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xsp4 - Online in the Cloud

Run xsp4 in OnWorks free hosting provider over Ubuntu Online, Fedora Online, Windows online emulator or MAC OS online emulator

This is the command xsp4 that can be run in the OnWorks free hosting provider using one of our multiple free online workstations such as Ubuntu Online, Fedora Online, Windows online emulator or MAC OS online emulator

PROGRAM:

NAME


XSP - Mono ASP.NET Web Server (xsp4 and xsp42)

SYNOPSIS


xsp4 [options]

or

mod-mono-server [options]

or

fastcgi-mono-server [options]

DESCRIPTION


XSP, mod-mono-server and fastcgi-mono-server are hosts for ASP.NET-based applications.

If run as `xsp4', the process provides a minimalistic web server which hosts the ASP.NET
runtime and can be used to test and debug web applications that use the System.Web
facilities in Mono. This server is most convenient for testing and running small sites,
does not offer everything a production web server offers.

`mod-mono-server' and 'fastcgi-mono-server' are both ASP.NET runtimes hosts that can
communicate with another web server (at the time of this writing, Apache 1.3-2.2 were
supported through mod_mono and several other web servers through FastCGI). This mechanism
is better used for high-traffic servers or production systems, since it can integrate with
the main HTTP server and leverage all of the optimizations and extensions of an existing
server, while providing the ASP.NET runtime. You can choose the communication channel used
between mod_mono and mod-mono-server. If you provide a --filename option, a unix socket is
used, otherwise you can give --port to use a TCP socket.

OPTIONS


--address addr
Sets the IP address to listen on. By default it's 0.0.0.0 for xsp4 and 127.0.0.1
for mod-mono-server. AppSettings key name: MonoServerAddress

--port PORT
Changes the default port where the XSP server will listen to requests. By default
XSP listens on port 8080 and mod-mono-server has no default. AppSettings key name:
MonoServerPort

--backlog N
The backlog of connections to set on the listener socket. By default the value is
set to 500.

--minThreads N
The minimum number of threads the threadpool allocates. Increase this value to
better handle the sudden arrival of connections. The default value is determined
by the mono runtime.

--filename file (mod-mono-server and fastcgi-mono-server)
The unix socket file name to listen on. Default value: /tmp/mod_mono_server
(fastcgi-mono-server: /tmp/fastcgi-mono-server) AppSettings key name:
UnixSocketFileName (fastcgi-mono-server: MonoUnixSocket)

--root PATH
The root directory for XSP. The default is the directory where XSP is executed.
The current directory will be changed to this one before creating any application.
AppSettings key name: MonoServerRootDir

--appconfigfile FILENAME
Adds application definitions from the XML configuration file. See sample
configuration file that comes with the server (sample.webapp) and WEBAPP FILE
FORMAT below. AppSettings key name: MonoApplicationsConfigFile

--appconfigdir DIR
Adds application definitions from all XML files found in the specified directory
DIR. Files must have '.webapp' extension. AppSettings key name:
MonoApplicationsConfigDir

--applications APPS
A comma separated list of virtual directory and real directory for all the
applications we want to manage with this server. The virtual and real dirs. are
separated by a colon. The default value is '/:.'.

Some examples:

'/:.' The virtual / is mapped to the current directory.

'/blog:../myblog'
The virtual /blog is mapped to ../myblog

'/:.,/blog:../myblog'
Two applications like the above ones are handled.

myhost.someprovider.net:/blog:../myblog
The virtual /blog at myhost.someprovider.net is mapped to ../myblog.

--master

This instance will be used to by mod_mono to create ASP.NET
applications on demand. If this option is provided, there is no need to provide a
list of applications to start. This applies only to mod-mono-server.exe.
--nonstop By default xsp4/mod-mono-server will stop processing requests when the
return key is pressed. Use this to avoid this behavior.

--no-hidden
Do not protect hidden files/directories from being accessed by clients. Hidden
files/directories are those with Hidden attribute on Windows and whose name starts
with a dot on Unix. Any file/directory below a hidden directory is inacessible.
This option turns the default behavior of protecting such locations off. If your
application does not contain any hidden files/directories, you might want to use
this option as the checking process has a per-request cost. AppSettings key name:
MonoServerCheckHiddenFiles (a boolean accepting 'true' or 'false')

--https
Enables HTTPS support on the server, you must supply an X.509 certificate and a
private key with either the --cert/--pkfile options or with the --p12file (which
combines both the certificate and the private key into a single file).

