Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32
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@Pete-S said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
sudo sed -i -e 's/(^DocumentRoot\s*).*$/\1"/var/www/html/nextcloud"/' /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
Better
sed
. I removed the\s*
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@JaredBusch said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
@Pete-S said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
sudo sed -i -e 's/(^DocumentRoot\s*).*$/\1"/var/www/html/nextcloud"/' /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
Better
sed
. I removed the\s*
I think you can simplify it way more.
- you don't need
-e
- don't use the
/
separator, use for instance#
. Sos#expression#replacement#
. Then you don't have to escape your paths. And then you can put your variables straight in.
- you don't need
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@Pete-S said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
@JaredBusch said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
@Pete-S said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
sudo sed -i -e 's/(^DocumentRoot\s*).*$/\1"/var/www/html/nextcloud"/' /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
Better
sed
. I removed the\s*
I think you can simplify it way more.
- you don't need
-e
- don't use the
/
separator, use for instance#
. Sos#expression#replacement#
. Then you don't have to escape your paths. And then you can put your variables straight in.
Don't think you need the sed script inside a quoted string either.
Maybe something like this:
sudo sed -i s#\(^DocumentRoot\).*$#\1$WWW_PATH/$APP_FOLDER# /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
If you want quotes around the sed "instructions" use
"
so you get variable expansion, and not'
.
But you don't need to quote a string as long as it doesn't contain spaces. - you don't need
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@Pete-S said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
you don't need -e
You just trying to fix all my old habits?
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@Pete-S said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
@Pete-S said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
@JaredBusch said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
@Pete-S said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
sudo sed -i -e 's/(^DocumentRoot\s*).*$/\1"/var/www/html/nextcloud"/' /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
Better
sed
. I removed the\s*
I think you can simplify it way more.
- you don't need
-e
- don't use the
/
separator, use for instance#
. Sos#expression#replacement#
. Then you don't have to escape your paths. And then you can put your variables straight in.
Don't think you need the sed script inside a quoted string either.
Maybe something like this:
sudo sed -i s#\(^DocumentRoot\).*$#\1$WWW_PATH/$APP_FOLDER# /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
If you want quotes around the sed "instructions" use
"
so you get variable expansion, and not'
.
But you don't need to quote a string as long as it doesn't contain spaces.I'll try it in a bit on my local test instance.
I'm in the middle of migrating the CentOS 7 system to the Fedora 32 system that caused me to write this in the first place.
- you don't need
-
Could not make it execute without the quotes
But this works.sudo sed -i 's#\(^DocumentRoot\).*$#\1 "'"$WWW_PATH"'/'"$APP_FOLDER"'"#' /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
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@JaredBusch said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
@Pete-S said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
@Pete-S said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
@JaredBusch said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
@Pete-S said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
sudo sed -i -e 's/(^DocumentRoot\s*).*$/\1"/var/www/html/nextcloud"/' /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
Better
sed
. I removed the\s*
I think you can simplify it way more.
- you don't need
-e
- don't use the
/
separator, use for instance#
. Sos#expression#replacement#
. Then you don't have to escape your paths. And then you can put your variables straight in.
Don't think you need the sed script inside a quoted string either.
Maybe something like this:
sudo sed -i s#\(^DocumentRoot\).*$#\1$WWW_PATH/$APP_FOLDER# /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
If you want quotes around the sed "instructions" use
"
so you get variable expansion, and not'
.
But you don't need to quote a string as long as it doesn't contain spaces.I'll try it in a bit on my local test instance.
I'm in the middle of migrating the CentOS 7 system to the Fedora 32 system that caused me to write this in the first place.
Hmm, maybe you need some quotes anyway,
The sed thing is really
s#regexp#\1 /www/whatever#
(using `# as delimiter).
Where \1 tell sed to use the capture result of the first group which is "DocumentRoot".
Then a space and then the new path. - you don't need
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@JaredBusch said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
Could not make it execute without the quotes
But this works.sudo sed -i 's#\(^DocumentRoot\).*$#\1 "'"$WWW_PATH"'/'"$APP_FOLDER"'"#' /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
OK try this then:
sudo sed -i 's#\(^DocumentRoot\).*$#\1 '$WWW_PATH/$APP_FOLDER# /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
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@Pete-S said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
@JaredBusch said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
Could not make it execute without the quotes
But this works.sudo sed -i 's#\(^DocumentRoot\).*$#\1 "'"$WWW_PATH"'/'"$APP_FOLDER"'"#' /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
OK try this then:
sudo sed -i 's#\(^DocumentRoot\).*$#\1 '$WWW_PATH/$APP_FOLDER# /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
That is missing the
"
that need to be around the value. But did make me realize I did not need to do all the quoting around the/
since I changed the delimeter.. habitssudo sed -i 's#\(^DocumentRoot\).*$#\1 "'$WWW_PATH/$APP_FOLDER'"#' /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
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\"#
also works to end it. -
@JaredBusch said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
@Pete-S said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
@JaredBusch said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
Could not make it execute without the quotes
But this works.sudo sed -i 's#\(^DocumentRoot\).*$#\1 "'"$WWW_PATH"'/'"$APP_FOLDER"'"#' /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
OK try this then:
sudo sed -i 's#\(^DocumentRoot\).*$#\1 '$WWW_PATH/$APP_FOLDER# /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
That is missing the
"
that need to be around the value. But did make me realize I did not need to do all the quoting around the/
since I changed the delimeter.. habitssudo sed -i 's#\(^DocumentRoot\).*$#\1 "'$WWW_PATH/$APP_FOLDER'"#' /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
Starting to look pretty good I think.
