Differences between revisions 20 and 21
Revision 20 as of 2017-06-10 18:26:06
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Editor: ?Michael Schmid
Comment: Does not work without .conf extenios
Revision 21 as of 2018-05-06 10:15:05
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Editor: AlbanVidal
Comment: Delete Wheezy section and add Stretch and Buster packages
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== Basic Installation guide for Wheezy ==

{{{
# apt-get install wordpress curl apache2 mysql-server}}}
== Basic Installation guide ==

=== Installati
on - Debian 8 (Jessie) ===

{{{
apt update
ap
t install wordpress curl apache2 mysql-server
}}}
Line 15: Line 19:
=== Installation - Debian 9 (Stretch) and 10 (Buster) ===

{{{
apt update
apt install wordpress curl apache2 mariadb-server
}}}

Secure your MySQL installation with this command
{{{
mysql_secure_installation
}}}
Line 16: Line 32:

{{{
# nano /etc/apache2/sites-available/wp.conf}}}

Add this content:
{{{
        Alias /wp/wp-content /var/lib/wordpress/wp-content
        Alias /wp /usr/share/wordpress
        <Directory /usr/share/wordpress>
            Options FollowSymLinks
            AllowOverride Limit Options FileInfo
            DirectoryIndex index.php
            Order allow,deny
            Allow from all
        </Directory>
        <Directory /var/lib/wordpress/wp-content>
            Options FollowSymLinks
            Order allow,deny
            Allow from all
        </Directory>
}}}

For Apache 2.4 (Jessie) you’ll need a slightly different site configuration:

Translation(s): none


WordPress is a free and open source (GNU GPLv2 or later) blogging tool and a content management system (CMS) based on PHP and MySQL. Features include a plug-in architecture and a template system.

Basic Installation guide

Installation - Debian 8 (Jessie)

apt update
apt install wordpress curl apache2 mysql-server

Set the mysql admin root user password when prompted

Installation - Debian 9 (Stretch) and 10 (Buster)

apt update
apt install wordpress curl apache2 mariadb-server

Secure your MySQL installation with this command

mysql_secure_installation

Create a site

# nano /etc/apache2/sites-available/wp.conf

add this content:

        Alias /wp/wp-content /var/lib/wordpress/wp-content
        Alias /wp /usr/share/wordpress
        <Directory /usr/share/wordpress>
            Options FollowSymLinks
            AllowOverride Limit Options FileInfo
            DirectoryIndex index.php
            Require all granted
        </Directory>
        <Directory /var/lib/wordpress/wp-content>
            Options FollowSymLinks
            Require all granted
        </Directory>

Enable the site

# a2ensite wp

Restart the webserver

# service apache2 reload

Create /etc/wordpress/config-$DM.php. $DM is the domain name e.g. if the fully qualified domain name is www.debianwordpress.dev, create one of the following files:

  • /etc/wordpress/config-www.debianwordpress.dev.php (this is the default, use it if you are unsure)

  • /etc/wordpress/config-debianwordpress.dev.php (this is used for multisite with subdomains)

  • /etc/wordpress/config-default.php (this is used as a fallback if no other file matches your domain name)

WordPress searches in the above order and uses the first configuration file it can find. The domain name is taken from the HTTP-Request of your browser. That way you may be able to define different configuration files for different domains you are hosting.

# nano /etc/wordpress/config-www.debianwordpress.dev.php

Add this content:-

   1 <?php
   2 define('DB_NAME', 'wordpress');
   3 define('DB_USER', 'wordpress');
   4 define('DB_PASSWORD', 'password');
   5 define('DB_HOST', 'localhost');
   6 define('WP_CONTENT_DIR', '/var/lib/wordpress/wp-content');
   7 ?>

<!> replace password with a suitably secure password

Create a file to hold the database creation instructions

# nano ~/wp.sql

Add this content:-

   1 CREATE DATABASE wordpress;
   2 GRANT SELECT,INSERT,UPDATE,DELETE,CREATE,DROP,ALTER
   3 ON wordpress.*
   4 TO wordpress@localhost
   5 IDENTIFIED BY 'password';
   6 FLUSH PRIVILEGES;

<!> replace password with your "suitably secure password"

Create the database:-

# cat ~/wp.sql | mysql --defaults-extra-file=/etc/mysql/debian.cnf

Navigate to the wordpress directory in browser e.g.:- http://debianwordpress.dev/wp which redirects to http://debianwordpress.dev/wp/wp-admin/install.php where you'll see the "classic" wordpress 5 minute install page (actually a 5 second install thanks to the Debian packaging)

<!> replace debianwordpress.dev with your domain name (or localhost if running on the same box as your browser).

