Webserver
Contents
Previous notes
If you installed aMule via deb or RPM package, the webserver source is not included. Since some few files are needed from the sources to set-up aMuleWeb, please visit http://www.amule.org and download the tar.gz package for your aMule version.
Set a Webserver with aMule
With aMule 2.0.0-rc1 or later
- Untar the sources and copy src/aMule.tmpl and src/webserver/ into your ~/.aMule/ directory. The following (run from the sources directory), should do so:
- cp -r src/aMule.tmpl src/webserver/ ~/.aMule/
- Shutdown aMule if it is still running.
- Edit your ~/.eMule file:
- Locate the [ExternalConnect] section and change:
- AcceptExternalConnections=1 <-- To enable aMule listening for External Connections.
- ECUseTCPPort=1 <-- To use the TCP port. Very important since Unix sockets are disabled.
- Restart aMule
- Go to your "Preferences"->"Remote Controls" (in aMule):
- Enable your webserver
- Also setup your passwords here for External Connections and webserver login.
- NOTE: When you change your webserver and External Connections ports here, make sure to restart aMule.
- Now you're done! You are ready to run aMuleWeb and connect to it.
With aMule 1.2.8 or earlier
The following is based on the original instruction by BigBob. They guide you on how to modify aMule's configuration files to set aMuleWeb correctly. There is "Preferences"->"Remote Controls" now, but anyway, information is never a bad idea.
- Shutdown aMule to avoid overwritting config files while shutting down.
- Copy from aMule's sources (version 1.2.4 or later) the directory src/webserver/ into your ~/.aMule/webserver/ directory.
- Copy from aMule's sources (version 1.2.4 or later) the file src/aMule.tmpl into your ~/.aMule/aMule.tmpl directory.
- Open a terminal and type (you might have to install md5sum):
- echo -n "THEPASWORDYOUWANT" | md5sum | cut -d " " -f 1
- This command will reply with an MD5 hash. Something like: 324f85f6095f9e5fe25b6c85af44b445
- Edit your ~/.eMule file, locate the [ExternalConnect] section in it and change this fields:
- AcceptExternalConnections=1 <- To enable aMule to listen for external connections.
- ECUseTCPPort=0 <- 0/1 (disable/enable) the use of a TCP port (if disabled use a Unix socket in your ~/.aMule/muleconn) for External Connections.
- ECPort=4712 <- Put here the port on which you want aMule to listen for External Connections.
- ECPassword=39e5049d0614baf21906500e2261d500 <- Put here the password for External Connections' authentications you generated before in terminal (something like 324f85f6095f9e5fe25b6c85af44b445).
- Edit your ~/.eMule file, locate the [WebServer] section in it and change fields:
- Password=324f85f6095f9e5fe25b6c85af44b445 <- Put here the password generated with md5sum for the admin (full privileged users).
- PasswordLow=1db5a746266e941b3ef7dd3586863ca7 <- Put here the password generated with md5sum for "low users" (low privileged users).
- Port=10000 <- Put the port you want aMuleWeb to listen on.
- Enabled=1 <- This option has been deprecated and is completly ignored now. Enabling External Connections will enable any application it connects to it, including aMuleWeb.
- UseGzip=1 <- Enable compression on communication.
- PageRefreshTime=120 <- Put here the web page refresh time (in seconds).
- UseLowRightsUser=0 <- 0/1 (disabled/enabled) "low user" access.
- Restart aMule.
- Now point your web browser to http://localhost:10000 (or whatever your host and ports are) and authenticate yourself with "Password" (for full privileged user) or "PasswordLow" (for low privileged user, if enabled).
- That's all :)
- 'NOTE: In latest aMule 1.2.x releases, the option WebTemplateFile allows to override the file template to use (thanks to Stefanero. You can set this option in the [eMule]] section. Example:
- WebTemplateFile=eMule.tmpl
Shakraw
Connecting to aMuleWeb
To run aMuleWeb run amuleweb on a terminal. For more information about running aMuleWeb check the aMuleWeb document.
Once aMuleWeb is running, open a web browser and connect to:
http://host:port
where host stands for your host's name (try with localhost) and port stands for the aMuleWeb port (NOT the External Connections port).
For example: http://localhost:4711
Standard ports
The ports can be set to anything, but this are the most used (the standard ones):
- External Connections: 4712
- aMuleWeb: 4711
Make sure you do not confuse with what each of them is.
Where to report problems and questions?
For Problems or Questions just report on http://forum.amule.org forum or join IRC channel #amule at irc.freenode.net