Test Server Installation and Configuration: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 14:57, 19 January 2014
The following instructions assume you are installing on a 64 bit machine. You can determine if your machine is 64 bit capable by looking up your CPU by model number. You can generally find the CPU type in the BIOS Setup, which is normally accessed on boot by pressing a function key or the delete key. Once you have the CPU model, you can verify it has a 64-bit instruction set by looking up the CPU on Intel's site. For instance:
- 64-bit CPU: http://ark.intel.com/products/27257/intel-core2-duo-processor-t7600-4m-cache-2_33-ghz-667-mhz-fsb
- 32-bit CPU: http://ark.intel.com/products/27235/Intel-Core-Duo-Processor-T2400-2M-Cache-1_83-ghz-667-mhz-fsb
These instructions have not been tested on a 32-bit machine. However, they should work with minimum changes. If you are planning to install on a 32 bit machine, you'll want to download the x86 image: http://releases.ubuntu.com/precise/ubuntu-12.04.3-server-i386.iso
Create Bootable Media
- Download Ubuntu Server 12.04.3 LTS 64 bit: http://releases.ubuntu.com/precise/ubuntu-12.04.3-server-amd64.iso
- Determine if you will be writing the ISO file to a CD or a USB drive.
- CD: simply write the ISO image to a writable CD. Detailed instructions are available here for many operating systems: https://help.ubuntu.com/community/BurningIsoHowto
- USB drive: writing to a USB drive can be a bit tricky. It's suggested that you use Linux Live USB Creator on Windows (http://www.linuxliveusb.com/en/home). Detailed instructions (and instructions for other OSes) can be found here: https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Installation/FromUSBStick
Install Ubuntu
More detailed install instructions can be found here: https://help.ubuntu.com/lts/serverguide/installing-from-cd.html
- Boot your Ubuntu media.
- You will be prompted to choose a language. Choose the appropriate language.
- Choose the option "Install Ubuntu Server"
- Select your language once again.
- Select your location.
- Select your keyboard layout. It's suggested you allow the installed to auto-detect it.
- Enter a hostname for this machine. If this machine has a name on your network, this would be it. This does not include the domain name. For example, "server01" and not "server01.example.com".
- Enter in the real name of the initial user.
- Choose a name for the initial user. This user will have administrative privileges, but will not be a super-user.
- Choose a password for the initial user.
- Choose to not encrypt your home folder.
- Choose to use Guided Partitioning, using the entire disk, with LVM.
- Select the proper disk.
- Write the changes to disk.
- Choose to use the entire disk again.
- Verify you will write changes to the disk again. The base system should now install.
- Setup an HTTP proxy, if you need one.
- Choose to install automatic updates.
- Choose to install the OpenSSH server.
- Install GRUB to the MBR.
- Reboot.
Remote Access
At this point you should be able to login to your server using SSH. If you can't login, there's a chance there's a problem with your network configuration. SSH uses port 22. Verify it's not being blocked by a firewall.
Configuring
Once your computer has rebooted, login using the username and password you created during the install process. The remainder of this tutorial assumes a basic familiarity with Bash, navigating folder structures from the command prompt in *nix, editing text files, and scripting. If you aren't comfortable with these topics, here are several tutorials that may help:
- https://help.ubuntu.com/community/UsingTheTerminal
- https://help.ubuntu.com/community/CommandlineHowto
- https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Beginners/BashScripting
Update Packages
At the command prompt, type the following:
sudo aptitude update sudo aptitude full-upgrade
Follow the prompt, and after the upgrade is complete, install apache, vsftpd, and incron:
sudo aptitude install apache2 vsftpd
Finally, reboot:
sudo reboot
Configure Apache
From the command prompt, switch to the following folder:
cd /etc/apache2/sites-available
Create a new site by creating a new text file:
sudo nano asserver
Paste the following content into the file, changing the ServerAdmin, ServerName, and ServerAlias to values that make sense for your server:
<VirtualHost *:80> ServerAdmin admin@example.com ServerName www.example.com ServerAlias example.com DocumentRoot /srv/ftp/home <Directory /srv/ftp/home/> Options FollowSymLinks AllowOverride None Order allow,deny allow from all </Directory> ErrorLog ${APACHE_LOG_DIR}/error.log # Possible values include: debug, info, notice, warn, error, crit, # alert, emerg. LogLevel warn CustomLog ${APACHE_LOG_DIR}/access.log combined </VirtualHost>
Save the file using Ctrl-O. Next, make the document root specified above:
sudo mkdir -p /srv/ftp/home
Finally restart apache:
sudo /etc/init.d/apache2 restart
Verify that you receive an empty folder listing when navigating to your server in a web browser. Verify that if you put a file in the document root (using touch, for instance) that file is now shown in the folder.
