Unable to get redis cache running on debian 10 based Nextcloud instance
- 
 These are the php modules installed. jbusch@nextcloud:~$ sudo apt list php-* | grep installed php-common/stable,now 2:69 all [installed,automatic] php-curl/stable,now 2:7.3+69 all [installed] php-fpm/stable,now 2:7.3+69 all [installed] php-gd/stable,now 2:7.3+69 all [installed] php-igbinary/stable,now 3.0.0-1 amd64 [installed,automatic] php-imagick/stable,now 3.4.3-4.1 amd64 [installed] php-intl/stable,now 2:7.3+69 all [installed] php-json/stable,now 2:7.3+69 all [installed] php-mbstring/stable,now 2:7.3+69 all [installed] php-mysql/stable,now 2:7.3+69 all [installed] php-pear/stable,now 1:1.10.6+submodules+notgz-1.1 all [installed] php-redis/stable,now 4.2.0-1 amd64 [installed] php-xml/stable,now 2:7.3+69 all [installed] php-zip/stable,now 2:7.3+69 all [installed]
- 
 @JaredBusch It's phpinfo you want to look at for module info. Preferably through the webserver. 
- 
 @Pete-S said in Unable to get redis cache running on debian 10 based Nextcloud instance: @JaredBusch It's phpinfo you want to look at for module info. Preferably through the webserver.  
  
- 
 Did you do the config in config.php file in nextcloud folder 
- 
 Here's what I found on https://www.c-rieger.de/nextcloud-installation-guide-debian-9-10/#c04 
 Redis configurationsed -i "s/port 6379/port 0/" /etc/redis/redis.conf sed -i s/\#\ unixsocket/\unixsocket/g /etc/redis/redis.conf sed -i "s/unixsocketperm 700/unixsocketperm 770/" /etc/redis/redis.conf sed -i "s/# maxclients 10000/maxclients 512/" /etc/redis/redis.conf usermod -aG redis www-dataNextcloud configuration for Redis 'redis' => array ( 'host' => '/var/run/redis/redis-server.sock', # ATTENTION if you operate on Debian 9.x: # 'host' => '/var/run/redis/redis.sock', 'port' => 0, 'timeout' => 0.0, ),
- 
 @Emad-R said in Unable to get redis cache running on debian 10 based Nextcloud instance: Did you do the config in config.php file in nextcloud folder Yes, I know how it is supposed to be configured. I've done it at least a dozen times on CentOS/Fedora based systems. 
- 
 @black3dynamite said in Unable to get redis cache running on debian 10 based Nextcloud instance: Here's what I found on https://www.c-rieger.de/nextcloud-installation-guide-debian-9-10/#c04 
 Redis configurationsed -i "s/port 6379/port 0/" /etc/redis/redis.conf sed -i s/\#\ unixsocket/\unixsocket/g /etc/redis/redis.conf sed -i "s/unixsocketperm 700/unixsocketperm 770/" /etc/redis/redis.conf sed -i "s/# maxclients 10000/maxclients 512/" /etc/redis/redis.conf usermod -aG redis www-dataNextcloud configuration for Redis 'redis' => array ( 'host' => '/var/run/redis/redis-server.sock', # ATTENTION if you operate on Debian 9.x: # 'host' => '/var/run/redis/redis.sock', 'port' => 0, 'timeout' => 0.0, ),The only thing I did not have was setting the port to 0 and the change of max clients. 
 My understanding of the port 0 was that it would answer both TCP or socket if I left it alone.
    
- 
 No difference 
  
- 
  
- 
 With the socket on 770 I get this spamming again. 
  Changing it to 777 stops that, but instead I get this. 
  
