Difference between revisions of "Help:Running MediaWiki on Slackware Linux"
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Revision as of 05:34, 19 July 2006
<-MediaWiki User's Guide: Running MediaWiki
Warning: no promises of security are made in this guide. It was intended to be run on an offline workstation.
Contents
System
- Slackware Linux full install: [1]
Slackware's full installation includes Apache, MySQL, and PHP, though some administrative work is still needed to get them up and running.
Settings
For this guide, I will make the following assumptions about names, directories, and the like, but you will want to make some of them different:
- name - The wiki needs a name; this example is called vicuna.
- database - It also needs a database, which will also be called vicuna in this example.
- passwords - There are several passwords involved, most importantly the password for the wiki database, and the initial administrator account you'll create when running the configuration page.
- directory - The directory where the wiki will be installed. In this example, it's /var/wiki.
Configuration of Apache
At a minimum, the webserver must access your wiki on demand. There are better and more complex ways of setting it up, but this will suffice. In /etc/apache/httpd.conf, in the section IfModule mod_alias.c
, add the following line:
Alias /wiki/ /var/wiki
Replace /var/wiki
with the directory you've chosen.
Apache will not be configured to use PHP by default, so you may need to do the following.
- Edit
/etc/apache/httpd.conf
by uncommenting the line#Include /etc/apache/mod_php.conf
- Edit
/etc/apache/mod_php.conf
by adding.phtml
to the lineAddType application/x-httpd-php .php
- If Apache isn't running, enter
apachectl start
, otherwise, doapachectl restart
.
Configuration of MySQL
Perform the following commands as root.
- Copy one of the MySQL configuration files in /etc to my.cnf:
cp /etc/my-meduium.cnf /etc/my.cnf
- Initialize the MySQL databases (only necessary once per system, but harmless):
su mysql -c mysql_install_db
- Start the MySQL daemon:
mysqld_safe --user=mysql &
- Set the root password:
mysqladmin -u root password password
You probably want MySQL to start at system boot time. You must edit a couple of init scripts to accomplish this.
- Place the startup script:
cp /usr/share/mysql/mysql.server /etc/rc.d/rc.mysql
- Edit
/etc/rc.d/rc.M
and add the following text near the end:
# Start the MySQL server
if [ -x /etc/rc.d/rc.mysql ]; then
. /etc/rc.d/rc.mysql start
fi
- Edit
/etc/rc.d/rc.K
and add the following text above the "Kill all processes" section:
# Shut down the MySQL server:
if [ -x /etc/rc.d/rc.mysql ]; then
/etc/rc.d/rc.mysql stop
fi
Configuration of MediaWiki
- Go to the directory where you will install Mediawiki, such as
/var
, and unpack the package:
cd /var
tar xzvf ~/mediawiki-1.x.x.tar.gz
- Rename the directory to something manageable:
mv mediawiki-1.x.x wiki
- Make the config directory world-writable:
chmod o+w wiki/config
- Load the configurating page in your web browser and use it. Go to
http://my.host/wiki/config/
.
- Once the configuration has completed successfully, shut off the config directory:
chmod 700 wiki/config
- And get your LocalSettings.php file installed:
mv wiki/config/LocalSettings.php wiki
- Edit LocalSettings.php as desired.
Loading the dump
- Unzip the dump by typing:
bunzip2 20031231_cur_table.sql.bz2
(this will take a while depending on the size of the dump and the speed of your workstation).
- Import the dump in your database by starting a mysql session as above, if you have not done so, loading the wiki database (the name as you gave above), by typing:
use <wiki db>
and then importing the data by typing: source /path/20031231_cur_table.sql
. This will also take a long time.
At this point you should have a working install with some data in it. Other things will also need to be set up (classic TODO here).
See also