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    Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27

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    • ObsolesceO
      Obsolesce @mattbagan
      last edited by

      @mattbagan said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:

      Whats the best way to configure the data directory? Do I create a large VM or a separate disk mounted on the data folder?

      For a file server, I'd have a separate .VHDX for the file storage, and mount it as /DATA

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • scottalanmillerS
        scottalanmiller @mattbagan
        last edited by

        @mattbagan said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:

        Whats the best way to configure the data directory? Do I create a large VM or a separate disk mounted on the data folder?

        Varies on your needs. NextCloud recommends separate BtrFS volume. I like a separate LVM2 volume with XFS.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • M
          mattbagan
          last edited by

          @scottalanmiller @Tim_G Thanks for the info. I will have a separate disk for the data. I will be using this guide to migrate from ubuntu to fedora.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
          • S
            sopdahl
            last edited by

            Very nice! I've done this before on Fedora 23 with OwnCloud, but the procedure was confusing.

            I wanted to add something for users who might have an issue like I did. I have a separate physical disk I wanted to setup for the data disk, but found myself running through most of your procedure without having setup or mounted the disk. I took your advice and used the default /var/www/html/nextcloud/data path.

            At the NextCloud wizard, I received a "can't read or write into the data directory" message. I knew it had something to do with permissions. First, I had to re-issue the chown apache:apache -R /var/www/html/nextcloud command because once the disk was mounted the data folder reverted back to root:root - that's a given. But the same error came up. So, I figured it was SELINUX and I re-ran the selinux_config.sh script, which gave me an error for each folder saying it was already defined. Even so, I tried NextCloud again and had the same data directory error.

            A little poking around and I found this out: you have 2 commands in SELINUX: "semanage fcontext" and "restorecon" ...
            The "already defined" error was coming from the semanage fcontext command, so I read a bit about restorecon and discovered that if you add an "-F" parameter, it will force the command rather than bypass it if it's already been run. There is no error from restorecon, it just silently doesn't work. Adding the -F parameter worked: restorecon -R -F ${ocpath}/data.

            Thank you, I have a nicely running NextCloud system now!

            JaredBuschJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • JaredBuschJ
              JaredBusch @sopdahl
              last edited by

              @sopdahl said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:

              Very nice! I've done this before on Fedora 23 with OwnCloud, but the procedure was confusing.

              I wanted to add something for users who might have an issue like I did. I have a separate physical disk I wanted to setup for the data disk, but found myself running through most of your procedure without having setup or mounted the disk. I took your advice and used the default /var/www/html/nextcloud/data path.

              At the NextCloud wizard, I received a "can't read or write into the data directory" message. I knew it had something to do with permissions. First, I had to re-issue the chown apache:apache -R /var/www/html/nextcloud command because once the disk was mounted the data folder reverted back to root:root - that's a given. But the same error came up. So, I figured it was SELINUX and I re-ran the selinux_config.sh script, which gave me an error for each folder saying it was already defined. Even so, I tried NextCloud again and had the same data directory error.

              A little poking around and I found this out: you have 2 commands in SELINUX: "semanage fcontext" and "restorecon" ...
              The "already defined" error was coming from the semanage fcontext command, so I read a bit about restorecon and discovered that if you add an "-F" parameter, it will force the command rather than bypass it if it's already been run. There is no error from restorecon, it just silently doesn't work. Adding the -F parameter worked: restorecon -R -F ${ocpath}/data.

              Thank you, I have a nicely running NextCloud system now!

              No problem. I am happy you figured it out.

              I did not think about the -F paramter to force it to redo it. That is a good idea to add to the instructions in case someone redoes something like you did.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • NashBrydgesN
                NashBrydges
                last edited by

                The one additional step I also did was to have what Nextcloud calls "pretty URLs"

                Add these lines to the config.php file (https if you've secured your instance with certs, http if you haven't)

                'overwrite.cli.url' => 'https://www.mydomain.com',
                  'htaccess.RewriteBase' => '/',
                  'overwriteprotocol' => 'https',
                

                Then from terminal, run this command.

                sudo -u apache php /var/www/nextcloud/occ maintenance:update:htaccess
                

                My URL then changed from https://www.mydomain.com/nextcloud to https://www/mydomain.com and it removed the "index.php" from shared links.

                B 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • B
                  bnrstnr @NashBrydges
                  last edited by

                  @nashbrydges Did you have to set Require all granted in your httpd.conf too?