I wonder about the
^DocumentRoot
though. Apache don't need it to be the start of the line. There could be some whitespace first. -
@Pete-S said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
I wonder about the ^DocumentRoot though. Apache don't need it to be the start of the line. There could be some whitespace first.
That is because there are 3 instances in the file. But only that one matters.
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@JaredBusch said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
@Pete-S said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
I wonder about the ^DocumentRoot though. Apache don't need it to be the start of the line. There could be some whitespace first.
That is because there are 3 instances in the file. But only that one matters.
I understand I'm just thinking about whitespace. It's very common to have indentation in the conf files. Especially when you are putting it under
virtualhost
.Then the regex wont match but works fine in apache.
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@Pete-S said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
@JaredBusch said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
@Pete-S said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
I wonder about the ^DocumentRoot though. Apache don't need it to be the start of the line. There could be some whitespace first.
That is because there are 3 instances in the file. But only that one matters.
I understand I'm just thinking about whitespace. It's very common to have indentation in the conf files. Especially when you are putting it under
virtualhost
.This is not in a vhost. this is the main apache config file. Assumption is a single purpose server. anything else is advanced beyond this guide.
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@JaredBusch said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
@Pete-S said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
@JaredBusch said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
@Pete-S said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
I wonder about the ^DocumentRoot though. Apache don't need it to be the start of the line. There could be some whitespace first.
That is because there are 3 instances in the file. But only that one matters.
I understand I'm just thinking about whitespace. It's very common to have indentation in the conf files. Especially when you are putting it under
virtualhost
.This is not in a vhost. this is the main apache config file. Assumption is a single purpose server. anything else is advanced beyond this guide.
Yeah, makes sense.
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sudo sed -i 's#(^DocumentRoot).*$#\1 "'$WWW_PATH/$APP_FOLDER'"#' /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
I wonder if the capture group is actually worth it. You're just capturing the static "DocumentRoot".
It's much cleaner without it and less escaping and quoting.sudo sed -i "s#^DocumentRoot.*$#DocumentRoot $WWW_PATH/$APP_FOLDER#" /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
Never mind, not much of an improvement.
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@Pete-S said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
sudo sed -i 's#(^DocumentRoot).*$#\1 "'$WWW_PATH/$APP_FOLDER'"#' /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
I wonder if the capture group is actually worth it. You're just capturing the static "DocumentRoot".
It's much cleaner without it and less escaping and quoting.sudo sed -i "s#^DocumentRoot.*$#DocumentRoot $WWW_PATH/$APP_FOLDER#" /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
and you are still missing the point that the default file has double quotes around it.
required or not, if it is the default format, I will keep it. -
@JaredBusch said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
@Pete-S said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
sudo sed -i 's#(^DocumentRoot).*$#\1 "'$WWW_PATH/$APP_FOLDER'"#' /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
I wonder if the capture group is actually worth it. You're just capturing the static "DocumentRoot".
It's much cleaner without it and less escaping and quoting.sudo sed -i "s#^DocumentRoot.*$#DocumentRoot $WWW_PATH/$APP_FOLDER#" /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
Ah, it's the regexp.
OK, last chance:sudo sed -i 's#^DocumentRoot.*$#DocumentRoot '$WWW_PATH/$APP_FOLDER# /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
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@Pete-S said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
@JaredBusch said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
@Pete-S said in Setup Nextcloud 19.0.4 on Fedora 32:
sudo sed -i 's#(^DocumentRoot).*$#\1 "'$WWW_PATH/$APP_FOLDER'"#' /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
I wonder if the capture group is actually worth it. You're just capturing the static "DocumentRoot".
It's much cleaner without it and less escaping and quoting.sudo sed -i "s#^DocumentRoot.*$#DocumentRoot $WWW_PATH/$APP_FOLDER#" /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
Ah, it's the regexp.
OK, last chance:sudo sed -i 's#^DocumentRoot.*$#DocumentRoot '$WWW_PATH/$APP_FOLDER# /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
That is the same as I have above, less the double quotes around the file path. Well and capture group
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The top post has been edited to now include the pretty URL and self signed SSL
HTTPS only. HTTP not open on the firewall.