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1 | .. MediaGoblin Documentation |
2 | ||
fd5c35e5 | 3 | Written in 2011, 2012, 2013 by MediaGoblin contributors |
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4 | |
5 | To the extent possible under law, the author(s) have dedicated all | |
6 | copyright and related and neighboring rights to this software to | |
7 | the public domain worldwide. This software is distributed without | |
8 | any warranty. | |
9 | ||
10 | You should have received a copy of the CC0 Public Domain | |
11 | Dedication along with this software. If not, see | |
12 | <http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/>. | |
13 | ||
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14 | .. _deploying-chapter: |
15 | ||
4e893b6e | 16 | ===================== |
17 | Deploying MediaGoblin | |
18 | ===================== | |
00fdc7bd | 19 | |
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20 | GNU MediaGoblin is fairly new and so at the time of writing, there |
21 | aren't easy package-manager-friendly methods to install MediaGoblin. | |
22 | However, doing a basic install isn't too complex in and of itself. | |
56d507b6 | 23 | |
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24 | There's an almost infinite way to deploy things... for now, we'll keep |
25 | it simple with some assumptions and use a setup that combines | |
26 | mediagoblin + virtualenv + fastcgi + nginx on a .deb or .rpm based | |
27 | GNU/Linux distro. | |
28 | ||
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29 | .. note:: |
30 | ||
31 | These tools are for site administrators wanting to deploy a fresh | |
32 | install. If instead you want to join in as a contributor, see our | |
33 | `Hacking HOWTO <http://wiki.mediagoblin.org/HackingHowto>`_ instead. | |
e260065a | 34 | |
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35 | There are also many ways to install servers... for the sake of |
36 | simplicity, our instructions below describe installing with nginx. | |
37 | For more recipes, including Apache, see | |
38 | `our wiki <http://wiki.mediagoblin.org/Deployment>`_. | |
39 | ||
4e893b6e | 40 | Prepare System |
41 | -------------- | |
e260065a | 42 | |
4e893b6e | 43 | Dependencies |
44 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
e260065a | 45 | |
4e893b6e | 46 | MediaGoblin has the following core dependencies: |
e260065a | 47 | |
4e893b6e | 48 | - Python 2.6 or 2.7 |
49 | - `python-lxml <http://lxml.de/>`_ | |
50 | - `git <http://git-scm.com/>`_ | |
775ec9e8 | 51 | - `SQLite <http://www.sqlite.org/>`_/`PostgreSQL <http://www.postgresql.org/>`_ |
4e893b6e | 52 | - `Python Imaging Library <http://www.pythonware.com/products/pil/>`_ (PIL) |
53 | - `virtualenv <http://www.virtualenv.org/>`_ | |
e260065a | 54 | |
4e893b6e | 55 | On a DEB-based system (e.g Debian, gNewSense, Trisquel, Ubuntu, and |
7798f911 | 56 | derivatives) issue the following command:: |
e260065a | 57 | |
775ec9e8 | 58 | sudo apt-get install git-core python python-dev python-lxml \ |
076bf0cf | 59 | python-imaging python-virtualenv |
e260065a | 60 | |
4e893b6e | 61 | On a RPM-based system (e.g. Fedora, RedHat, and derivatives) issue the |
7798f911 | 62 | following command:: |
4e893b6e | 63 | |
775ec9e8 | 64 | yum install python-paste-deploy python-paste-script \ |
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65 | git-core python python-devel python-lxml python-imaging \ |
66 | python-virtualenv | |
e260065a | 67 | |
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68 | Configure PostgreSQL |
69 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
70 | ||
71 | .. note:: | |
72 | ||
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73 | MediaGoblin currently supports PostgreSQL and SQLite. The default is a |
74 | local SQLite database. This will "just work" for small deployments. | |
775ec9e8 | 75 | |
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76 | For medium to large deployments we recommend PostgreSQL. |
77 | ||
78 | If you don't want/need postgres, skip this section. | |
79 | ||
fd5c35e5 | 80 | These are the packages needed for Debian Wheezy (stable):: |
775ec9e8 | 81 | |
21a84362 | 82 | sudo apt-get install postgresql postgresql-client python-psycopg2 |
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83 | |
84 | The installation process will create a new *system* user named ``postgres``, | |
