W3CMarkupValidator » History » Revision 5
Revision 4 (zours, 2007-08-29 18:06) → Revision 5/11 (Anonymous, 2007-10-14 06:57)
= Using W3C Markup Validator with Lighttpd = This is a quick guide to help you configure the w3c-markup-validator for use with Lighttpd. '''This example was only tested on Ubuntu Feisty (but it should work with any Debian-based system), and with w3c-markup-validator v0.7.4.''' == Lighttpd doesn't speak Apache fluently == Some times ago I switched many of my web servers from Apache to Lighttpd (some still have Apache, because of subversion). When I did so, I was happy to see that almost everything worked perfectly -- almost. The one thing that obviously didn't work, was the w3c-markup-validator. Using the one available online isn't always an option, if you're developing in an intranet, with no direct external access from the outside. w3c-markup-validator is configured via some Apache-only directives. I struggled quite a bit, trying to figure out how to reproduce the configuration for Lighttpd (I wasn't even sure it was possible). == Let's do it! == First of all, you'll need to enable a few modules : {{{ lighty-enable-mod alias lighty-enable-mod cgi invoke-rc.d lighttpd restart }}} Then, create a new configuration file in {{{/etc/lighttpd/conf-available/}}}. {{{/etc/lighttpd/conf-enabled/}}}. Name it, for example, {{{20-w3c-markup-validator.conf}}} (you'll need it to start after the other modules anyway). Paste these lines in the file : {{{ ## W3C markup validator service $HTTP["remoteip"] == "127.0.0.1" { alias.url += ( "/validator/checklink" => "/usr/lib/cgi-bin/checklink", "/validator/check" => "/usr/lib/cgi-bin/check", "/validator/" => "/usr/share/w3c-markup-validator/html/" ) cgi.assign += ("/check" => "") } }}} Finally, enable this new module : {{{ lighty-enable-mod w3c-markup-validator invoke-rc.d lighttpd restart }}} Now, try accessing {{{http://localhost/validator/}}} and you're done.