This guide for the installation of the W3C Markup Validator was contributed by David Tibbe. It is also available in german.
See the generic installation guide for instructions on how to install the Markup Validator on other platforms and links to other platform-specific guides.
The first prerequisite to run the validator on your system is a Web server. This guide will assume that the server is already installed, and its configuration will not be discussed here. The server used in this guide is Apache 2, and the instructions should be applicable to most versions of Apache.
The Markup Validator itself is basically a script written in Perl, so you will need that, too. ActivePerl (version 5.8), is one of the options, and thanks to its installer should not be difficult to set up.
Of course, you will also need the Validator itself. It is available for download as two tar-archives: the validator itself (~300kB), and a collection of DTDs (~400kB).
The validator relies on a number of Perl libraries, or "modules".
At Active State,
has a list of all available modules for Active Perl. In this list is also mentioned
if a module is "Core" (which means it is build in) or if it
is downloadable.
For the validator, the following modules are required:
...and the following are optional:
You can get each of them in a single package at ActiveState. They are also packed ready-to-install in a single zip-file, (courtesy of the guide's author).
Finally you will need some calm and patience. A whole installation of the validator (including the Apache and Perl) will take about an hour if you do not have much experience.
It might be a good idea to think about the directories the program should be installed to. Just clicking "Next" in all installation routines is not a very good idea.
One suggested method is to have a directory C:\www
in which all programs concerning the
Web server are located (in subfolders, obviously). For instance, Apache is installed in
C:\www\Apache2
, Perl in C:\www\perl
, the Perl modules unzipped in
C:\www\pmm
, the validator itself in C:\www\validator
and finally
the DTD-Collection in C:\www\sgml-lib
The rest of this guide will assume that these paths are being used. If you want to use another directory structure, you will have to adapt the instructions and sample configuration to your own setup.
Next, you will be installing all the programs and libraries one after the other.
The Apache Web server
should first be installed and successfully started. As mentioned, this will not be
explained in here, but you will find a lot of How-Tos all over the net, e.g.
in the Documentation on the Apache site
The only thing that is important to know is that the installation
routine will create a subfolder Apache2
by itself. Therefore, you will want to choose
C:\www
as installation directory, and Apache will be installed to
C:\www\Apache2
.
Since Perl 5.8.8 build 817.91 PPM has a GUI. It is quite easy to use, if you do have any problems have a look at its documentation.
You can add the modules from the downloaded package or directly from the web. If you want to install them from a local repository, you have to add it first (if you don't want to do so, just skip this step).
That can be done within in the preferences dialogue (Edit -> Preferences -> Repositories). Click the Folder-Icon, select C:\www\ppm and name the repository "Local", for example. Click "Add" and then "OK".
When you type the first letters of the desired package, the long list is getting shorter and only matching packages are shown. Select the one you want to install, select "Install..." from the context menu. When you have done that for all packages, click the little green arrow in the to of the window.
In the little status window on the bottom you will see the progress and success of each installation. Exit PPM when all packages have been installed.
The first file to edit is the httpd.conf
located at
C:\www\Apache2\conf
, the central configuration file
of your Apache. It is recommended to make a backup before editing
it.
The validator pages are composed by using
SSI. Therefore, the
Apache has to load the required module. In
"Section 1 Global Environment", the different
modules are loaded. SSI needs mod_include
for working.
The line
LoadModule include_module modules/mod_include.so
has to be unquoted (by deleting the # at the beginning of the line) or added completely if the module is not loaded yet.