85 | it will have privilegies sufficient to manage the database. We will create a | |
86 | new database user with restricted privilegies and a new database owned by our | |
87 | restricted database user for our MediaGoblin instance. | |
88 | ||
89 | In this example, the database user will be ``mediagoblin`` and the database | |
90 | name will be ``mediagoblin`` too. | |
91 | ||
7798f911 | 92 | To create our new user, run:: |
775ec9e8 | 93 | |
5526150e | 94 | sudo -u postgres createuser -A -D mediagoblin |
775ec9e8 | 95 | |
7798f911 | 96 | then create the database all our MediaGoblin data should be stored in:: |
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97 | |
98 | sudo -u postgres createdb -E UNICODE -O mediagoblin mediagoblin | |
99 | ||
100 | where the first ``mediagoblin`` is the database owner and the second | |
101 | ``mediagoblin`` is the database name. | |
102 | ||
103 | .. caution:: Where is the password? | |
104 | ||
105 | These steps enable you to authenticate to the database in a password-less | |
106 | manner via local UNIX authentication provided you run the MediaGoblin | |
107 | application as a user with the same name as the user you created in | |
108 | PostgreSQL. | |
109 | ||
110 | More on this in :ref:`Drop Privileges for MediaGoblin <drop-privileges-for-mediagoblin>`. | |
111 | ||
112 | ||
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113 | .. _drop-privileges-for-mediagoblin: |
114 | ||
4e893b6e | 115 | Drop Privileges for MediaGoblin |
116 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
17c71230 | 117 | |
fd5c35e5 | 118 | MediaGoblin does not require special permissions or elevated |
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119 | access to run. As such, the preferred way to run MediaGoblin is to |
120 | create a dedicated, unprivileged system user for the sole purpose of running | |
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121 | MediaGoblin. Running MediaGoblin processes under an unpriviledged system user |
122 | helps to keep it more secure. | |
123 | ||
124 | The following command (entered as root or with sudo) will create a | |
125 | system account with a username of ``mediagoblin``. You may choose a different | |
126 | username if you wish.:: | |
127 | ||
9b604868 | 128 | adduser --system mediagoblin |
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129 | |
130 | No password will be assigned to this account, and you will not be able | |
131 | to log in as this user. To switch to this account, enter either:: | |
132 | ||
f055b475 | 133 | sudo -u mediagoblin /bin/bash # (if you have sudo permissions) |
fd5c35e5 | 134 | |
9b604868 | 135 | or:: |
fd5c35e5 | 136 | |
f055b475 | 137 | su mediagoblin -s /bin/bash # (if you have to use root permissions) |
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138 | |
139 | You may get a warning similar to this when entering these commands:: | |
140 | ||
9b604868 | 141 | warning: cannot change directory to /home/mediagoblin: No such file or directory |
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142 | |
143 | You can disregard this warning. To return to your regular user account after | |
144 | using the system account, just enter ``exit``. | |
145 | ||
146 | .. note:: | |
147 | ||
148 | Unless otherwise noted, the remainder of this document assumes that all | |
149 | operations are performed using this unpriviledged account. | |
150 | ||
151 | .. _create-mediagoblin-directory: | |
152 | ||
153 | Create a MediaGoblin Directory | |
154 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
17c71230 | 155 | |
4e893b6e | 156 | You should create a working directory for MediaGoblin. This document |
076bf0cf | 157 | assumes your local git repository will be located at |
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158 | ``/srv/mediagoblin.example.org/mediagoblin/``. |
159 | Substitute your prefered local deployment path as needed. | |
160 | ||
161 | Setting up the working directory requires that we first create the directory | |
162 | with elevated priviledges, and then assign ownership of the directory | |
163 | to the unpriviledged system account. | |
17c71230 | 164 | |
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165 | To do this, enter either of the following commands, changing the defaults |
166 | to suit your particular requirements:: | |
17c71230 | 167 | |
138d934f | 168 | sudo mkdir -p /srv/mediagoblin.example.org && sudo chown -hR mediagoblin: /srv/mediagoblin.example.org |