At time of writing this provides WordPress v3.6.1. WordPress v3.7.1 is available in Testing and Unstable. I haven't tested it but it should install fine on Wheezy.

Upgrading the installed WordPress version

For keep your WordPress up to date and receive security fixes use Debian package manager:

# apt-get update && apt-get upgrade

If you would like to use a more recent version of WordPress, consider using Backports or Debian testing.

An alternate installation method

I believe this method conforms more with how the maintainer recommends it should be done. Various sources are drawn upon using this method, and it is also affected by a few bugs as at this writing. It is basically centric around a "kind of" multisite install, but I recommend this method even for a single blog, otherwise when you decide down the track to have more than one and share the packages' codebase, you'll have a fair bit of work on your hands.

The key useful script here is /usr/share/doc/wordpress/examples/setup-mysql. This gem does a few things:

  • Creates a WordPress config file under /etc/wordpress

  • Creates the WordPress database and user

  • Sets up a wp-content structure under /srv/www/wp-content/DOMAIN (this is key for a non-WordPress multisite install, which is covered more below)

Install required packages

# apt-get install wordpress apache2 mysql-server

Run the helper script

Now run /usr/share/doc/wordpress/examples/setup-mysql, passing an argument of your site name; eg. myblog.com. You will most probably need other arguments too -- just try an initial -h to get help.

At this point, as per above, you should have a database created for you, and the /etc/wordpress/config-myblog.com.php config file. Peruse that and sanity check it.

Create the Apache site

Quoting /usr/share/doc/wordpress/examples/apache.conf:

There are several ways to setup Wordpress & Apache in Debian. However the maintainer's recommended way with the helper script setup-mysql uses:

## Virtual host VirtualDocumentRoot

        NameVirtualHost *:80

        <VirtualHost *:80>
        UseCanonicalName Off
        VirtualDocumentRoot /usr/share/wordpress
        Options All

        # wp-content in /srv/www/wp-content/$0
        RewriteEngine On
        RewriteRule ^/wp-content/(.*)$ /srv/www/wp-content/%{HTTP_HOST}/$1
        </VirtualHost>

For this configuration to work you'll also need to have mod_rewrite and mod_vhost_alias loaded and working in Apache. To enable these modules run

# a2enmod rewrite && a2enmod vhost_alias && service apache2 restart

Place this config into something like /etc/apache2/sites-available/myblog.com and modify according to your needs (IP-based virtual host, name-based, logging, etc.)

If you're using any Wordpress functionality that requires URL rewriting (such as permalinks), then you will also need something like this in your Apache config:

    RewriteRule ^index\.php$ - [L]
    RewriteCond /usr/share/wordpress%{REQUEST_URI} !-f
    RewriteCond /usr/share/wordpress%{REQUEST_URI} !-d
    RewriteRule . /usr/share/wordpress/index.php [L]
    # Also needed if using PHP-FPM / Fast-CGI
    RewriteCond %{REQUEST_URI} !^/php5-fcgi/*

The above rewrite conditions rely on Apache finding the required files in /usr/share/wordpress for non-permalinks (such as wp-admin). This may require the following line to ensure it finds the index file when requesting /wp-admin/

    DirectoryIndex index.php

Final reading before actual configuration

Now would be a great time to read /usr/share/doc/wordpress/README.Debian if you haven't already. All the rest of the pieces should fall into place once you do.

Amongst other things, it explains the great way that the Debian WordPress package utilises the WordPress wp-config.php framework, and more importantly, how to handle the infamous "themes" and "plugins" directories in a WordPress install. The key point is that by symlinking under /var/lib/wordpress, users better abide by the FilesystemHierarchyStandard, and can use the in-app upgrade mechanisms of WordPress to upgrade plugins and themes, without clobbering the package, and risking server security.

It also discusses the two choices regarding multisite installs, of which this here describes the non-WordPress version.

Enable the Apache site

Now we enable the Apache site config made earlier using a2ensite, which basically just creates a symlink in /etc/apache2/sites-enabled from sites-available, then reload Apache:

# a2ensite myblog.com
# service apache2 reload

Configure WordPress

Now, browse to your new domain, and follow the normal WP configuration process, and you should be done.

Issues

Sadly at this point, there are some issues with symlinking, and messing around generally with WP_CONTENT_DIR.

The main bug is being tracked at http://core.trac.wordpress.org/ticket/16953. At this point, basically a fair few things break, especially if plugin or theme authors don't do things right when determining correct filesystem and URI paths to use. There seems no easy fix right now, other than not using symlinks or non-standard (but configurable!) paths.

See also

  • Sample configurations can be found in /usr/share/doc/wordpress/examples/

  • Debian specific instructions are /usr/share/doc/wordpress/README.Debian

  • LAMP