Warning: Reason support is experimental. We are looking for beta-tester and contributors.

Quickstart

Installation

The easier way to install Ocsigenserver is to use the installation tool from your distribution. Ocsigenserver is available for example in Debian, Gentoo, FreeBSD... If your distribution is not shipping any package we recommend to use Opam to install Ocsigen and all its dependencies (including OCaml). It is known to work on Linux, MacOS, FreeBSD, Solaris (but has not been tested on Windows).

If you need to install it from source, download the package, and read instructions in the README file.

Launch the server

Distributions usually provide a default configuration file called /etc/ocsigenserver/ocsigenserver.conf (and possibly other configuration files in /etc/ocsigenserver/conf.d).

If you are root on your system, and if no other server is running on port 80, just launch the server using the configuration script from your distribution, usually:

/etc/init.d/ocsigenserver start

or just type

ocsigenserver

A default Web site should be available at URL http://localhost/. If another Web server is running on port 80, just change the port number in the main configuration file.

If you want to run Ocsigen as an unprivileged user, you need to adapt the configuration file to your rights. An example of configuration file for users with restricted rights is given here. Copy it in a file and adapt it to your needs. Use a port greater than 1024, for example 8080. Then run:

ocsigenserver -c //your_config_file//

and go to the URL http://localhost:8080/ to see the default Web site.

Personalizing my configuration

Have a look at the page Configuration to learn how to personalize the configuration file and adapt it to your needs.

The main extensions you need for basic use are:

Staticmod
for serving static pages,
Accesscontrol
if you need to restrict the access to the sites,
Eliom
if you want to use dynamic Web sites written in OCaml with Eliom,
CGImod
if you want to use dynamic Web sites written as CGI scripts (for example one way to run PHP pages),
Revproxy
if you want to redirect some requests to another Web server, like Tomcat or Apache (another way to run PHP pages).

Writing my own dynamic sites with Eliom

Eliom Web sites are OCaml compiled modules (.cmo or .cma, possibly .cmxs with native code version) that are loaded dynamically from the configuration file. The first section of the first part of Eliom's tutorial explains how to write an "Hello World" with Eliom.

If something goes wrong

If something goes wrong, first have a look in the logs to see if there is an error message. The directory of logs is set in the configuration file (usually /var/log/ocsigenserver).

If you can't find the solution in the documentation, register to our mailing list and ask your question here.

If you find a bug, a mistake in the documentation (even a small one), or if you want to make a suggestion, fill a ticket on Github.