Install Mediawiki: Difference between revisions
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* [[Setting up a mediawiki instance on the sandbox]] | * [[Setting up a mediawiki instance on the sandbox]] | ||
* [[User:Rita_Graca/trimester6/technicaldocumentation#Installing_Mediawiki_on_the_pi | Rita's Notes]] | * [[User:Rita_Graca/trimester6/technicaldocumentation#Installing_Mediawiki_on_the_pi | Rita's Notes]] | ||
* https://pad.xpub.nl/p/mediawiki-install-party | * https://pad.xpub.nl/p/mediawiki-install-party (MediaWiki install party in 2021) |
Revision as of 10:42, 21 November 2022
Setting up your own Mediawiki.
Which wiki?
There are many different kinds of wiki softwares around: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_wiki_software
For this page we will focus on installing MediaWiki.
Where is your wiki?
click and install
Most regular web hosting companies allow for installing MediaWiki without too much trouble, although maintaining and upgrading the code would still in most cases be up to you.
"wiki-family" or "wiki farm"
If you want to run a MediaWiki wiki and don't want to maintain your own infrastructure, you might be interested in a wiki-family or wiki farm.
One of those wiki hosting providers is Fandom (earlier called Wikicities and Wikia), see: https://www.fandom.com/
For more information and a list of wiki farms see: https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Hosting_services
on your own server
If you want to install a wiki on your own server, you can follow the steps on this page.
For notes on how to choose what kind of server you would like to work with and how to install it, see: https://pad.xpub.nl/p/hosting-and-serving
Dependencies
Mediawiki requires 3 things to be installed:
- PHP
- webserver (like nginx or apache)
- database (MariaDB, MySQL, SQLite or PostgreSQL)
Check the Mediawiki download page to see which exact versions you need:
https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Manual:Installation_requirements
Install a database
For this example we will use MariaDB
.
$ sudo apt install mariadb-server
Install a webserver
For this example we will use nginx
.
$ sudo apt install nginx
Install PHP
Install PHP
+ the fpm
and php-mysql
extension:
$ sudo apt install php php-common php-fpm php-mysql php-mbstring php-xml php-intl
Configure your webserver to work with the fpm
extension.
For example, when you work with nginx, edit the default config file with:
$ sudo nano /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/default
and add the following snippet:
Note: change the version number of php to your installed version!
location ~ \.php$ { include snippets/fastcgi-php.conf; fastcgi_pass unix:/run/php/php7.3-fpm.sock; }
To see if php works now, you can make a php file in /var/www/html/
called test.php
:
<?php phpinfo(); ?>
Now open this file in the browser and see if it works.
Download Mediawiki
Navigate to the folder where you want to install Mediawiki.
In this example we will install it at /var/www/wiki/
:
cd /var/www/wiki/
Download the latest version of Mediawiki and unzip the tar file.
You can copy the link from the Mediawiki download page: https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Download
wget https://releases.wikimedia.org/mediawiki/1.38/mediawiki-1.38.4.tar.gz
tar xf mediawiki-1.38.4.tar.gz
Rename the wiki folder something short, like "wiki".
mv mediawiki-1.35.1 wiki
Configure the URL
To connect the folder /var/www/wiki/
to an url like https://hub.xpub.nl/soupboat/wiki/
we need to edit the configuration file of the webserver.
$ sudo nano /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/default
Add the following lines:
location /wiki { alias /var/www/wiki/; index index.php; }
See if it works: https://hub.xpub.nl/soupboat/wiki/
Database
By default you can log in to MariaDB with the root user and the root password.
However, it's a *good idea* to create a dedicated database + database user for your wiki. In this way you can easily back it up (and eventually restore it) with a simple mysqldump
command. Also, it helps to keep different projects separate from each other. See the Mysql page on how to do this. Once you do this add the database name, user name, and password to the Mediawiki setup page when requested.
We will now make a dedicated database for your wiki.
First log in into MariaDB as root:
$ sudo mysql -u root -p
Create a new database:
(Note: replace "<NAMEOFYOURWIKI>" with the name of your wiki, for example: mywiki.)
CREATE DATABASE <NAMEOFYOURWIKI>;
Create a dedicated user for this database and assign a password.
Write this password down, you will need it later to configure the wiki.
(Note: replace "<USERNAME>" and "<SOMEPASSWORD>" with something else.)
CREATE USER '<USERNAME>'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY '<SOMEPASSWORD>';
Give this user the rights to edit the database:
GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON <USERNAME>.* TO '<USERNAME>'@'localhost';
FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
Exit MariaDB:
quit
Setup your Mediawiki
Now go to the wiki setup script: https://hub.xpub.nl/soupboat/wiki/
(Or wherever you installed your wiki of course!)
In step 2 you can use your database settings as configured in the above step. The database prefix can be left empty.
Give the wiki a name and fill in the administrator account info. When in doubt, leave things at the default values.
At the end, download the LocalSettings.php file.
Upload LocalSettings.php
Upload the LocalSettings.php file you just downloaded to the folder of your wiki: /var/www/wiki/
.
The wiki should work now!
Try it out by opening your wiki: https://hub.xpub.nl/soupboat/wiki/
When installing the wiki on a sandbox server
However for a sandbox server you have to tweak one line in the LocalSettings.php file.
Open the file with a text editor (like nano
) and look for:
$wgScriptPath = "/wiki";
and change it to:
$wgScriptPath = "/soupboat/wiki";
Enable uploads
Enable uploads in your LocalSettings.php:
$wgEnableUploads = true; # Enable uploads
and change permissions of the images folder:
$ sudo chgrp www-data /var/www/wiki/images $ sudo chmod 775 /var/www/wiki/images
From: https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Manual:Configuring_file_uploads
You can change the upload size limit in the php.ini file (this is the configuration file for php).
See where it is at the server with:
$ php --ini
Open the php.ini file with nano
:
$ sudo nano /path/to/file/php.ini
Search for upload_max_filesize
and post_max_size
and change the values to your desired upload size, for example to: 32M
Configure
How open/closed do you want your wiki to be?
- public, everyone can edit
- public, only people with accounts can edit, account creation is open
- public, only people with accounts can edit, account creation is closed
- non-public, only you can edit
...
Back up your wiki
...
Extensions
You can find lists of extensions on the MediaWiki wiki: https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Category:Extensions
There are instructions on the MediaWiki page of the extension about the installations.
But basically you follow the following steps.
Copy the extension to:
/var/www/wiki/extensions
And then activate it in your LocalSettings.php:
/var/www/wiki/extensions/LocalSettings.php
with the following line:
wfLoadExtension( 'NAMEOFYOUREXTENSION' );
If it is installed correctly, it should show up on this page:
URL-TO-YOUR-WIKI/Special:Version
Customizing
Choose a skin
See: https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Category:All_skins + https://skins.wmflabs.org/#/explore
You can find instructions regarding how to install the skin on the MediaWiki page for the skin, for example this is the page for the Vector skin: https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Skin:Vector
Tweaking the skin
You can edit the CSS of the skin at this wiki page: MediaWiki:Common.css
And leave javascript code here: MediaWiki:Common.js
Edit the menu: MediaWiki:Sidebar
Edit system texts: https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Help:System_message
You can find all system texts at:
Special:AllMessages
See also
- Wiki: more context of the MediaWiki software
- Wiki_Tutorial: a guide for the MediaWiki syntax and editing
- https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Manual:Installing_MediaWiki
- Setting up a mediawiki instance on the sandbox
- Rita's Notes
- https://pad.xpub.nl/p/mediawiki-install-party (MediaWiki install party in 2021)