| 27 |   | You can't have the last portion of the path identical between the projects since that's how trac keeps the URLs of the  | 
                      
                        | 28 |   | different projects unique. So if you use /project1/path/to and /project2/path/to, you will only see the second project.  | 
                      
                      
                        |   | 28 | You can't have the last portion of the path identical between the projects since Trac uses that name to keep the URLs of the  | 
                      
                        |   | 29 | different projects unique. So if you use `/project1/path/to` and `/project2/path/to`, you will only see the second project.  | 
                      
                        |   | 30 |   | 
                      
                        |   | 31 | An alternative way to serve multiple projects is to specify a parent directory in which each subdirectory is a Trac project, using the `-e` option. The example above could be rewritten:  | 
                      
                        |   | 32 | {{{  | 
                      
                        |   | 33 |  $ tracd -p 8080 -e /path/to  | 
                      
                        |   | 34 | }}}  | 
                      
            
                  
                          |   | 56 |   | 
                  
                          |   | 57 | Another way to share the digest file is to specify "*"  | 
                  
                          |   | 58 | for the project name:  | 
                  
                          |   | 59 | {{{  | 
                  
                          |   | 60 |  $ tracd -p 8080 \  | 
                  
                          |   | 61 |    --auth *,/path/to/users.htdigest,mycompany.com \  | 
                  
                          |   | 62 |    /path/to/project1 /path/to/project2  | 
                  
                          |   | 63 | }}}  | 
                  
                          |   | 64 |   | 
                  
                          |   | 65 | == How to set up an htdigest password file ==  | 
                  
                          |   | 66 |   | 
                  
                          |   | 67 | If you have Apache available, you can use the htdigest command to generate the password file. Type 'htdigest' to get some usage instructions, or read [http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.0/programs/htdigest.html this page] from the Apache manual to get precise instructions.  You'll be prompted for a password to enter for each user that you create.  For the name of the password file, you can use whatever you like, but if you use something like `users.htdigest` it will remind you what the file contains. As a suggestion, put it in your <projectname>/conf folder along with the [TracIni trac.ini] file.  | 
                  
                          |   | 68 |   | 
                  
                          |   | 69 | Note that you can start tracd without the --auth argument, but if you click on the ''Login'' link you will get an error.  | 
                  
            
                  
                          |   | 98 | Note: If you use the above script you must use the --auth option to tracd, not --basic-auth, and you must set the realm in the --auth value to 'trac' (without the quotes). Example usage (assuming you saved the script as trac-digest.py):  | 
                  
                          |   | 99 |   | 
                  
                          |   | 100 | {{{  | 
                  
                          |   | 101 | python trac-digest.py -u username -p password >> c:\digest.txt  | 
                  
                          |   | 102 | python tracd --port 8000 --auth proj_name,c:\digest.txt,trac c:\path\to\proj_name  | 
                  
                          |   | 103 | }}}  | 
                  
                          |   | 104 |   | 
                  
                          |   | 105 | == Tips ==  | 
                  
                          |   | 106 |   | 
                  
                          |   | 107 | === Serving static content ===  | 
                  
                          |   | 108 |   | 
                  
                          |   | 109 | If `tracd` is the only webserver used for the project,   | 
                  
                          |   | 110 | it can also be used to distribute static content   | 
                  
                          |   | 111 | (tarballs, Doxygen documentation, etc.)  | 
                  
                          |   | 112 |   | 
                  
                          |   | 113 | This static content should be put in the `$TRAC_ENV/htdocs` folder,  | 
                  
                          |   | 114 | and is accessed by URLs like `<project_URL>/chrome/site/...`.  | 
                  
                          |   | 115 |   | 
                  
                          |   | 116 | Example: given a `$TRAC_ENV/htdocs/software-0.1.tar.gz` file,  | 
                  
                          |   | 117 | the corresponding relative URL would be `/<project_name>/chrome/site/software-0.1.tar.gz`,   | 
                  
                          |   | 118 | which in turn can be written using the relative link syntax  | 
                  
                          |   | 119 | in the Wiki: `[/<project_name>/chrome/site/software-0.1.tar.gz]`   | 
                  
                          |   | 120 |   | 
                  
                          |   | 121 | The development version of Trac supports a new `htdocs:` TracLinks   | 
                  
                          |   | 122 | syntax for the above. With this, the example link above can be written simply   | 
                  
                          |   | 123 | `htdocs:software-0.1.tar.gz`.   | 
                  
                          |   | 124 |   |