This is the second entry of my posts on working with .NET (Mono) on Linux. The first installment showed how to install Mono on Linux and execute a very basic C# program. Next I’ll go through the steps for setting up ASP.NET itself and running a website. As mentioned in my previous post there’s a dearth of articles and help for us .NET programmers coming over to the world of Linux so I want to do a bit more than just show a few steps but actually document what I’ve done to get things up and running in the real world.

Okay first fire up your Linux VM and login then install the nginx webserver.

1 sudo apt-get install nginx

We’ll use nginx as a reverse proxy for fastcgi which is what will be doing all the work. This is an exmaple of where you can find yourself getting caught out with Mono as I found a lot of the documentation referenced the fastcgi version for Mono’s .NET 2.0 implementation. Anyhow, to install the correct version for this tutorial run the following command.

1 sudo apt-get install mono-fastcgi-server4

There are a couple of additions that need to be made to the fastcgi parameters file so run the following command to open it up in vim.

1 sudo vi /etc/nginx/fastcgi_params

And add the following to the file (actually I’m not sure it makes any difference if it’s at the top or the bottom but I added the entries to the top). If the entires exist already then just amend them to what I have them as below.

1 2 fastcgi_param PATH_INFO "" ; fastcgi_param SCRIPT_FILENAME $document_root$fastcgi_script_name ;

Then save and quit using the !wq commands for vim (explained in the previous post). Great, now everything’s in place for serving websites. Create a www directory for storing the websites.

1 mkdir ~/www

Then create a directory for a demo website itself.

1 mkdir ~/www/aspnet

Then create an aspx file using vim.

1 vi ~/www/aspnet/Default.aspx

In the vim editor paste the following code - we’ll use the ubiquitous ‘Hello World’ for our demo page :-)

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 <% @ Page AutoEventWireup = "true" Language = "C#" ContentType = "text/plain" %> < script runat = "server" > void Page_Load ( object sender , EventArgs e ) { this . Response . Write ( "Hello World!" ); } </ script >

Save the changes with the !wq vim command. Now we’ll create the configuration files so the site will work with nginx. Create a new file with vim.

1 sudo vi /etc/nginx/sites-available/aspnet.conf

Now paste the following code into the new file and save the changes with the !wq vim command.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 server { listen 80 ; server_name aspnet.mono-demo ; location / { root /home/deployer/www/aspnet/ ; index index.html index.htm default.aspx Default.aspx ; fastcgi_index Default.aspx ; fastcgi_pass 127.0.0.1:9000 ; include /etc/nginx/fastcgi_params ; } }

The value next to server_name is your domain name. I’m using a local VM which has the name mono-demo but normally this would be the something like www.mysite.com. The other values are self explanatory although you might notice there are two entries for the default aspx web page. This is a gotcha for anyone coming from the Windows world - path and file names with different cases are treated seperately. If a user browses for Default.aspx and your file is uploaded as default.aspx the request will be treated as a 404 so you have to cater for this.

Next create a symlink in the nginx sites-enabled folder to point to the previously created nginx config file by running the following commands.

1 sudo ln -s /etc/nginx/sites-available/aspnet.conf /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/aspnet.conf

Restart the nginx service so our changes are picked up.

1 sudo service nginx restart

Now we are finally ready to test our new web page and show some .NET code running. Run the following command.

1 fastcgi-mono-server4 /applications = /:/home/deployer/www/aspnet /socket = tcp:127.0.0.1:9000

If you browse to the domain entry in your aspnet.conf file you should see your web page working.

That’s all well and good but it isn’t very practical to have a terminal open for each web site you want to run. This is where I started to experience some frustration as I really had to hunt around to find an adequate solution.

This post pointed me in the right direction but this required putting all the configuration information for each site in the same file in the /etc/init.d/ folder under root. Thankfully I came across the EPM Junkie blog which has a super helpful post here which tells me everything I need.

To tie everything up create the file monoserve by running the following command.