Configuring VSFTPD
Using nano, make the following modifications to /etc/vsftpd.conf:
- Uncomment write_enable=YES
- Change anonymous_enable=YES to anonymous_enable=NO
- Uncomment local_enable=YES
- Uncomment local_umask=022
- Add the following lines:
delete_failed_uploads=YES pasv_min_port=50000 pasv_max_port=50100 port_enable=NO chroot_local_user=YES passwd_chroot_enable=YES
Add an FTP user to the system, setting it's home folder to "/srv/ftp/./home" without quotes:
sudo adduser ftpuser
Restart vsftpd:
sudo /etc/init.d/vsftpd restart
Verify you can upload files by connecting via FTP as the user you just completed. They should appear in the web root.
Creating the proper folder structure
Start by creating the folders to support template uploads and setting their permissions:
sudo mkdir -p /srv/ftp/NSB_UPLOAD_COMPLETED sudo mkdir -p /srv/ftp/templates sudo touch /srv/ftp/NSB_UPLOAD_COMPLETED/.locked sudo chown ftpuser:ftpuser /srv/ftp/NSB_UPLOAD_COMPLETED
Make template folders for all the versions of AppStudio you wish to support - for instance:
sudo mkdir -p /srv/ftp/templates/3.3.x
Copy the nsb folder from your install inside the newly created 3.3.x folder. You may need to first upload the folder to your home directory using an SFTP client and then use sudo to cp the folder as root.
Configuring incron
First, create the link script in the template folder with the following command:
sudo nano /srv/ftp/templates/link.sh
Copy the following into link.sh using nano:
#!/bin/bash if grep --quiet '<meta name="generator" content="NSB/AppStudio 3.*" />' /srv/ftp/home/$1/index.html; then ln -s /srv/ftp/templates/3.3.x/* /srv/ftp/home/$1 fi # add elif lines for more templates rm /srv/ftp/NSB_UPLOAD_COMPLETED/$1
Save the file using Ctrl-O and mark it executable:
sudo chmod a+x /srv/ftp/templates/link.sh
Next you need to configure incron for ftpuser. First allow ftpuser to use incron by creating the following file:
sudo nano /etc/incron.allow
Add the following content to the file and save with Ctrl-O:
ftpuser
Edit ftpuser's incrontab:
sudo incrontab -u ftpuser -e
This brings up an editor. Paste the following content into the editor:
/srv/ftp/NSB_UPLOAD_COMPLETED IN_CLOSE_WRITE /bin/bash /srv/ftp/templates/link.sh $# > /dev/null 2>&1
Save the content with Ctrl-O. Incron should now be configured. You can verify this by creating a folder in /srv/ftp/home and then creating a file in /srv/ftp/NSB_UPLOAD_COMPLETED that shares the folder's name. The file you created should be removed and the folder should contain a link to your template.
Uploading & Verification
If everything has been configured correctly, you should be able to connect via FTP upload files using AppStudio's protocol, described below.
AppStudio Upload Protocol
AppStudio uploads projects to a test server with the following steps:
- Choose a unique prefix for the folder based on the user's registration.
- Connect via FTP and upload the prefixed project folder into the ftp home folder.
- Change folders to ../NSB_UPLOAD_COMPLETED and drop a file in that folder that matches the name of the folder you just uploaded.
You can follow these steps manually to test the system.
Verification
If the system is working properly, after uploading, a symbolic link to the template should have appeared in your project's folder. Also, the file uploaded to NSB_UPLOAD_COMPLETE should have been removed.