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    Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27

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    • JaredBuschJ
      JaredBusch
      last edited by JaredBusch

      No with Pictures!!

      Navigate to the raw IP (or DNS name) and port 3000 to begin the setup wizard.
      Click Start.
      0_1521132094868_94b16f99-ec79-4a05-9214-1559ef179041-image.png

      It will verify things. Click continue.
      0_1521132136299_05fd8a2d-af61-4182-92e7-c4613b7c564b-image.png

      This screen is the important one. This is where you determine how to access it going forward.
      0_1521132385008_c1693caf-7f60-4ff7-b7d0-5d0a4827e87b-image.png

      Fill in the name with whatever you want and the host with your real FQDN. if you are gong to be using SSL on your proxy, populate this with https.
      I will always recommend that you put a proxy in front of a nodejs application. So because of that, set this to be port 3000 (we already opened the firewall for this).
      0_1521132682485_a6b50d58-5c87-4393-949b-6d28f35bc5da-image.png

      Read and understand what you need to do if you are using a proxy.
      0_1521132728426_daac1ccb-eb1f-4957-89ef-4c83d9035564-image.png

      Mongo should connect if you followed the above instructions.
      0_1521132776516_53c9d7e9-cff5-40dd-b51d-e68cb9ec274c-image.png
      0_1521132795438_f24ba259-7019-4a94-8411-8a7f245273f3-image.png

      Unless you are snowflaking the system on purpose, leave this alone.
      0_1521132826805_cdb59dd7-0df8-45df-891e-f6c4c2be2d4a-image.png

      Skip this for now unless you really know what you are doing.
      0_1521132871834_948756f4-06f7-4c43-956e-d52edfb1a7ec-image.png

      This is what you see whether you configure or skip.
      0_1521132928270_d8374491-ab07-4b5b-bb76-874de5264d60-image.png

      Create your initial admin account
      0_1521133010501_f1a64f3e-cf68-4524-b584-9ed137e3066b-image.png

      Start the Wiki up.
      0_1521133036418_5de3dea9-4817-48d8-a0a1-43659ec7aac1-image.png

      You will see this in the GUI
      0_1521133126281_172b5360-0411-497a-8a45-4ddb808da5f7-image.png

      And you will see this on the CLI.
      0_1521133107652_6967a8c2-3c36-4758-9026-39c314b0353d-image.png

      This brings it to here. I'm not sure why the system is not showing the css. Probably because I do not have my proxy setup right yet.
      0_1521133945975_e56999fa-d7c4-4bd6-a27e-d8ecc13ea318-image.png

      A 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • AdamFA
        AdamF
        last edited by

        Nice work. Are you documenting putting a reverse proxy in front of this, or are you only using it internally?

        JaredBuschJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • JaredBuschJ
          JaredBusch @AdamF
          last edited by

          @fuznutz04 said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

          Nice work. Are you documenting putting a reverse proxy in front of this, or are you only using it internally?

          Yes, I have a Nginx proxy in front. But that is on another box.

          AdamFA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • black3dynamiteB
            black3dynamite
            last edited by

            If you want to have wiki.js autostart after reboot. You can install pm2 and tell pm2 to configure itself as a startup service.

            But before installing pm2 and configuring it, you will want to temporary set SELinux to permissive and also install setroubleshoot-server. After installing and configuring pm2. You will end up having to run these commands.

            ausearch -c 'systemd' --raw | audit2allow -M my-systemd
            semodule -i my-systemd.pp
            

            You'll get that info from running sealert -a /var/log/audit/audit.log.
            SystemD needs read access to pm2.pid.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • AdamFA
              AdamF @JaredBusch
              last edited by

              @jaredbusch said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

              @fuznutz04 said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

              Nice work. Are you documenting putting a reverse proxy in front of this, or are you only using it internally?

              Yes, I have a Nginx proxy in front. But that is on another box.

              I think to do this properly, I should put up Nginx in front as well. If I were to just put Wiki.js on a VPS, I could put Nginx on the same box, correct?

              JaredBuschJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • JaredBuschJ
                JaredBusch @AdamF
                last edited by

                @fuznutz04 said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                @jaredbusch said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                @fuznutz04 said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                Nice work. Are you documenting putting a reverse proxy in front of this, or are you only using it internally?

                Yes, I have a Nginx proxy in front. But that is on another box.

                I think to do this properly, I should put up Nginx in front as well. If I were to just put Wiki.js on a VPS, I could put Nginx on the same box, correct?

                Yes.

                AdamFA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • AdamFA
                  AdamF @JaredBusch
                  last edited by

                  @jaredbusch said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                  @fuznutz04 said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                  @jaredbusch said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                  @fuznutz04 said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                  Nice work. Are you documenting putting a reverse proxy in front of this, or are you only using it internally?