                  JaredBuschJ NashBrydgesN 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • JaredBuschJ
                    JaredBusch @bnrstnr
                    last edited by JaredBusch

                    @bnrstnr said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:

                    @nashbrydges Did you have to set Require all granted in your httpd.conf too?

                    You should not touch httpd.conf
                    That is the reason that nextcloud.conf exists.

                    B 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • NashBrydgesN
                      NashBrydges @bnrstnr
                      last edited by

                      @bnrstnr said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:

                      @nashbrydges Did you have to set Require all granted in your httpd.conf too?

                      I didn't, no. All changes are done in nextcloud.conf and it does not need Require all granted.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • JaredBuschJ
                        JaredBusch
                        last edited by JaredBusch

                        I guess I should make a dedicated post for this..
                        Here are the instructions to pretty the URL.

                        https://mangolassi.it/topic/12878/install-nextcloud-11-0-2-on-centos-7-with-php-7-1-from-remi/2

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • B
                          bnrstnr @JaredBusch
                          last edited by

                          @jaredbusch Ah, I was confusing this with SAM's install script. I was about to say that the script didn't create a nextcloud.conf in my conf.d folder. I ran his script last night on a new server and it was only going to serve this one nextcloud install so I just modified the httpd.conf

                          JaredBuschJ scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                          • NashBrydgesN
                            NashBrydges
                            last edited by

                            The only change that I do that isn't really covered anywhere in any documentation I've seen is to change the favicon. I replace the Nexcloud one with mine just to complete the theming.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • JaredBuschJ
                              JaredBusch @bnrstnr
                              last edited by

                              @bnrstnr said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:

                              @jaredbusch Ah, I was confusing this with SAM's install script. I was about to say that the script didn't create a nextcloud.conf in my conf.d folder. I ran his script last night on a new server and it was only going to serve this one nextcloud install so I just modified the httpd.conf

                              @scottalanmiller is a slacker.

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • scottalanmillerS
                                scottalanmiller @bnrstnr
                                last edited by

                                @bnrstnr said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:

                                @jaredbusch Ah, I was confusing this with SAM's install script. I was about to say that the script didn't create a nextcloud.conf in my conf.d folder. I ran his script last night on a new server and it was only going to serve this one nextcloud install so I just modified the httpd.conf

                                I do one application per VM, so no need for individual configuration files 😉

                                JaredBuschJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • JaredBuschJ
                                  JaredBusch @scottalanmiller
                                  last edited by

                                  @scottalanmiller said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:

                                  @bnrstnr said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:

                                  @jaredbusch Ah, I was confusing this with SAM's install script. I was about to say that the script didn't create a nextcloud.conf in my conf.d folder. I ran his script last night on a new server and it was only going to serve this one nextcloud install so I just modified the httpd.conf

                                  I do one application per VM, so no need for individual configuration files 😉

                                  Not true. Using a vhost config keeps things simple compared to editing the default config file.

                                  Granted neither need to happen here unless you are doing the pretty URL bit.

                                  M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • M
                                    manxam @JaredBusch
                                    last edited by

                                    @jaredbusch & @scottalanmiller : the vhost thing is likely the correct way to do this as "letsencrypt --apache" fails unless there is a vhost configured for port 80.
                                    The default httpd.conf included with Fedora does not have this configured.

                                    So you both know, Fedora 28 installs NC 13.0.3 in exactly the same manner but fails during installation due to missing php-json. Once installed, it installs without issue.

                                    A scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                    • A
                                      Alex Sage @manxam
                                      last edited by

                                      This post is deleted!
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                                      • scottalanmillerS
                                        scottalanmiller @manxam
                                        last edited by

                                        @manxam said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:

                                        @jaredbusch & @scottalanmiller : the vhost thing is likely the correct way to do this as "letsencrypt --apache" fails unless there is a vhost configured for port 80.
                                        The default httpd.conf included with Fedora does not have this configured.

                                        So you both know, Fedora 28 installs NC 13.0.3 in exactly the same manner but fails during installation due to missing php-json. Once installed, it installs without issue.

                                        Thanks. I'm on Fed 28 with 13.0.4 now, but it was an update, not a fresh install.

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • JaredBuschJ
                                          JaredBusch
                                          last edited by JaredBusch

                                          Updated to install php-json as it seems to be a new requirement in recent Fedora 28 builds running 13.x

                                          Thanks to @zachary715 for testing a clean build.
                                          https://mangolassi.it/topic/17409/errors-updating-nextcloud/27

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                                          • A
                                            ajh
                                            last edited by

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