The next step is to create a virtual host. It is needed, because the validator
should be run from a different directory and logically separated from the
default host. At the end of the httpd.conf
, in
"Section 3: Virtual Hosts", the following lines have to be added:
NameVirtualHost 127.0.0.2:80 <VirtualHost 127.0.0.2:80> ServerName validator.example.org DocumentRoot "C:/www/validator/htdocs" ErrorLog logs/error_validator.log CustomLog logs/access_validator.log common ScriptAlias /cgi-bin "C:/www/validator/httpd/cgi-bin" ScriptAlias /check "C:/www/validator/httpd/cgi-bin/check" AddType text/html .html AddOutputFilter INCLUDES .html <Directory "C:/www/validator/htdocs"> Options ExecCGI Includes Indexes MultiViews AddEncoding x-gzip .gz <Files *.js.gz> ForceType application/javascript </Files> <Files *.css.gz> ForceType text/css </Files> AllowOverride None Order deny,allow Allow from localhost </Directory> <Directory "C:/www/validator/httpd/cgi-bin"> Options ExecCGI Includes Indexes MultiViews AllowOverride None Order deny,allow Allow from localhost </Directory> </VirtualHost>
It may be that the httpd.conf
is splitted into more than one
file. The other files will be located in the C:\www\Apache2\conf\extra
folder. If there is a file named httpd-vhosts.conf
edit this one and
make sure that it will be included in the httpd.con
(there must be
a line
# Local access to the Apache HTTP Server Manual Include conf/extra/httpd-manual.conf
The meaning of all these lines will not be discussed here. Who is
interested in their sense can have a look to the manual or in one
of the many How-Tos found by Google. Just some short notes about:
The first line specifies the IP-address, the validator should run
at. It is a loop back address, so the validator will be accessible
only from your machine. The following lines specify the name of
the host, the locations of the log files and some "short
cuts" for the cgi-bin directory and check-script. The next
three lines make the Apache parsing HTML-files for SSI-directives.
The last two sections set some permission for the used
directories.
The files error_validator.log
and
access_validator.log
can be found in the
C:\www\Apache2\logs
-directory. They log every
request and error occurring on this host and give you some
helpful advices in these cases.
Finally, the Apache has to be restarted so that the changes take effect. You can do that by choosing the shortcut in the Apache-program group (Start, Programs, Apache HTTP Server, Control Apache Server Restart). A DOS-box will appear shortly; when it disappears, the Apache is restarted.
When you call http://127.0.0.2/ in your browser, you should see the well-known site from http://validator.w3.org/. In the configuration file of the Apache, a name for the Virtual Host was defined (validator.example.org), but it is not resolved yet. That is changed in the next step.
The hosts
-file can be seen as a local
DNS-configuration. It is located in at
C:\windows\hosts
on Win9x and at
C:\Windows\system32\drivers\etc\hosts
on
WinXP. It might be possible, that the file is missing,
but a file hosts.sam
can be found instead.
In that case you have to rename it by deleting the file
extension and its leading dot.
When opening it in an editor, you will find a leading comment in there. A line
127.0.0.1 localhost
follows.
That line means that a request to localhost is redirected to 127.0.0.1 (i.e. calling http://localhost/ in your browser effects a request to http://127.0.01/).
Edit the file to the following:
127.0.0.1 localhost 127.0.0.1 www.example.org 127.0.0.2 validator.example.org
After these changes, the server is available at http://localhost/ but can be accessed also at http://www.example.org/, too. Requests for http://validator.example.org/ are redirected to http://127.0.0.2/.
The server configuration is finished right now. But if you
try to validate a page, you will get an "Internal Server Error",
because the check
-script has not been configured yet.
In the directory c:\www\validator\htdocs\config
, a file
called validator.conf
can be found. Open it with the editor.
Lines beginning with # are comments.
For the SGML Library
, c:/www/sgml-lib
is declared. Notice that slashes are used here instead of
windows-like back slashes.
The last option that has to be modified is Allow Private
IPs = { no | yes }
. It must be set to
"yes". Otherwise, you cannot validate files
from the local PC and you will get just an access fault
because of security reasons.
