Sign Up
Log In
Log In
or
Sign Up
Places
All Projects
Status Monitor
Collapse sidebar
home:frispete:tools
ampache
ampache-README.SUSE
Overview
Repositories
Revisions
Requests
Users
Attributes
Meta
File ampache-README.SUSE of Package ampache
How to set up Ampache for the first time ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ (see further below for hints on how to update an existing installation) Note: Since Ampache 3.8.1, you must first install Composer dependencies with: cd @APACHE_SERVERROOT@/ampache composer install --prefer-source --no-interaction Step 1. Configure mysql. First, start it: rcmysql start (upon the very first start, it is initialized) set root passwort: /usr/bin/mysqladmin -u root password 'secret' create database named "ampache" and grant a user authenticating as wwwrun all permissions on it: mysql -u root -p mysql> create database ampache; Query OK, 1 row affected (0.02 sec) mysql> GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON ampache.* to ampache@localhost IDENTIFIED BY 'othersecret'; Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.02 sec) mysql> quit Bye Note. Because we suggested in earlier versions to create a database named "ampache", we are now suggesting a different name so updates can work (the tables have changed and need to be recreated). initialize ampache database: mysql -D ampache -u ampache -p < /usr/share/doc/packages/ampache/ampache.sql Step 2. Configure ampache: edit /etc/ampache/ampache.cfg to contain the right password and username for accessing the mysql database, and set the "web_path". You may review the apache2 configuration in /etc/apache2/conf.d/ampache.conf but no changes should be needed for now. Now create admin user. You can do this over /etc/amapache/ampache.cfg or over console. a) over config-file change use_auth = "true" to "false" default_auth_level = "guest" to "admin" open the URL http://hostname/ampache in a browser and set the password of the ampache user: -> Preferences -> Account make sure to set the admin password to a more secure one ;-) You do that by simply creating an account for yourself (Admin -> Users -> ...), giving it "admin" rights, and delete the initial admin user. You can add additional users now or later - but it's important to change the default "open" setting to a more secure one now. Edit /etc/ampache/ampache.cfg and set use_auth = "yes" default_auth_level = "guest" Afterwards only valid users can access ampache. b) over console php @APACHE_SERVERROOT@/ampache/bin/install/add_user.inc -u _loginname_ -l admin -p _password_ -e _mailadress_ -n _Name_ You must change _loginname_, _password_, _mailadress_ and _Name_ with your values. Step 3. Configure your web browser to start an mp3 player for the respective mime type (you have probably already done that). With a text browser, you might want to put this in ~/.mailcap: audio/mpegurl;/usr/bin/xmms %s Step 4. Just a hint for further experimentation... if you run the ampache server behind another machine, you can reverse proxy it and map its URL space into, for example, a virtual host: <VirtualHost *> RewriteEngine on ServerName your.external.server <IfModule mod_proxy.c> ProxyVia on ProxyPass /admin http://ampache.internal/ampache/admin/ ProxyPass / http://ampache.internal/ampache/ RewriteRule ^/(.*) http://ampache.internal/ampache/$1 [P,L] </IfModule> </VirtualHost> This implies that you setup the ampache server (in step 2.) to the DNS name that is reachable from the outside. Note on update to 3.3.1.2 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The path to the main index file has changed. You need to replace Alias /ampache @APACHE_SERVERROOT@/ampache/docs by Alias /ampache @APACHE_SERVERROOT@/ampache in your apache configuration. How to update an existing (pre-v3.2) installation ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ !! All database updates to Ampache starting with 3.2 are handled by ampache !! himself, when you first use it after installing the newer package. !! (If you update in the running system, it might help though to log out before, !! to avoid confusion.) !! This means, you don't need to follow the steps detailed below. !! Note however that you might put the correct name of the database into !! /etc/ampache.cfg (local_db parameter). Your database might be named ampache3_1. !! I'm actually not sure whether updates from older versions to 3.2.2 work !! without the below manual migration. I'm leaving the instructions here in !! case you need them. If you update from v3.0 to v3.1, as in an update to SUSE Linux 9.1, you need to read /usr/share/doc/packages/ampache/MIGRATION and follow the directions! Before using the migration scripts, install a few needed perl modules: yast -i perl-DBI perl-Msql-Mysql-modules perl-Data-ShowTable Make a list of your existing catalogues, you'll need to recreate them. The configuration file has changed. Merge your settings from /etc/ampache.conf.inc.rpmsave into /etc/ampache.cfg. Note: leave 'local_db = ampache3_1' unchanged (see below). Note: Also adjust the 'web_path' setting to your base URL. The database format has changed, too. Create new database: # mysql -u root -p Enter password: Welcome to the MySQL monitor. Commands end with ; or \g. Your MySQL connection id is 6 to server version: 3.23.55-log Type 'help;' or '\h' for help. Type '\c' to clear the buffer. mysql> create database ampache3_1; Query OK, 1 row affected (0.04 sec) mysql> GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON ampache3_1.* to wwwrun@localhost IDENTIFIED BY 'othersecret'; Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.05 sec) mysql> quit Bye Initialize the new database structure: mysql -D ampache3_1 -u wwwrun -p < /usr/share/doc/packages/ampache/ampache.sql Edit and run the migration scripts: cd @APACHE_SERVERROOT@/ampache/bin/ vi export_playlist.pl ./export_playlist.pl ~/ampache-playlists vi migrate_user.pl ./migrate_user.pl Reload apache/apache2. Log in and recreate your catalogues. Re-import your playlists: vi ./import_playlist.pl ./import_playlist.pl ~/ampache-playlists Ugrade starting from version 3.8.1 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Every attempt is made to make upgrading your Ampache installation as painless as possible. Although we do everything we can to prevent data loss during an upgrade it is never a bad idea to backup your database before performing an upgrade. Below is a simple command line way to backup your MySQL database. Whenever you upgrade Ampache it is recommend that you run a catalog Verify so that any improvements/changes to the tag reading process are applied to your local collection. The catalog verify is not forced during the upgrade due to the length of time it can take. mysqldump -u <USERNAME> -p <AMPACHEDB> --add-drop-table --allow-keywords > mybackup.sql Basic Instructions Move your Old Install Directory out of the way mv ampache ampache.old Extract the new version tar -xzf current.tar.gz Copy your config file from the old install to the new directory cp ampache.old/config/ampache.cfg.php ampache/config/ Since Ampache 3.8.1, don't forget to update Composer dependencies with composer install --prefer-source --no-interaction Attempt to login as normal, Ampache will prompt you for any database upgrades which must be performed Maintenance mode If you attempt to run migration or custom scripts, it's good practice to put your website in maintenance mode to avoid users doing mistakes during that time. To put Ampache in maintenance mode, simply create a new .maintenance file in Ampache root directory. An example redirecting a page hosted in ampache.org is provided under .maintenance.example file. When creating your custom message, don't forget to add exit; at the end to stop the sc ript going further.
Locations
Projects
Search
Status Monitor
Help
OpenBuildService.org
Documentation
API Documentation
Code of Conduct
Contact
Support
@OBShq
Terms
openSUSE Build Service is sponsored by
The Open Build Service is an
openSUSE project
.
Sign Up
Log In
Places
Places
All Projects
Status Monitor