- 
 That should go away when you add redis to www-data group. 
- 
 @black3dynamite said in Unable to get redis cache running on debian 10 based Nextcloud instance: That should go away when you add redis to www-data group. root@nextcloud:/var/www/nextcloud# adduser redis www-data Adding user `redis' to group `www-data' ... Adding user redis to group www-data Done. root@nextcloud:/var/www/nextcloud# systemctl restart redis root@nextcloud:/var/www/nextcloud# systemctl restart apache2 # edit conf to change permission to 770 again root@nextcloud:/var/www/nextcloud# nano /etc/redis/redis.conf root@nextcloud:/var/www/nextcloud# systemctl restart redisand back to the spamming permission denied. 
- 
 @JaredBusch said in Unable to get redis cache running on debian 10 based Nextcloud instance: @black3dynamite said in Unable to get redis cache running on debian 10 based Nextcloud instance: That should go away when you add redis to www-data group. root@nextcloud:/var/www/nextcloud# adduser redis www-data Adding user `redis' to group `www-data' ... Adding user redis to group www-data Done. root@nextcloud:/var/www/nextcloud# systemctl restart redis root@nextcloud:/var/www/nextcloud# systemctl restart apache2 # edit conf to change permission to 770 again root@nextcloud:/var/www/nextcloud# nano /etc/redis/redis.conf root@nextcloud:/var/www/nextcloud# systemctl restart redisand back to the spamming permission denied. Go the other way and add www-data to the redis group instead? 
- 
 @dafyre said in Unable to get redis cache running on debian 10 based Nextcloud instance: @JaredBusch said in Unable to get redis cache running on debian 10 based Nextcloud instance: @black3dynamite said in Unable to get redis cache running on debian 10 based Nextcloud instance: That should go away when you add redis to www-data group. root@nextcloud:/var/www/nextcloud# adduser redis www-data Adding user `redis' to group `www-data' ... Adding user redis to group www-data Done. root@nextcloud:/var/www/nextcloud# systemctl restart redis root@nextcloud:/var/www/nextcloud# systemctl restart apache2 # edit conf to change permission to 770 again root@nextcloud:/var/www/nextcloud# nano /etc/redis/redis.conf root@nextcloud:/var/www/nextcloud# systemctl restart redisand back to the spamming permission denied. Go the other way and add www-data to the redis group instead? Nothing. I'm at a real loss as to WTF is going on here. 
- 
 Since he's back... @jospoortvliet any hints on where to look? 
- 
 Honestly it can be quite a PITA. A solution might be to kind'a start from scratch and follow the how-to from techrepublic - I helped Jack write that, we had also permission errors. The group thing was a big part of the solution. Note you need to restart stuff after changing groups etc, maybe a horrible reboot can help. And yeah, I was looking here. I don't see any obvious issues... 
- 
 @jospoortvliet said in Unable to get redis cache running on debian 10 based Nextcloud instance: Honestly it can be quite a PITA. A solution might be to kind'a start from scratch and follow the how-to from techrepublic - I helped Jack write that, we had also permission errors. The group thing was a big part of the solution. Note you need to restart stuff after changing groups etc, maybe a horrible reboot can help. And yeah, I was looking here. I don't see any obvious issues... I'll poke at this shortly. I've never had a problem enabling this on a CentOS or Fedora system. I do not use Ubuntu anywhere. This one was Debian because supposedly the OCR plugin needs a package that is not available on Fedora. 
- 
 Possibly unrelated, but I was having problems getting a new instance setup on Ubuntu. Redis wasn't working there either. I bailed almost immediately as I didn't have time to mess with it. Installed it on Fedora, and it everything seems to be working as expected. 
- 
 @jospoortvliet said in Unable to get redis cache running on debian 10 based Nextcloud instance: Honestly it can be quite a PITA. A solution might be to kind'a start from scratch and follow the how-to from techrepublic - I helped Jack write that, we had also permission errors. The group thing was a big part of the solution. Note you need to restart stuff after changing groups etc, maybe a horrible reboot can help. And yeah, I was looking here. I don't see any obvious issues... ok got it. I had to keep the socket permission at 770instead of700. I can fine tune that later when the system is not in use.This is my config.php'filelocking.enabled' => true, 'memcache.local' => '\\OC\\Memcache\\Redis', 'memcache.locking' => '\\OC\\Memcache\\Redis', 'redis' => array ( 'host' => '/var/run/redis/redis-server.sock', 'port' => 0, 'timeout' => 0, 'password' => '', 'dbindex' => 0, ), 
- 
 Congrats  