After that, the configuration file will look like this:
# # Main Configuration File for the W3C Markup Validation Service. # # See 'perldoc Config::General' for the syntax, and be aware that the # 'SplitPolicy' is 'equalsign', ie. keys and values are separated by '\s*=\s*', # and that 'InterPolateVars' is in effect. # # # Base Path for Markup Validator files. # # You MUST set these unless you use the default locations for the files. # e.g. the config files in "/etc/w3c/" and everything else in # "/usr/local/validator/". # # Make sure all file paths below do NOT end with a slash <Paths> # # Base path. Defaults to the value of the W3C_VALIDATOR_HOME environment # variable or /usr/local/validator if the variable does not exist. #Base = /usr/local/validator # # Location of template files Templates = $Base/share/templates # configuration file for HTML::Tidy Module, if available TidyConf = $Base/htdocs/config/tidy.conf <SGML> # # The SGML Library Path. Library = C:/www/sgml-lib </SGML> </Paths> # # This controls whether the debugging options are allowed to be enabled. Allow Debug = yes # # This lets you permanently enable the debugging options. Can be overridden # with CGI options (unlike "Allow Debug" above). Enable Debug = no # # Whether private RFC1918 addresses are allowed. Allow Private IPs = yes # # Enable (or not) the web service API for this validator # see http://validator.w3.org/docs/api.html Enable SOAP = yes # # Whether the validator will check its own output. # 0 means it will refuse to check its own output, 1 means it will but it will # refuse to check the results of it checking itself. Etc. Max Recursion = 0 # # Protocols the validator is allowed to use for retrieving documents. # The default is to allow http and https. <Protocols> Allow = data,http,https </Protocols> # # Email address of the maintainer of this service. Maintainer = www-validator@w3.org # Localization # only English available for now Languages = en # # Mapping tables etc... # # # Main document Type Registry; contains all information on the types # of documents we support and how they are processed. <Types> Include types.conf </Types> # # Mapping of charset names to their IANA names and how iconv(3) knows them. <Charsets> Include charset.cfg </Charsets> # # Map MIME Media Type to Parse Mode mapping. <MIME> text/xml = XML image/svg = XML image/svg+xml = XML application/smil = XML application/xml = XML text/html = TBD text/vnd.wap.wml = XML application/xhtml+xml = XML application/mathml+xml = XML </MIME>
Now, the validator has been successfully configured. But it is not ready for use yet, some lines in the validator script itself have to be changed before.
The following changes are necessary because the script is written for a Unixserver where some things are different to a Windows-system.
The check
-script located in the directory
C:\www\validator\httpd\cgi-bin
can be opened
with the editor. I will not mention any line numbers in
the following steps, because they might differ in
later versions. Some advices are always placed in the lines above
in the script so that you can orientate yourself to those lines.
The very first line of the script has to be changed to
#!c:/www/perl/bin/perl.exe
This is the path to the Perl interpreter, up to now in
Unix-style. So it has to be changed to Windows-style. The
parameter -T
is replaced by that, too.
In the following lines the script is told where to find the configuration file. That is done after the comment in these lines
# # Read Config Files. eval { my %config_opts = ( -ConfigFile => ($ENV{W3C_VALIDATOR_CFG} || '/etc/w3c/validator.conf'),
We do not define an environment variable but specify the full path to the file. So the lines have to be changed to
# # Read Config Files. eval { my %config_opts = ( -ConfigFile => 'C:/www/validator/htdocs/config/validator.conf',
For some configurations, the check-skript needs to know where its root directory is. It tries to read it from the environment variable W3C_VALIDATOR_HOME and uses a default directory if it is not set. That is done within the line:
Paths => { Base => ($ENV{W3C_VALIDATOR_HOME} || '/usr/local/validator'), },
So we change that line fixed to our path:
Paths => { Base => 'C:/www/validator', },.
After saving the script, you can use it at http://validator.example.org/ as you know it from http://validator.w3.org/.
That is it, your own validator is working.
In further versions of the validator, some other Perl modules will be needed perhaps. They can be downloaded by PPM. You can discover that case very easily: When trying to run the script, you will get an output like
Can't locate Config/General.pm in @INC (@INC contains: C:/www/perl/lib C:/www/perl/site/lib .) at C:/www/validator/httpd/cgi-bin/check line 46. BEGIN failed--compilation aborted at C:/www/validator/httpd/cgi-bin/check line 46.
It is easy to see that the missing module is "Config General", that has to be installed.
Windows XP with Service Pack 2 installed might have problems with the loop back address 127.0.0.2. The Problem and its solution are described at http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?kbid=884020.
If you do have any further questions or suggestions to improve this guide, you can use our feedback channels.