To use you must first create an X.509 certificate for your server, for
example:
$ makecert -r -eku 1.3.6.1.5.5.7.3.1 -n "CN=server" -p12 server.p12 s3kr3t
Mono MakeCert - version 1.1.9.0
X.509 Certificate Builder
Copyright 2002, 2003 Motus Technologies. Copyright 2004-2005 Novell. BSD licensed.

Success

Then you must pass the following flags to xsp4:
$ xsp4 --https --p12file server.p12 --pkpwd s3kr3t

This option is only valid for XSP. For mod_mono you should configure Apache for SSL/TLS.

--https-client-accept
Like --https this enables HTTPS support on the server. However this option also
send an "invitation" to clients to provide client-certificates to authenticate
themselves. Client are free to provide, or not, a client certificate. Web
application can detect if a client certificate is used and react accordingly. Most
web browser will not send a client certificate unless they have been explicitly
requested to do so.

This option is only valid for XSP. For mod_mono you should configure Apache for SSL/TLS.

--https-client-require
Like --https this enables HTTPS support on the server. However this option also
requires clients to use client-certificates to authenticate themselves. Client who
do not provide client certificates will receive an error. Note that client may send
an empty certificate structure so web application should check the certificate
content.

This option is only valid for XSP. For mod_mono you should configure Apache for SSL/TLS.

--p12file FILENAME
Used to specify the PKCS#12 file to use. This file includes both the X.509
certificate and the private key required to encrypt the HTTP traffic.

This option is only valid for XSP. For mod_mono you should configure Apache for SSL/TLS.

--cert FILENAME
Used to specify the server X.509 certificate file. This is normally used with the
--pkfile.

This option is only valid for XSP. For mod_mono you should configure Apache for SSL/TLS.

--pkfile FILENAME
Used to specify the path to the private keyfile. The PVK format isn't very secure
and you should use the PKCS#12 format (--p12file option) to store new private keys.

This option is only valid for XSP. For mod_mono you should configure Apache for SSL/TLS.

--pkpwd PASSWORD
If your private key is password protected, PASSWORD is the password used to decote
the private key. This option works for both PVK and PKCS#12 formats.

This option is only valid for XSP. For mod_mono you should configure Apache for SSL/TLS.

--protocol PROTOCOL
Specifies which protocols are available for encrypting the communications. The
possible values are Default, Tls and Ssl3. Ssl2 isn't supported. The default
value is "Default" which auto-detect the client protocol and adjust the server
protocol accordingly.

This option is only valid for XSP. For mod_mono you should configure Apache for SSL/TLS.

--terminate (mod-mono-server only)
Gracefully terminates a running mod-mono-server instance. All other options but
--filename or --address and --port are ignored if this option is provided.

--version
Displays version information and exits.

--help Shows the list of options and exits.

--verbose
Prints extra messages. Useful for debugging.

--pidfile FILE
Writes the xsp4 PID to the specified file.

MONO RUNTIME OPTIONS


xsp4 and xsp42 are scripts that call mono. If you want to pass options to mono (for
example, options to get line numbers in stack traces), you can use the MONO_OPTIONS
environment variable when invoking xsp4 or xsp42.

For example:
$ MONO_OPTIONS=--debug xsp42

DEFAULT INDEX FILES


You can choose which files are considered as index using xsp4.exe.config configuration
file like this:

<appSettings>
<add key="MonoServerDefaultIndexFiles"
value="index.aspx" />
</appSettings>

By default, it has index.aspx, Default.aspx, default.aspx, index.html and index.htm. The
order matters.

WEBAPP FILE FORMAT


The format of the .webapp files used for --appconfigfile and --appconfigdir is:

<apps>
<web-application>
<name>{appname}</name>
<vhost>{virtual host for application}</vhost>
<vport>{port for the application}</vport>
<vpath>{virtual directory in apache}</vpath>
<path>{physical path to aspx files}</path>
<!-- <enabled> is true by default -->
<enabled>{true|false}</enabled>
</web-application>
</apps>

You can include any number of <web-application> nodes, one per ASP.NET application to run.

There's a sample.webapp file in the XSP samples directory.

AUTHORS


The Mono XSP server was written by Gonzalo Paniagua Javier ([email protected]). Fastcgi-
mono-server was written by Brian Nickel <http://kerrick.wordpress.com>.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES


MONO_ASPNET_NODELETE
If set to any value, temporary source files generated by ASP.NET support classes
will not be removed. They will be kept in the user's temporary directory.

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