1 sudo vi /etc/init.d/monoserve

And then copy and paste the following.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 #!/bin/bash ### BEGIN INIT INFO # Provides: monoserve.sh # Required-Start: $local_fs $syslog $remote_fs # Required-Stop: $local_fs $syslog $remote_fs # Default-Start: 2 3 4 5 # Default-Stop: 0 1 6 # Short-Description: Start FastCGI Mono server with hosts ### END INIT INFO PATH = /usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin DAEMON = /usr/bin/mono NAME = monoserver DESC = monoserver ## Begin -- MAKE CHANGES HERE -- PROGRAM = fastcgi-mono-server4 # The program which will be started ADDRESS = 127.0.0.1 # The address on which the server will listen PORT = 9000 # The port on which the server will listen USER = www-data # The user under which the process will run GROUP = $USER # The group under which the process will run LOGFILE = /var/log/mono/fastcgi.log ## End -- MAKE CHANGES HERE -- # Determine the environment MONOSERVER = $( which $PROGRAM ) MONOSERVER_PID = "" FCGI_CONFIG_DIR = /home/deployer/www/mono-fastcgi # /etc/mono/fcgi/apps-enabled # Start up the Mono server start_up (){ get_pid if [ -z " $MONOSERVER_PID " ] ; then start-stop-daemon -S -c $USER : $GROUP -x $MONOSERVER -- --appconfigdir $FCGI_CONFIG_DIR /socket = tcp: $ADDRESS : $PORT /logfile = $LOGFILE & echo "Mono FastCGI Server $PROGRAM started as $USER on $ADDRESS : $PORT " else echo "Mono FastCGI Server is already running - PID $MONOSERVER_PID " fi } # Shut down the Mono server shut_down () { get_pid if [ -n " $MONOSERVER_PID " ] ; then kill $MONOSERVER_PID echo "Mono FastCGI Server stopped" else echo "Mono FastCGI Server is not running" fi } # Refresh the PID get_pid () { MONOSERVER_PID = $( ps auxf | grep $PROGRAM .exe | grep -v grep | awk '{print $2}' ) } case " $1 " in start ) start_up ;; stop ) shut_down ;; restart|force-reload ) shut_down start_up ;; status ) get_pid if [ -z " $MONOSERVER_PID " ] ; then echo "Mono FastCGI Server is not running" else echo "Mono FastCGI Server is running - PID $MONOSERVER_PID " fi ;; * ) echo "Usage: monoserve (start|stop|restart|force-reload|status)" ;; esac exit 0

As per the previous steps when using vim run the !wq command to save the changes. There’s quite a lot going on in this file but the bits to note are the variables FCGI_CONFIG_DIR which points to a configuration file for our sites which we’ll create in a minute and USER and GROUP which refer to the www-data user and group which our sites will run under and have lower level privileges and are a lot safer than running under root! To get the monoserve service to start after a reboot run the following.

UPDATE: I’m not sure if this was a mistake on my part or if it’s because I’ve just tried this on a new version of Ubuntu than the one used when I wrote this tutorial but this step should be done after the execute permissions are set for the file (shown in the step after).

1 sudo update-rc.d monoserve defaults

Then run the following so monoserve has the correct permssions.

1 sudo chmod +x /etc/init.d/monoserve

There are a few gotchas referred to in the post mentioned above which are to do with folders and files not being present. We’ll need to create them so run the following commands.

1 2 3 sudo mkdir /var/log/mono sudo mkdir /var/www sudo mkdir /var/www/.mono

Set the correct permissions for the .mono folder.

1 sudo chown -R www-data:www-data /var/www/.mono

There’s also a log file that’s referenced in monoserve that also needs to be created and the correct permissions set. First create the file.

1 sudo vi /var/log/mono/fastcgi.log

If you create a file with the vi filename command it won’t save anything if you haven’t added any text so hit return to add some whitespace and then save the file with the !wq command and then set the correct permissions.

1 sudo chown www-data:www-data /var/log/mono/fastcgi.log

The last folder we need to create for monoserve is the site configuration file so let’s do that.

1 mkdir ~/www/mono-fastcgi

That’s everything setup for monoserve we’re now ready to add a site. Basically the service will check for files that are suffixed with .webapp in the ~/www/mono-fastcgi folder we created earlier. So let’s create one for our demo app.

1 vi ~/www/mono-fastcgi/aspnet.webapp

Copy and paste the following into the text editor. The ony change you may need to make is the vhost tag which is the domain name for the site.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 <apps> <web-application> <name> aspnet </name> <vhost> aspnet.mono-demo </vhost> <vport> 80 </vport> <vpath> / </vpath> <path> /home/deployer/www/aspnet </path> </web-application> </apps>

Once again run !wq to save the changes.

Now let’s start the monoserve service and also restart the nginx service.

1 2 sudo service monoserve start sudo service nginx restart

That’s it! If you browse to the domain you set up for the site it should now view in the browser.

You can manage monoserve the same as any service by using the following commands.

1 2 3 sudo service monoserve start sudo service monoserve restart sudo service monoserve stop

Everything is now in place to add more sites without too much fuss. A quick check list of the files you’ll need to get a new site working with monoserve is below.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 # nginx site-name config file /etc/nginx/sites-available/site-name.conf # symlink to /etc/nginx/sites-available/site-name.conf /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/site-name.conf # monoserve site-name config file ~/www/mono-fastcgi/site-name.webapp # restart monoserve sudo service monoserve restart # restart nginx sudo service monoserve restart

That’s the end of this tutorial. I think it’s fairly instructive for getting something up and running that can be used in production. There are a couple of things I haven’t gone through to help with the work process but I’ll likely be documenting these at a later date and they are somewhat out of the scope of what we’re discussing here. Please add any comments below :-)

UPDATE 2: A new issue has come up as per this Stack Overflow question. It was easily resolved by running the following commands but I’ve put it here as it’s another gotcha to look out for.

1 2 sudo mkdir /etc/mono/registry sudo chmod uog+rw /etc/mono/registry

UPDATE 3 (2017-03-29): I just tried to set this up on a Digital Ocean VM and had a problem when i ran the sudo update-rc.d monoserve defaults command. This calls Perl and there was an issue with the locale settings. I found various solutions but the simplest seemed to be to reinstall the required packages with the following.