Most of the install guides (
https://en.opensuse.org/SDB:Nextcloud and
https://en.opensuse.org/SDB:LAMP_setup) use the command-line but a lot can be done using Yast. Do this logged on as root or else you will need to enter the root password a lot and preface command line instructions with
sudo.
- Get the LAMP stack is installed and running...
- Yast | Software | Software Management | View | Patterns
- Tick Web and LAMP Server under Server Functions and press Accept
- Yast | System | Services Manager
- Select apache2 set the Start Mode to On Boot, and then press Start to start it immediately. Repeat for mariadb. Then press Ok.
- Get MariaDB set up properly...
- Fire up a terminal session and run mysql_secure_installation
- Press enter since there is no current MariaDB root password and then select Y to set one - enter your new MariaDB root password twice
- Select Y for the rest of the options
- Set up a database for Nextcloud...
- Fire up a terminal session (or keep using the previous one) and run mysql -u root -p
- You will be prompted for the password you entered above
- To create the database type create database nextcloud; and then press Enter. Don't forget the semicolon at the end.
- Then create a user ID and password for Nextcloud to access the database. Type create user ncdbuser@localhost identified by 'your-password-here'; and then press Enter
- Now give the Nextcloud ID access to the database. Type grant all privileges on nextcloud.* to ncdbuser@localhost identified by 'the-same-password-above'; and then press Enter
- Now type exit; and press Enter to finish
- Enable PHP so that Nextcloud can run
- Fire up a terminal session (or keep using the previous one) and run a2enmod php7
- Then restart the apache webserver with apachectl restart
- Now install Nextcloud. The version that install with OpenSuse 15.0 is 13.0.2 but, as of writing 13.0.8 is in the update repository. If you have a vanilla install of OpenSuse the Update Repositories should already added to the Software Management module.
- Yast | Software | Software Management | Search | nextcloud
- Tick nextcloud and then press Accept
- A whole load of dependencies will display, press Continue
- Now configure Nextcloud.
- Fire up a web browser and navigate to locahost/nextcloud
- You should see a login screen as asking you to create an admin account and password for Nextcloud. Enter a new user ID and password here (these should be different from the previous userID's and passwords). DO NOT PRESS the Finish Setup button yet!
- Select MySQL as the database and boxes for entering the details entered in section 3 will appear ("ncdbuser", "your-password", "nextcloud" and "localhost").
- Then you can press the Finish Setup button
- You will now be logged in to Nextcloud as the admin user. Logout (option under the top right icon)
This is an older version of Nextcloud so you need to update but, at least on my install the permissions and a couple of other things are a bit messed up and the online updater won't work. To fix this, do the following in a terminal as root:
- cd /srv/www/htdocs
- chown wwwrun.www nextcloud
- cd nextcloud
- chown wwwrun.www * -R
- chown wwwrun.www .*
- chmod +x occ
- rmdir search
Now, in a browser, log in to Nextcloud again as the admin. Do the following...
- Click on the top right icon and select Settings
- Part way down the screen under the Version heading you should see there is a new version 14.X available (otherwise log on and off again and see if it does a rescan for updates).
- Click to use the Web Updater
- You should then allow it to check that the updater will work (if you have reset the permissions above that should go through OK).
- Click to carry on with the Web Updater, you should be taken to an update screen with a list of all the bits to be updated. This is a fresh install so they should all be fine.
- Press the button at the bottom to go ahead with the update
Once that is done you will once more be logged in to the updated Nextcloud instance as an admin.
Repeat the above procedure again since there will now be a 15.X update available - at the time of writing that's it, 16.X isn't out yet.
We are not done yet, although we now have Nextcloud 15.X running it now needs a bit of tuning...
- In the browser, go to the menu top right and select Settings. Under the Overview | Security and Setup Warnings there is a short list of things to fix...
- First of all get the database straightened out after the upgrades. In a terminal, logged on as root, do the following
- cd /srv/www/htdocs/nextcloud
- sudo -u wwwrun ./occ db:add-missing-indices
- sudo -u wwwrun ./occ db:convert-filecache-bigint
- The last command will warn you about taking hours, it won't since the install is fresh, so press Y
- When running these commands you will notice them complaining about the PHP memory limit so lets change that.
- In Dolphin, navigate to /etc/php7/apache2 and click on php.ini. It should open in the kate text editor.
- Scroll down until you find the line memory_limit = 128M and change it to memory_limit = 512M
- Save the file and exit
- Now navigate to /etc/php7/cli and repeat the process there.
- Now lets set up some caching to improve performance...
- In Yast go to Yast | Software | Software Management | Search | apcu and check php7-APCu
- Then search for php7-opcache and check it
- Press Accept to install the packages
- In Dolphin, navigate to /etc/php7/apache2 and click on php.ini. It should open in the kate text editor.
- Scroll down until you find the [opcache] section. Remove the leading semicolon and edit (if required) the following lines:
- opcache.enable=1
- opcache.enable_cli=1
- opcache.memory_consumption=128
- opcache.interned_strings_buffer=8
- opcache.max_accelerated_files=10000
- opcache.revalidate_freq=1
- opcache.save_comments=1
- Now add a new section [apc] at the end with the line apc.enable_cli=1
- Save the file and exit
- Now navigate to /etc/php7/cli and repeat the process there.
- Now navigate to /srv/www/htdocs/nextcloud/config/config.php and open it in the kate editor
- Just before the last line add in 'memcache.local' => '\OC\Memcache\APCu',
- Save the file
- Restart the web server in a terminal using apache2ctl restart
- Log on to Nextcloud and there should be a lot less things in the Settings | Overview. I don't care about the CalDav and CardDav issues since it only really affects Apple stuff - which I don't have any of.
However, SSL really does need to be set up, but that is for another posting...
One last thing. I just had a look in the logs and it was full of error messages about using "...a fallback version of the intl extension". Fire up Yast, install
php7-intl and then restart apache (again). Problem solved.