I'm a newbie in the open source world. Always used to paying i can't imagine we can get a whole OS for free!!! None the less from reputed companies like Oracle, i'm sold! OK so i got Oracle Linux server 6.1 installed and its running fine. I also checked all the boxes under webserver and MySQl during installation and i can see the Apache home page when i type localhost on the browser and i have started both the Apache & the MySql services.
My question: is there a GUI based admin tool like phpmyadmin to administer the MySql DB which is already installed? If not can someone point me to a step by step guide for the same. I have been trying since last 4 days and i just can't understand how to do this and what is required? I also saw some post saying something like Oracle Enterprise Manager is available through which we can administer the DB but i just can't find out how to get to the console? Is there a locahost url or something to get it to work?
Finally all i want to do is run Drupal on the Linux server and be able to administer the DB with phpmyadmin, if everything is complicated can i just install LAMP or XXAMP which will give me everything i need in one go. Although i feel since Apache & MySQL is already installed when i installed the OS not sure what will happen.
I know i'm all over the place, making the transition from Windows and am really new to this. Any help will be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
KK
Oracle Enterprise Linux is based off of the Red Hat sources, just like CentOS.
Found a link on how to get it setup with CentOS 6, which should work for OEL.
Related
I have a moodle site which runs on a linux AWS box and I'm trying to upgrade it. I need to have MariaDB 10.3 on there, and I currently have 10.2.10
I've followed the instruction for upgrading using yum from this webpage https://www.ryadel.com/en/mariadb-10-upgrade-10-3-without-losing-data-how-to/ and all goes fine until I get to Running Transaction Check and Running Transaction Check at which point I get the following
Transaction check error:
file /etc/my.cnf from install of MariaDB-common-10.3.27-1.el7.centos.x86_64 conflicts with file fr
om package mariadb-config-3:10.2.10-2.amzn2.0.3.x86_64
file /usr/lib64/libmysqlclient.so.18 from install of MariaDB-compat-10.3.27-1.el7.centos.x86_64 co
nflicts with file from package mariadb-libs-3:10.2.10-2.amzn2.0.3.x86_64
I'm not sure what to do now? Any help or pointers would be appreciated.
EC2 is not designed for database specifically
You seem to be installing and running your database on EC2 (what you call a linux AWS box), this means you can SSH into the instance and install software manually and carry out updates and edit configuration files and settings etc.
RDS is designed for Database
RDS also has other really convenient features like automatic version upgrade and maintenance window management.
If your situation allows I would suggest to use a tool designed for database instead of having to configure things manually. It will save you a lot of time and troubleshooting, it is also more secured.
I am new to Linux command line and setting up Magento 2.1 on my VPS. I am thinking to setup Nagios on subdomain so i don't want any interruption on my actual domain ecommerce application.
I have few doubts which causing lot of trouble to me.
By default Zpanel comes up with lower config for Php and Mysql and to make them work with Magento 2 i have to manually upgrade them . I did that but Magento worked, whole Zpanel navigation stopped working. So i re-installed whole ubuntu Os again and ready with my box. I would also like to have Varnish Cache along with some web based console so that i can easily manage my virtual hosts and for some other stuff.
What will be the best approach to setup everything one by one on one domain/sub-domain? I have found so many articles to install magento 2 on ubuntu using command line but they dont use any webpanel. I am open to switch it to any other OS as well.
If there is sequence to setup these all, please guide.
Final Requirement:
Magento 2 with any Linux OS
Nagios server for monitoring
Web panel like CWP or Zpanel etc.
This question will be complete solution and will helpful many other users as well. All answers are highly appreciated. Thank you all in advance.
Regards
H
I know this may be a long shot targeting those here on stackoverflow who use oxwall software to help me with my question, but sadly, I've tried all other sources - even the oxwall forums but to no avail.
For starters - here is what I have so far:
I'm currently running Windows 10 as my OS
I have XAMPP installed
Control panel Apache and MySQL are activated or started/running
Using Localhost:100 instead of Localhost:80 due to conflicts with other applications
User: root with password left blank or empty
I have the Oxwall software - version 1.8.0 within my htdocs folder
I have a database setup using mysql with it's current port set to 3306
My issue:
When installing the oxwall software and get to the third section in the installation process, I am unable to proceed due to setting up a cron job incorrectly.
Due to the fact that I'm running on a localhost with my port as 100 - on a windows machine, using xampp - I'm pretty much clueless on how to get this cron job working correctly and/or even setup for that matter.
I've read literally all the topics that were discussed on the oxwall forums and even followed their documentation but still nothing.
The error I get is this:
ow_includes/config.php file is incorrect. Update it with details provided below.
However, the only details given states:
• Create a cron job that runs ow_cron/run.php once a minute. (?) - with the question mark directing me to the oxwall documentation of how to setup a cron job. But that doesn't seem to work...
I'm literally at a loss here, I've tried to create a .bat file and created a task schedule but nothing...
Even if there is nobody here that uses Oxwall, I'm hoping this can still be answered.
Any help is greatly appreciated!
I received the same error message when using using Oxwall 1.8.1 on my own VPS with CentOS 7, PHP 5.5.31 and mariaDB 5.5.44.
I noticed that the DB only contained one table because my DB user does not have 'Lock table' rights. Once I added these rights to my DB user for Oxwall DB, removed the table and continued the installation, all tables were created and installation was successful.
Hello "stackers" i've been trying the past few days to set-up TCadmin GamePanel on my CentOS server.
We're running CentOS 64 bit, with 32 lib installed.
-We can create Murmur/counter-strike: Source servers running without problems.
-Other servers not responding to query.
-we've allowed port range 27015 - 27030
-SteamCMD is running and we can connect to steam API (tried via. the server)
Following folder names are with lowercases:
/home/tcagame/user
/home/tcadmin/tcafiles/games
/home/tcadmin/tcafiles/users
So after what my research lead to. It isn't because of uppercase letters.
We've tried to reinstall the entire server but nothing works.
Does anybody know why this is happening?
(if some info are missing i'll provide them to you)
Best regards
Rune
Update:
TCadmin support responded to our ticket:
Bu default Tcadmin Runs the "srcds.exe"
This is not the right file to run
Cilck on the server, choose service settings and change "srcds.exe" to "srcds_run"
I have got rackspace cloud server and i have installed lamstack and more. Its too hard to use command prompt to my client, so he wants cPanel or plesk control panel. Is it possible to install any one of those? Which one is best and free or open source. Please suggest me.
cPanel and Plesk will cost you plenty i suppose because rackspace is not their reseller. You might want to look into webmin.
VHCS is ok, i use it for simple webhosting, email, ftp and database administration.
doesn't do a lot else though. its good beside webmin.
Not sure if people are still following this question, but for those that find it VHCS is no longer being supported and is being improved under from a new name called IspCP. Neither of them are particularly easy to install on linux servers and they are not that good. Webmin is the easiest to install and the most written about for support.