fd5c35e5 | 169 | |
9b604868 | 170 | or (as the root user):: |
fd5c35e5 | 171 | |
138d934f | 172 | mkdir -p /srv/mediagoblin.example.org && chown -hR mediagoblin: /srv/mediagoblin.example.org |
17c71230 | 173 | |
4e893b6e | 174 | |
e260065a | 175 | Install MediaGoblin and Virtualenv |
4e893b6e | 176 | ---------------------------------- |
e260065a | 177 | |
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178 | .. note:: |
179 | ||
7798f911 | 180 | MediaGoblin is still developing rapidly. As a result |
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181 | the following instructions recommend installing from the ``master`` |
182 | branch of the git repository. Eventually production deployments will | |
183 | want to transition to running from more consistent releases. | |
e260065a | 184 | |
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185 | We will now clone the MediaGoblin source code repository and setup and |
186 | configure the necessary services. Modify these commands to | |
187 | suit your own environment. As a reminder, you should enter these | |
188 | commands using your unpriviledged system account. | |
17c71230 | 189 | |
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190 | Change to the MediaGoblin directory that you just created:: |
191 | ||
192 | cd /srv/mediagoblin.example.org | |
17c71230 | 193 | |
d3b1fd2e | 194 | Clone the MediaGoblin repository and set up the git submodules:: |
e260065a | 195 | |
5a756fb8 | 196 | git clone git://gitorious.org/mediagoblin/mediagoblin.git |
b889f971 | 197 | cd mediagoblin |
64ad0bee | 198 | git submodule init && git submodule update |
e260065a | 199 | |
e260065a | 200 | |
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201 | And set up the in-package virtualenv:: |
202 | ||
d60d686a | 203 | (virtualenv --python=python2 --system-site-packages . || virtualenv --python=python2 .) && ./bin/python setup.py develop |
e260065a | 204 | |
4e893b6e | 205 | .. note:: |
e260065a | 206 | |
4a0778b3 | 207 | We presently have an **experimental** make-style deployment system. if |
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208 | you'd like to try it, instead of the above command, you can run:: |
209 | ||
f0e137ab | 210 | ./bootstrap.sh && ./configure && make |
99d79749 | 211 | |
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212 | This also includes a number of nice features, such as keeping your |
213 | viratualenv up to date by simply running `make update`. | |
99d79749 | 214 | |
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215 | Note: this is liable to break. Use this method with caution. |
216 | ||
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217 | You then need to make a local copy of mediagoblin.ini, if you don't have one:: |
218 | ||
219 | cp --no-clobber mediagoblin.example.ini mediagoblin.ini | |
220 | ||
4e893b6e | 221 | The above provides an in-package install of ``virtualenv``. While this |
222 | is counter to the conventional ``virtualenv`` configuration, it is | |
223 | more reliable and considerably easier to configure and illustrate. If | |
224 | you're familiar with Python packaging you may consider deploying with | |
c356dc16 | 225 | your preferred method. |
e260065a | 226 | |
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227 | Assuming you are going to deploy with FastCGI, you should also install |
228 | flup:: | |
99192f24 | 229 | |
076bf0cf | 230 | ./bin/easy_install flup |
99192f24 | 231 | |
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232 | (Sometimes this breaks because flup's site is flakey. If it does for |
233 | you, try):: | |
234 | ||
235 | ./bin/easy_install https://pypi.python.org/pypi/flup/1.0.3.dev-20110405 | |
236 | ||
4e893b6e | 237 | This concludes the initial configuration of the development |
8d9aa03f | 238 | environment. In the future, when you update your |
076bf0cf | 239 | codebase, you should also run:: |
e260065a | 240 | |
e99431cc | 241 | git submodule update && ./bin/python setup.py develop --upgrade && ./bin/gmg dbupdate |
e260065a | 242 | |
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243 | Note: If you are running an active site, depending on your server |
244 | configuration, you may need to stop it first or the dbupdate command | |
245 | may hang (and it's certainly a good idea to restart it after the | |
246 | update) | |
247 | ||
248 | ||