                  Yes, I have a Nginx proxy in front. But that is on another box.

                  I think to do this properly, I should put up Nginx in front as well. If I were to just put Wiki.js on a VPS, I could put Nginx on the same box, correct?

                  Yes.

                  Another project for the list!

                  JaredBuschJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • JaredBuschJ
                    JaredBusch @AdamF
                    last edited by

                    @fuznutz04 said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                    @jaredbusch said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                    @fuznutz04 said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                    @jaredbusch said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                    @fuznutz04 said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                    Nice work. Are you documenting putting a reverse proxy in front of this, or are you only using it internally?

                    Yes, I have a Nginx proxy in front. But that is on another box.

                    I think to do this properly, I should put up Nginx in front as well. If I were to just put Wiki.js on a VPS, I could put Nginx on the same box, correct?

                    Yes.

                    Another project for the list!

                    I have instructions for CentOS7 on here. shoudl be the same.

                    AdamFA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • AdamFA
                      AdamF @JaredBusch
                      last edited by

                      @jaredbusch said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                      @fuznutz04 said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                      @jaredbusch said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                      @fuznutz04 said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                      @jaredbusch said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                      @fuznutz04 said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                      Nice work. Are you documenting putting a reverse proxy in front of this, or are you only using it internally?

                      Yes, I have a Nginx proxy in front. But that is on another box.

                      I think to do this properly, I should put up Nginx in front as well. If I were to just put Wiki.js on a VPS, I could put Nginx on the same box, correct?

                      Yes.

                      Another project for the list!

                      I have instructions for CentOS7 on here. shoudl be the same.

                      Referring to this one, I assume...https://mangolassi.it/topic/6905/setting-up-nginx-on-centos-7-as-a-reverse-proxy

                      JaredBuschJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • JaredBuschJ
                        JaredBusch @AdamF
                        last edited by

                        @fuznutz04 said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                        @jaredbusch said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                        @fuznutz04 said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                        @jaredbusch said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                        @fuznutz04 said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                        @jaredbusch said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                        @fuznutz04 said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                        Nice work. Are you documenting putting a reverse proxy in front of this, or are you only using it internally?

                        Yes, I have a Nginx proxy in front. But that is on another box.

                        I think to do this properly, I should put up Nginx in front as well. If I were to just put Wiki.js on a VPS, I could put Nginx on the same box, correct?

                        Yes.

                        Another project for the list!

                        I have instructions for CentOS7 on here. shoudl be the same.

                        Referring to this one, I assume...https://mangolassi.it/topic/6905/setting-up-nginx-on-centos-7-as-a-reverse-proxy

                        Yes. There is nothing special in setting up NginX on CentOS versus Fedora.

                        JaredBuschJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • JaredBuschJ
                          JaredBusch @JaredBusch
                          last edited by

                          @jaredbusch said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                          @fuznutz04 said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                          @jaredbusch said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                          @fuznutz04 said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                          @jaredbusch said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                          @fuznutz04 said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                          @jaredbusch said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                          @fuznutz04 said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                          Nice work. Are you documenting putting a reverse proxy in front of this, or are you only using it internally?

                          Yes, I have a Nginx proxy in front. But that is on another box.

                          I think to do this properly, I should put up Nginx in front as well. If I were to just put Wiki.js on a VPS, I could put Nginx on the same box, correct?

                          Yes.

                          Another project for the list!

                          I have instructions for CentOS7 on here. shoudl be the same.

                          Referring to this one, I assume...https://mangolassi.it/topic/6905/setting-up-nginx-on-centos-7-as-a-reverse-proxy

                          Yes. There is nothing special in setting up NginX on CentOS versus Fedora.

                          and I made a new guide for that now.
                          https://mangolassi.it/topic/16651/install-nginx-as-a-reverse-proxy-on-fedora-27

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • JaredBuschJ
                            JaredBusch
                            last edited by

                            added some screenshots in post 3.

                            https://mangolassi.it/topic/16171/quick-and-dirty-install-wiki-js-on-fedora-27/3

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • A
                              Alex Sage @JaredBusch
                              last edited by Alex Sage

                              @JaredBusch said in Quick and dirty install Wiki.js on Fedora 27:

                              This brings it to here. I'm not sure why the system is not showing the css. Probably because I do not have my proxy setup right yet.
                              0_1521133945975_e56999fa-d7c4-4bd6-a27e-d8ecc13ea318-image.png

                              @JaredBusch Did you get this fixed?

                              Having the same issue behind NGINX reverse proxy

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • A
                                Alex Sage
                                last edited by

                                Nevermind.

                                https://docs.requarks.io/wiki/administration/setup-nginx-reverse-proxy

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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