Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27
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@Donahue said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@DustinB3403 said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@Donahue said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@DustinB3403 said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@Donahue said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@DustinB3403 said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@Donahue did you just take what @JaredBusch wrote and keyed in each line one by one? If so human error could have gotten you.
If you scripted it I don't see how you could be using the incorrect password.
I just copied and pasted the whole blocks, only changing ncuser, ncuserpassword, and somesecurepassword
Print the history from the machine and see if you are actually using the correct password.
how do I do that? I cant see back that far. I am using powershell to connect
Have you disconnected? If not just type "history"
I already closed it, before you said it the first time.
You can still hit up arrow and ctrl+r
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I still have the block text that I pasted in that has the password that was set initially, its not a bad password
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@Donahue said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
I still have the block text that I pasted in that has the password that was set initially, its not a bad password
Want to bet?
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@JaredBusch said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@Donahue said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
I still have the block text that I pasted in that has the password that was set initially, its not a bad password
Want to bet?
This is what I pasted in. Maybe I made a mistake somewhere?
#Create a database for nextcloud and a user to access it. mysql -e "CREATE DATABASE nextcloud;" mysql -e "CREATE USER 'ncadmin'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'N@2$#sx67UkIZ^$xsInW0&7Z';" mysql -e "GRANT ALL ON nextcloud.* TO 'ncadmin'@'localhost';" mysql -e "FLUSH PRIVILEGES;" #Secure mariadb. These commands do what mysql_secure_installation does interactively mysql -e "UPDATE mysql.user SET Password=PASSWORD('vX41YtG&Z*^!I*DWVdv$D2k!') WHERE User='root';" mysql -e "DELETE FROM mysql.user WHERE User='root' AND Host NOT IN ('localhost', '127.0.0.1', '::1');" mysql -e "DELETE FROM mysql.user WHERE User='';" mysql -e "DROP DATABASE test;" mysql -e "FLUSH PRIVILEGES;"
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@Donahue Yup. bad password. Hell you are lucky your root password took.
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@JaredBusch said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@Donahue Yup. bad password. Hell you are lucky your root password took.
I am not sure I actually changed the root on mysql, I might just have the root on fedora
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@Donahue said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@JaredBusch said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@Donahue Yup. bad password. Hell you are lucky your root password took.
I am not sure I actually changed the root on mysql, I might just have the root on fedora
....................
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what did I do wrong? I still dont see the issue?
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@JaredBusch said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@Donahue said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@JaredBusch said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@Donahue Yup. bad password. Hell you are lucky your root password took.
I am not sure I actually changed the root on mysql, I might just have the root on fedora
....................
The one password that matters wasn't changed.
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@Donahue said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@JaredBusch said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
mysql -e "UPDATE mysql.user SET Password=PASSWORD('vX41YtG&Z*^!I*DWVdv$D2k!') WHERE User='root';"
That is you changing the
mysql
root password. Well setting actually. -
@DustinB3403 said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@JaredBusch said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@Donahue said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@JaredBusch said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@Donahue Yup. bad password. Hell you are lucky your root password took.
I am not sure I actually changed the root on mysql, I might just have the root on fedora
....................
The one password that matters wasn't changed.
care to elaborate?
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@Donahue said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@DustinB3403 said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@JaredBusch said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@Donahue said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@JaredBusch said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@Donahue Yup. bad password. Hell you are lucky your root password took.
I am not sure I actually changed the root on mysql, I might just have the root on fedora
....................
The one password that matters wasn't changed.
care to elaborate?
It didn't take the password.
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@Donahue said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@JaredBusch said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
mysql -e "CREATE USER 'ncadmin'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'N@2$#sx67UkIZ^$xsInW0&7Z';"
This is you using an invalid character in a mysql password.
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@JaredBusch said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@Donahue said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@JaredBusch said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
mysql -e "CREATE USER 'ncadmin'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'N@2$#sx67UkIZ^$xsInW0&7Z';"
This is you using an invalid character in a mysql password.
what is the invalid character?
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@Donahue said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@JaredBusch said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@Donahue said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@JaredBusch said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
mysql -e "CREATE USER 'ncadmin'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'N@2$#sx67UkIZ^$xsInW0&7Z';"
This is you using an invalid character in a mysql password.
what is the invalid character?
The $ in a bash command with double quotes
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@Donahue said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@JaredBusch said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@Donahue said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@JaredBusch said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
mysql -e "CREATE USER 'ncadmin'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'N@2$#sx67UkIZ^$xsInW0&7Z';"
This is you using an invalid character in a mysql password.
what is the invalid character?
@JaredBusch is probably looking it up, but only numbers and letters are allowed here from what I can find.
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@DustinB3403 said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@Donahue said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@JaredBusch said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@Donahue said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@JaredBusch said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
mysql -e "CREATE USER 'ncadmin'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'N@2$#sx67UkIZ^$xsInW0&7Z';"
This is you using an invalid character in a mysql password.
what is the invalid character?
@JaredBusch is probably looking it up, but only numbers and letters are allowed here from what I can find.
They can be complex, but you have risks of them being misinterpreted. Like bash reading it as a variable.
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@JaredBusch said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@DustinB3403 said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@Donahue said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@JaredBusch said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@Donahue said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@JaredBusch said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
mysql -e "CREATE USER 'ncadmin'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'N@2$#sx67UkIZ^$xsInW0&7Z';"
This is you using an invalid character in a mysql password.
what is the invalid character?
@JaredBusch is probably looking it up, but only numbers and letters are allowed here from what I can find.
They can be complex, but you have risks of them being misinterpreted. Like bash reading it as a variable.
so stick with letters and numbers?
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@Donahue said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@JaredBusch said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@DustinB3403 said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@Donahue said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@JaredBusch said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@Donahue said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@JaredBusch said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
mysql -e "CREATE USER 'ncadmin'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'N@2$#sx67UkIZ^$xsInW0&7Z';"
This is you using an invalid character in a mysql password.
what is the invalid character?
@JaredBusch is probably looking it up, but only numbers and letters are allowed here from what I can find.
They can be complex, but you have risks of them being misinterpreted. Like bash reading it as a variable.
so stick with letters and numbers?
Should I just start over? or can I overwrite these with new passwords?
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@Donahue said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@JaredBusch said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@DustinB3403 said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@Donahue said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@JaredBusch said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@Donahue said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
@JaredBusch said in Install Nextcloud 13.0.0 on Fedora 27:
mysql -e "CREATE USER 'ncadmin'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'N@2$#sx67UkIZ^$xsInW0&7Z';"
This is you using an invalid character in a mysql password.
what is the invalid character?
@JaredBusch is probably looking it up, but only numbers and letters are allowed here from what I can find.
They can be complex, but you have risks of them being misinterpreted. Like bash reading it as a variable.
so stick with letters and numbers?
Pretty much always.