4e893b6e | 249 | Deploy MediaGoblin Services |
250 | --------------------------- | |
e260065a | 251 | |
a7d2a892 ST |
252 | Edit site configuration |
253 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
254 | ||
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255 | A few basic properties must be set before MediaGoblin will work. First |
256 | make a copy of ``mediagoblin.ini`` for editing so the original config | |
257 | file isn't lost:: | |
a7d2a892 ST |
258 | |
259 | cp mediagoblin.ini mediagoblin_local.ini | |
a7d2a892 | 260 | |
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261 | Then: |
262 | - Set ``email_sender_address`` to the address you wish to be used as | |
263 | the sender for system-generated emails | |
264 | - Edit ``direct_remote_path``, ``base_dir``, and ``base_url`` if | |
265 | your mediagoblin directory is not the root directory of your | |
266 | vhost. | |
a7d2a892 ST |
267 | |
268 | ||
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269 | Configure MediaGoblin to use the PostgreSQL database |
270 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
271 | ||
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272 | If you are using postgres, edit the ``[mediagoblin]`` section in your |
273 | ``mediagoblin_local.ini`` and put in:: | |
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274 | |
275 | sql_engine = postgresql:///mediagoblin | |
276 | ||
277 | if you are running the MediaGoblin application as the same 'user' as the | |
278 | database owner. | |
279 | ||
7798f911 | 280 | |
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281 | Update database data structures |
282 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
283 | ||
7798f911 | 284 | Before you start using the database, you need to run:: |
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285 | |
286 | ./bin/gmg dbupdate | |
287 | ||
288 | to populate the database with the MediaGoblin data structures. | |
289 | ||
290 | ||
4e893b6e | 291 | Test the Server |
292 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
e260065a | 293 | |
4e893b6e | 294 | At this point MediaGoblin should be properly installed. You can |
076bf0cf | 295 | test the deployment with the following command:: |
e260065a | 296 | |
076bf0cf | 297 | ./lazyserver.sh --server-name=broadcast |
e260065a | 298 | |
4e893b6e | 299 | You should be able to connect to the machine on port 6543 in your |
300 | browser to confirm that the service is operable. | |
e260065a | 301 | |
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302 | .. _webserver-config: |
303 | ||
56d507b6 | 304 | |
a7d2a892 ST |
305 | FastCGI and nginx |
306 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
307 | ||
308 | This configuration example will use nginx, however, you may | |
4e893b6e | 309 | use any webserver of your choice as long as it supports the FastCGI |
310 | protocol. If you do not already have a web server, consider nginx, as | |
311 | the configuration files may be more clear than the | |
312 | alternatives. | |
313 | ||
314 | Create a configuration file at | |
315 | ``/srv/mediagoblin.example.org/nginx.conf`` and create a symbolic link | |
316 | into a directory that will be included in your ``nginx`` configuration | |
317 | (e.g. "``/etc/nginx/sites-enabled`` or ``/etc/nginx/conf.d``) with | |
076bf0cf | 318 | one of the following commands (as the root user):: |
4e893b6e | 319 | |
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320 | ln -s /srv/mediagoblin.example.org/nginx.conf /etc/nginx/conf.d/ |
321 | ln -s /srv/mediagoblin.example.org/nginx.conf /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/ | |
4e893b6e | 322 | |
323 | Modify these commands and locations depending on your preferences and | |
324 | the existing configuration of your nginx instance. The contents of | |
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325 | this ``nginx.conf`` file should be modeled on the following:: |
326 | ||
327 | server { | |
328 | ################################################# | |
329 | # Stock useful config options, but ignore them :) | |
330 | ################################################# | |
331 | include /etc/nginx/mime.types; | |
332 | ||
333 | autoindex off; | |
334 | default_type application/octet-stream; | |
335 | sendfile on; | |
336 | ||
337 | # Gzip | |
338 | gzip on; | |
339 | gzip_min_length 1024; | |
340 | gzip_buffers 4 32k; | |
