<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"> <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en"> <head> <meta http-equiv="Content-type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8" /> <meta http-equiv="Content-Language" content="en-us" /> <meta name="ROBOTS" content="ALL" /> <meta http-equiv="imagetoolbar" content="no" /> <meta name="MSSmartTagsPreventParsing" content="true" /> <meta name="Keywords" content="cherokee web server httpd http" /> <meta name="Description" content="Cherokee is a flexible, very fast, lightweight Web server. It is implemented entirely in C, and has no dependencies beyond a standard C library. It is embeddable and extensible with plug-ins. It supports on-the-fly configuration by reading files or strings, TLS/SSL (via GNUTLS or OpenSSL), virtual hosts, authentication, cache friendly features, PHP, custom error management, and much more." /> <link href="media/css/cherokee_doc.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" media="all" /> </head> <body> <h2 id="_a_href_index_html_index_a_8594_a_href_other_html_other_information_a_8594_a_href_other_bundle_html_man_pages_a"><a href="index.html">Index</a> → <a href="other.html">Other information</a> → <a href="other_bundle.html">Man pages</a></h2> <div class="sectionbody"> </div> <h2 id="_man_pages_cherokee_tweak">Man pages: cherokee-tweak</h2> <div class="sectionbody"> <div class="paragraph"><p>This command-line tool is also not as well known as it should. Again this is not by lack of merits, which in fact are considerable. Its intended audience are also system administrators and developers.</p></div> <div class="paragraph"><p><tt>cherokee-tweak</tt> is a swiss army knife that allows to perform several administrative tasks from the command line. It can connect to a running Cherokee instance, be it in the local computer or at a remote location, and request it to perform several actions.</p></div> <div class="paragraph"><p>These actions are:</p></div> <div class="ulist"><ul> <li> <p> Log rotation: <tt>logrotate</tt>. </p> </li> <li> <p> Live tracing: <tt>trace</tt>. </p> </li> <li> <p> Provide information: <tt>info</tt>. </p> </li> <li> <p> Report the list of Information Sources of a running server and their individual statuses. </p> </li> <li> <p> Kill remotely any information source. </p> </li> </ul></div> <div class="paragraph"><p>This is the full information provided by the manpage.</p></div> <div class="sidebarblock"> <div class="sidebar-content"> <div class="dlist"><dl> <dt class="hdlist1"> <strong>NAME</strong> </dt> <dd> <p> cherokee-tweak - Command-line interface to the administration interface of Cherokee </p> </dd> <dt class="hdlist1"> <strong>SYNOPSIS</strong> </dt> <dd> <p> cherokee-tweak [options] URL info cherokee-tweak [options] URL sources cherokee-tweak [options] URL kill-source ID cherokee-tweak [options] URL logrotate PATH cherokee-tweak [options] URL trace TRACE </p> </dd> <dt class="hdlist1"> <strong>DESCRIPTION</strong> </dt> <dd> <p> cherokee-tweak connects to a running cherokee instance, either local or remote, and requests it to perform one of several actions. </p> </dd> <dt class="hdlist1"> <strong>COMMANDS</strong> </dt> <dd> <div class="dlist"><dl> <dt class="hdlist1"> info </dt> <dd> <p> Prints info about the server status </p> </dd> <dt class="hdlist1"> sources </dt> <dd> <p> Prints a list of the information sources </p> </dd> <dt class="hdlist1"> kill-source </dt> <dd> <p> Kill a remote information source, specified by its reported ID </p> </dd> <dt class="hdlist1"> logrotate </dt> <dd> <p> Rotates a local (<strong>and only local</strong>) log file specified by PATH. </p> </dd> <dt class="hdlist1"> trace </dt> <dd> <p> Manipulates the tracing mechanism. TRACE should be the string that specifies the modules to be traced, and Cherokee must have been compiled with the --enable-trace option for this to work. Everything traceable with CHEROKEE_TRACE can also be traced this way. </p> </dd> </dl></div> </dd> <dt class="hdlist1"> <strong>PARAMETERS</strong> </dt> <dd> <div class="dlist"><dl> <dt class="hdlist1"> URL </dt> <dd> <p> Required before any command. This is the URL where the administrative interface can be found. This target must be defined previously in cherokee-admin, enabling a "Remote Administration" type handler (Virtual Servers→Behavior→Rule Management→Add new rule, and then Handler→"Remote Administration"). The definition of a security mechanism is highly encouraged. </p> </dd> <dt class="hdlist1"> -h, --help </dt> <dd> <p> Shows brief usage information </p> </dd> <dt class="hdlist1"> -V, --version </dt> <dd> <p> Print version and exit </p> </dd> </dl></div> </dd> <dt class="hdlist1"> <strong>OPTIONS</strong> </dt> <dd> <p> cherokee-tweak accepts the following options: </p> <div class="dlist"><dl> <dt class="hdlist1"> -u, --user=STRING </dt> <dd> <p> Specifies the user name with which to identify to the server </p> </dd> <dt class="hdlist1"> -p, --password=STRING </dt> <dd> <p> Specifies the password with which to identify to the server </p> </dd> </dl></div> </dd> </dl></div> </div></div> <div class="paragraph"><p>To use <tt>cherokee-tweak</tt>, an administrative interface must be defined within <a href="other_bundle_cherokee-admin.html">cherokee-admin</a>. That is, you must define a path managed by the handler <tt>Remote Administration</tt>. This can be done through the <em>Virtual Servers</em> option, in <em>Behavior</em> and using the <em>Add new rule</em> option.</p></div> <div class="imageblock"> <div class="content"> <img src="media/images/admin_handler_admin.png" alt="media/images/admin_handler_admin.png" /> </div> </div> <div class="paragraph"><p>Please note that while you are at it, the definition of a security (through the <em>Security</em> tab) is highly encouraged. Although you have the choice to, you should never use <em>None</em> as security mechanism since this would leave your system exposed to third parties using <tt>cherokee-tweak</tt>.</p></div> <div class="paragraph"><p>Also note that the usage of the <tt>trace</tt> command has no effect unless Cherokee is compiled with the <tt>--enable-trace</tt>. This is a debugging option and it is unlikely to be present in binary version of Cherokee not specifically compiled with this in mind.</p></div> <div class="paragraph"><p>Every module traceable with CHEROKEE_TRACE can also be traced this way. Refer to the <a href="dev_debug.html">"Debugging"</a> section of the documentation for more information on this matter.</p></div> <div class="paragraph"><p>Keep in mind one important thing: when the <tt>trace</tt> command is specified, <tt>cherokee-tweak</tt> activates the tracing functionality within the <tt>cherokee</tt> instance. It does not provide tracing of its own. This means the debugging information will appear in the machine that is actually running the <tt>cherokee</tt> instance. This may or may not be the same that is running the <tt>cherokee-tweak</tt> process.</p></div> </div> <div id="footer"> <div id="footer-text"> </div> </div> </body> </html>