Install LAMP, FTP and PhpMyAdmin on your Onion Omega
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@Kit-Bishop Thank You for Your help, but
/etc/init.d/apache enable
creates symlink automatically. I also tried manual as you stated, but still no luck. Also tried to change START=95 into all kinds of numbers, but nothing works
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@Josip-Mlakar Sorry that didn't help - though I didn't see anything in the /etc/init.d/apache file you posted for handling enable or setting up any symlinks.
Just for the record, after some quick testing, i can confirm that the symlinks in /etc/rc.d do work as I expected and also that the START value (and the <nn> values) can be reused - I created a test file in /etc/init.d with START=95 and set up the S95 and K95 links which duplicate the 95 used by /etc/init.d/done and all worked fine,
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@Danny-van-der-Sluijs I think that's because you have not set Apache server to start automatically on boot. Can you try this:
Create a file
/etc/init.d/apache
, add the following content:#!/bin/sh /etc/rc.common START=12 USE_PROCD=1 NAME=apache PROG=/usr/sbin/apachectl start_service() { procd_open_instance procd_set_param command "$PROG" start procd_close_instance } stop() { /usr/sbin/apachectl stop } reload() { /usr/sbin/apachectl reload }
Make the file executable:
chmod +x /etc/init.d/apache
Reboot again.
Please let me know if this works
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Ok i found what's wrong. Since PhpMyAdmin uses mysql, apache fails to starts before mysql is up. So very very very (did I say very? :D) dirty way to fix this is to add sleep 5 in start() function... Better way would be somthing like
while (mysql not running) {wait}
but I cant find a way to check mysql status. if I find a way I'll update this comment.
Anyways @Danny-van-der-Sluijs current solution is:
Make file namedapache
in/etc/init.d
with content:#!/bin/sh /etc/rc.common START=95 start() { sleep 5 apachectl start } restart() { apachectl restart } stop() { apachectl stop }
Make it executable with
chmod +x /etc/init.d/apache
and then execute/etc/init.d/apache enable
. Ofcourse don't forget to enable mysql to start on boot, you can do that with a command/etc/init.d/mysqld enable
.@Kit-Bishop You don't need to manualy handle
enable
to set up symlink (as stated here in Enable and disable section).
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Hi, I followed your tutorial. But after setting up phpmyadmin I'm getting this error:
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Hi @Milan-Vuckovic, according to this post: https://community.onion.io/topic/220/lamp-stack-rights-management-issues, you can try reinstalling apache a couple times to see if it fixes the issue.
Cheers.
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What should I use for server name in httpd.conf ?
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@Milan-Vuckovic wathever You want (example: www.example.com, www.my-page.com ...)
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@Milan-Vuckovic I'm having the same problem as well. I've tried reinstalling apache with no luck. (opkg install apache --force-reinstall). Any help would be appreciated.
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Try this. I changed some of the settings and it worked.
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@Milan-Vuckovic Anything specific? I've worked through most of it, but haven't had any luck.
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@Collin-S Can't give you specific answer, because I was going through every setting on wiki , just to make sure. Some of the settings mentioned in this tutorial didn't work for me. Try the settings from the link I gave you, restart apache and then try again. That worked for me.
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@Josip-Mlakar said:
ScriptAlias /php/ "/usr/bin"
I, too, was able to reproduce this error, after following the instructions to the letter.
Upon investigation, I found this in the error_log:
"client denied by server configuration: /usr/binphp-cgi"
I adjusted the line ScriptAlias /php/ "/usr/bin" to be ScriptAlias /php/ "/usr/bin/" (notice the trailing /), and it resolved the issue.
Hope that helps!
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@Chris-MacKay Cool, ty.
/php/ "/usr/bin"
worked before last update, after that I didn't try to install it again. Anyways I'll update my post
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@Josip-Mlakar Autostarting apache. OK this is doing my head in! i create the suggested file and get this error: 'bin/sh: cant open' /etc/rc.common
this file doesnt exist on my system should it? where can i get it?
HELP!!!!
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@Andrew-Doherty Can you post the output of
ls -l /etc
?
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@Boken-Lin said:
>this is my apache file in init.d #!/bin/sh /etc/rc.common
#! /bin/sh /etc/rc.common
START=12USE_PROCD=1
NAME=apache
PROG=/usr/sbin/apachectlstart_service() {
procd_open_instance
procd_set_param command "$PROG" start
procd_close_instance
}stop() {
/usr/sbin/apachectl stop
}reload() {
/usr/sbin/apachectl reload
}
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@Andrew-Doherty Seems like
rc.common
does exist. It doesn't startup automatically?
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Nope, tells me it cant find it, everything else starts OK like mysql
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@Andrew-Doherty It's telling you that it cannot find the
/etc/init.d/apache
file or/etc/rc.common
file? And you can show me the output that says that?