341 | gzip_types text/plain text/html application/x-javascript text/javascript text/xml text/css; | |
342 | ||
343 | ##################################### | |
344 | # Mounting MediaGoblin stuff | |
345 | # This is the section you should read | |
346 | ##################################### | |
347 | ||
348 | # Change this to update the upload size limit for your users | |
349 | client_max_body_size 8m; | |
350 | ||
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351 | # prevent attacks (someone uploading a .txt file that the browser |
352 | # interprets as an HTML file, etc.) | |
353 | add_header X-Content-Type-Options nosniff; | |
37b48053 | 354 | |
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355 | server_name mediagoblin.example.org www.mediagoblin.example.org; |
356 | access_log /var/log/nginx/mediagoblin.example.access.log; | |
357 | error_log /var/log/nginx/mediagoblin.example.error.log; | |
358 | ||
359 | # MediaGoblin's stock static files: CSS, JS, etc. | |
360 | location /mgoblin_static/ { | |
361 | alias /srv/mediagoblin.example.org/mediagoblin/mediagoblin/static/; | |
362 | } | |
363 | ||
364 | # Instance specific media: | |
365 | location /mgoblin_media/ { | |
366 | alias /srv/mediagoblin.example.org/mediagoblin/user_dev/media/public/; | |
367 | } | |
368 | ||
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369 | # Theme static files (usually symlinked in) |
370 | location /theme_static/ { | |
371 | alias /srv/mediagoblin.example.org/mediagoblin/user_dev/theme_static/; | |
372 | } | |
373 | ||
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374 | # Plugin static files (usually symlinked in) |
375 | location /plugin_static/ { | |
376 | alias /srv/mediagoblin.example.org/mediagoblin/user_dev/plugin_static/; | |
377 | } | |
378 | ||
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379 | # Mounting MediaGoblin itself via FastCGI. |
380 | location / { | |
381 | fastcgi_pass 127.0.0.1:26543; | |
382 | include /etc/nginx/fastcgi_params; | |
383 | ||
384 | # our understanding vs nginx's handling of script_name vs | |
385 | # path_info don't match :) | |
386 | fastcgi_param PATH_INFO $fastcgi_script_name; | |
387 | fastcgi_param SCRIPT_NAME ""; | |
4e893b6e | 388 | } |
076bf0cf | 389 | } |
4e893b6e | 390 | |
391 | Now, nginx instance is configured to serve the MediaGoblin | |
392 | application. Perform a quick test to ensure that this configuration | |
393 | works. Restart nginx so it picks up your changes, with a command that | |
076bf0cf | 394 | resembles one of the following (as the root user):: |
4e893b6e | 395 | |
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396 | sudo /etc/init.d/nginx restart |
397 | sudo /etc/rc.d/nginx restart | |
4e893b6e | 398 | |
399 | Now start MediaGoblin. Use the following command sequence as an | |
076bf0cf | 400 | example:: |
4e893b6e | 401 | |
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402 | cd /srv/mediagoblin.example.org/mediagoblin/ |
403 | ./lazyserver.sh --server-name=fcgi fcgi_host=127.0.0.1 fcgi_port=26543 | |
4e893b6e | 404 | |
405 | Visit the site you've set up in your browser by visiting | |
518c5eb3 | 406 | <http://mediagoblin.example.org>. You should see MediaGoblin! |
4e893b6e | 407 | |
4e893b6e | 408 | .. note:: |
409 | ||
a085dda5 | 410 | The configuration described above is sufficient for development and |
411 | smaller deployments. However, for larger production deployments | |
412 | with larger processing requirements, see the | |
413 | ":doc:`production-deployments`" documentation. | |
a7d2a892 ST |
414 | |
415 | ||
416 | Apache | |
417 | ~~~~~~ | |
418 | ||
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419 | Instructions and scripts for running MediaGoblin on an Apache server |
420 | can be found on the `MediaGoblin wiki <http://wiki.mediagoblin.org/Deployment>`_. | |
b835e153 E |
421 | |
422 | ||
423 | Security Considerations | |
424 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | |
425 | ||
426 | .. warning:: | |
427 | ||
428 | The directory ``user_dev/crypto/`` contains some very | |
429 | sensitive files. | |
430 | Especially the ``itsdangeroussecret.bin`` is very important | |
431 | for session security. Make sure not to leak its contents anywhere. | |
432 | If the contents gets leaked nevertheless, delete your file | |
433 | and restart the server, so that it creates a new secret key. | |
fd5c35e5 JC |
434 | All previous sessions will be invalidated. |
435 |