Install on Ubuntu 2204 2210 » History » Revision 25
« Previous |
Revision 25/57
(diff)
| Next »
Gareth Eaton, 06/06/2023 10:52 AM
Install on Ubuntu 2204¶
Install on Ubuntu 22.04 / 22.10
h2. Requirements¶
- A server running Ubuntu 22.04.
- A valid domain name pointed to the server or Nginx Proxy Manager IP. See A Record
- A root password is configured on your server.
Before starting, LAMP stack must be installed on your server. If not installed, you can install it with the following command:
NOTE: We have two LAMP stack, depending on wich Next cloud you are going to install
apt install apache2 mariadb-server php php-cli php-fpm php-json php-intl php-imagick php-pdo php-mysql php-zip php-gd php-mbstring php-curl php-xml php-pear php-bcmath apache2 libapache2-mod-php -y
NOTE: If you are installing next cloud 26 + you will need php8, this so use this LAMP stack
sudo apt install apache2 mariadb-server php8.0 php8.0-cli php8.0-fpm php8.0-intl php8.0-imagick php8.0-pdo php8.0-mysql php8.0-zip php8.0-gd php8.0-mbstring php8.0-curl php8.0-xml php8.0-bcmath libapache2-mod-php8.0 -y
After installing all packages, edit the PHP configuration file and change some default settings:
Use php -v to check which php is installed, and change the #.# with the right numbers
in my case it say, PHP 8.0.28, so I would use 8.0
nano /etc/php/#.#/apache2/php.ini
Change the following lines:
date.timezone = UTC or what ever time zone you are in memory_limit = 512M upload_max_filesize = 500M post_max_size = 500M max_execution_time = 300
Save and close the file then restart the Apache service to apply the changes:
systemctl restart apache2
Create a Database for Nextcloud¶
Nextcloud uses a MariaDB database as a database backend so you will need to create a database and user in MariaDB.
First, connect to the MariaDB shell with the following command:
mysql
Once you are connected to the MariaDB, create a database and user with the following command:
NOTE: Change the 'password' to the password you would like to use.
CREATE DATABASE nextcloud; CREATE USER 'nextcloud'@'localhost' identified by 'password';
Next, grant all the privileges to the Nextcloud database with the following command:
GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON nextcloud.* TO 'nextcloud'@'localhost';
Next, flush the privileges and exit from the MariaDB with the following command:
FLUSH PRIVILEGES; QUIT;
Download Nextcloud¶
At the time of of updateing this article, the latest version of Nextcloud is 26.0.2. You can download it with the following command:
NOTE: you can go to https://download.nextcloud.com/server/releases/ to check which is the latest version
wget https://download.nextcloud.com/server/releases/nextcloud-26.0.2.zip
Once the download is completed, unzip the downloaded file with the following command:
unzip nextcloud-26.0.2.zip
Next, move the extracted directory to the Apache web root with the following command:
mv nextcloud /var/www/html/
Next, change the ownership and permission of the Nextcloud directory using the following command:
chown -R www-data:www-data /var/www/html/nextcloud chmod -R 775 /var/www/html/nextcloud
Create an Apache Virtual Host for Nextcloud¶
Next, you will need to create an Apache virtual host configuration file for Nextcloud. You can create it with the following command:
nano /etc/apache2/sites-available/next.conf
Add the following lines:
NOTE: Change the [email protected] and next.example.com, to the right one for you
<VirtualHost *:80> ServerAdmin [email protected] DocumentRoot /var/www/html/nextcloud ServerName next.example.com ErrorLog /var/log/apache2/nextcloud-error.log CustomLog /var/log/apache2/nextcloud-access.log combined <Directory /var/www/html/nextcloud> Options +FollowSymlinks AllowOverride All Require all granted SetEnv HOME /var/www/html/nextcloud SetEnv HTTP_HOME /var/www/html/nextcloud <IfModule mod_dav.c> Dav off </IfModule> </Directory> </VirtualHost>
Save and close the file then activate the Apache virtual host and other required Apache modules with the following command:
a2ensite next a2enmod rewrite dir mime env headers
Next, restart the Apache service to apply the changes:
systemctl restart apache2
NOTE: we have had it where the default site configuration was overriding my vhost configuration, if this happens to you you can disable the default configuration.
sudo a2dissite 000-default.conf service apache2 reload
Now in a web-browser go to your nextcloud address(http://next.example.com) and finish the install,
Set up an admin user account, and for the database it should be,
Database user: nextcloud Database password: what ever you used Database name: nextcloud Database hose:localhost
The install should now be complete.
Depending on how you setup your network and server you might have to install a SSL more information on how to do that below.
You should also go to "Administration Settings" and in the Overview tab, see the Security & setup warning, see https://lightningcr.com/projects/nextcloud/wiki to help you with each warning you get.
also setup your Email Server, this is found in Basic setting, again see https://lightningcr.com/projects/nextcloud/wiki to help you with this.
Installing SSL with Let's Encrypt SSL
Installing on with a Nginx with a reverse proxy using a Nginx Proxy Manager¶
Updated by Gareth Eaton over 1 year ago · 25 revisions