Install Nextcloud on Fedora 31
Nextcloud® is a file-sharing software similar to Google® Drive or Dropbox®. Because Nextcloud is open source, you have full control, and you can install the server on your machine. This article describes how to install Nextcloud on a Fedora® 31 cloud server.
Prerequisites
- A Cloud Server running Fedora 31
- Access to the root or admin user
Install and configure a LAMP stack
Before you install Nextcloud, you must have a LAMP (Linux®, Apache®, MySQL® or MariaDB®, and PHP) stack on your server.
This example uses MariaDB for the database in the stack.
At the command line, enter the following commands to install Apache, MariaDB, and PHP:
dnf install httpd unzip
dnf install php php-gd php-mbstring php-intl php-mysqlnd php-opcache php-json php-zip php-xml
dnf install mariadb mariadb-server
After you install MariaDB, you should run mysql_secure_installation
to set a root password, disallow remote root logins, and delete the test databases. Use the following commands to start MariaDB and secure the database:
systemctl enable mariadb
systemctl start mariadb
mysql_secure_installation
Next, configure your database by using the following steps:
-
Enter your MariaDB installation by using the following command:
mysql -p
-
Create a database for Nextcloud. Replace with a database name of your choice. We
recommend choosing a database name that clearly indicates the purpose of the database.CREATE DATABASE <database>;
-
Create a user for the new database. Replace with a username and with a
secure password of your choice.CREATE USER '<dbUser>'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY '<PASSWORD>';
-
Give the user access to the database:
GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON .* TO ''@'localhost';
-
Flush privileges:
FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
-
Exit MariaDB:
exit
Take note of these credential settings. You need them to access the database in Nextcloud.
Install Nextcloud
Now that we have our base LAMP stack set up, we can move on to installing Nextcloud itself.
Use the commands in the following steps to download and install Nextcloud:
-
Change to the document root directory.:
cd /var/www/html/
-
Download the latest version of Nextcloud:
wget https://download.nextcloud.com/server/releases/latest.zip
-
Decompress the file:
unzip latest.zip
-
Remove the compressed file:
rm latest.zip
-
Give ownership to the webserver:
chown -R apache:apache nextcloud/
-
Restart Apache:
systemctl enable httpd
systemctl start httpd
-
Add the http and https services to your firewall:
firewall-cmd --permanent --add-service=http
firewall-cmd --permanent --add-service=https
firewall-cmd --reload
-
In your web browser on your local machine, navigate to
https://<internet_ip_address>/nextcloud
.Here, you can create the admin user and configure database access. For the admin
account, choose any secure username and password combination. -
Click Storage & database and select MySQL/MariaDB.
Enter the credentials that you configured in the previous section.
Nextcloud then installs the base system as well as a few applications you might find useful. After this
finishes, the Nextcloud panel displays, and you are ready to upload some files.
Updated about 1 year ago