:8888/</em>. Select WebTool in the topmost frame and start TestTool from the web page. Click on the link labeled <em>TestTool</em> in the topmost frame.</p> </section> </section> </chapter>