Setup:Installation Guide/System Preparation/Linux/MariaDB: Difference between revisions

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apt clean</pre>
apt clean</pre>
==Create database user for BlueSpice==
==Create database user for BlueSpice==
<span title="" class="">After installation, immediately create a database user for MariaDB directly with the following command:</span><span /><span /><br />
<span title="" class="">After installation, immediately create a database user for MariaDB directly with the following command:</span><span /><span /><span /><br />


<pre>mysql -e "GRANT ALL ON bluespice.* TO 'bluespice'@'127.0.0.1' IDENTIFIED BY '<a password of your choice>';"</pre>{{Messagebox|boxtype=important|icon=yes|Note text=Remember the username and password for later parts of the Installation.|bgcolor=}}
<pre>mysql -e "GRANT ALL ON bluespice.* TO 'bluespice'@'127.0.0.1' IDENTIFIED BY '<a password of your choice>';"</pre>{{Messagebox|boxtype=important|icon=no|Note text=Remember the username and password for later parts of the Installation.|bgcolor=}}


==Next Step==
==Next Step==

Latest revision as of 10:56, 24 January 2023

Important!BlueSpice stores your content in a database for which you need to install a corresponding server. The steps listed here are required.

Installing MariaDB

Install MariaDB via Aptitude:

apt update; \
apt install mariadb-server mariadb-client; \
apt clean

Create database user for BlueSpice

After installation, immediately create a database user for MariaDB directly with the following command:

mysql -e "GRANT ALL ON bluespice.* TO 'bluespice'@'127.0.0.1' IDENTIFIED BY '<a password of your choice>';"
Important!Remember the username and password for later parts of the Installation.


Next Step

If you have completed all steps successfully, you can proceed to the next step " Jetty".



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