<xterm2>sudo apt-get install postgresql-server</xterm2>
<xterm2> user@host:~$ sudo su postgres [sudo] password for user: postgres@host:/home/user$ createuser user Shall the new role be a superuser? (y/n) y USER CREATED </xterm2>
<xterm2> createdb stars </xterm2>
<xterm2> user@host:~$ cd rts2/src/sql user@host:~/rts2/src/sql$ ./rts2-builddb stars </xterm2>
<xterm2> user@host:~$ psql stars Welcome to psql 8.3.8, the PostgreSQL interactive terminal. Type: \copyright for distribution terms \h for help with SQL commands \? for help with psql commands \g or terminate with semicolon to execute query \q to quit stars=# alter group observers add user user; GROUP ALTERED stars=# </xterm2>
<xterm2> user@host:~$ sudo rts2-xmlrpcd -i </xterm2>
If it will run and not complain about database, then you setup data properly.
If you want to use external services, you will need to populate users table in stars database. Just a reminder:
To populate user tables, do:
<xterm2> user@host:~$ psql stars Welcome to psql 8.3.8, the PostgreSQL interactive terminal. Type: \copyright for distribution terms \h for help with SQL commands \? for help with psql commands \g or terminate with semicolon to execute query \q to quit stars=# insert into users values ('rts2', 'rts2', NULL, 'rts2@example.com', 1); </xterm2>
Which will create user rts2, with password rts2. 1 is user ID, you of course would like to keep this unique, otherwise psql will complain. You can then user rts2 as login and rts2 as password for XML-RPC access through rts2-xmlrpcd
Note it is likely the database was different when the previous instruction was written to the version when this next note was added: Since the table headers are: usr_login | usr_tmp | usr_email | usr_id | usr_execute_permission | usr_passwd | allowed_devices to add a new user 'rts2' with password 'password' it should be:
stars=# insert into users values ('rts2', , 'rts2@example.com', 3, f,'password',);
Also it is apparent passwords should be somehow hashed so this almost works but it doesn't.