.. MediaGoblin Documentation
Written in 2011, 2012 by MediaGoblin contributors
To the extent possible under law, the author(s) have dedicated all
copyright and related and neighboring rights to this software to
the public domain worldwide. This software is distributed without
any warranty.
You should have received a copy of the CC0 Public Domain
Dedication along with this software. If not, see
.
.. _deploying-chapter:
=====================
Deploying MediaGoblin
=====================
GNU MediaGoblin is fairly new and so at the time of writing, there
aren't easy package-manager-friendly methods to install MediaGoblin.
However, doing a basic install isn't too complex in and of itself.
There's an almost infinite way to deploy things... for now, we'll keep
it simple with some assumptions and use a setup that combines
mediagoblin + virtualenv + fastcgi + nginx on a .deb or .rpm based
GNU/Linux distro.
.. note::
These tools are for site administrators wanting to deploy a fresh
install. If instead you want to join in as a contributor, see our
`Hacking HOWTO `_ instead.
Prepare System
--------------
Dependencies
~~~~~~~~~~~~
MediaGoblin has the following core dependencies:
- Python 2.6 or 2.7
- `python-lxml `_
- `git `_
- `SQLite `_/`PostgreSQL `_
- `Python Imaging Library `_ (PIL)
- `virtualenv `_
On a DEB-based system (e.g Debian, gNewSense, Trisquel, Ubuntu, and
derivatives) issue the following command::
sudo apt-get install git-core python python-dev python-lxml \
python-imaging python-virtualenv
On a RPM-based system (e.g. Fedora, RedHat, and derivatives) issue the
following command::
yum install python-paste-deploy python-paste-script \
git-core python python-devel python-lxml python-imaging \
python-virtualenv
Configure PostgreSQL
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
.. note::
MediaGoblin currently supports PostgreSQL and SQLite. The default is a
local SQLite database. This will "just work" for small deployments.
For medium to large deployments we recommend PostgreSQL.
If you don't want/need postgres, skip this section.
These are the packages needed for Debian Wheezy (testing)::
sudo apt-get install postgresql postgresql-client python-psycopg2
The installation process will create a new *system* user named ``postgres``,
it will have privilegies sufficient to manage the database. We will create a
new database user with restricted privilegies and a new database owned by our
restricted database user for our MediaGoblin instance.
In this example, the database user will be ``mediagoblin`` and the database
name will be ``mediagoblin`` too.
To create our new user, run::
sudo -u postgres createuser mediagoblin
then answer NO to *all* the questions::
Shall the new role be a superuser? (y/n) n
Shall the new role be allowed to create databases? (y/n) n
Shall the new role be allowed to create more new roles? (y/n) n
then create the database all our MediaGoblin data should be stored in::
sudo -u postgres createdb -E UNICODE -O mediagoblin mediagoblin
where the first ``mediagoblin`` is the database owner and the second
``mediagoblin`` is the database name.
.. caution:: Where is the password?
These steps enable you to authenticate to the database in a password-less
manner via local UNIX authentication provided you run the MediaGoblin
application as a user with the same name as the user you created in
PostgreSQL.
More on this in :ref:`Drop Privileges for MediaGoblin `.
.. _drop-privileges-for-mediagoblin:
Drop Privileges for MediaGoblin
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
As MediaGoblin does not require special permissions or elevated
access, you should run MediaGoblin under an existing non-root user or
preferably create a dedicated user for the purpose of running
MediaGoblin. Consult your distribution's documentation on how to
create "system account" or dedicated service user. Ensure that it is
not possible to log in to your system with as this user.
You should create a working directory for MediaGoblin. This document
assumes your local git repository will be located at
``/srv/mediagoblin.example.org/mediagoblin/`` for this documentation.
Substitute your prefer ed local deployment path as needed.
This document assumes that all operations are performed as this
user. To drop privileges to this user, run the following command::
su - [mediagoblin]
Where, "``[mediagoblin]``" is the username of the system user that will
run MediaGoblin.
Install MediaGoblin and Virtualenv
----------------------------------
.. note::
MediaGoblin is still developing rapidly. As a result
the following instructions recommend installing from the ``master``
branch of the git repository. Eventually production deployments will
want to transition to running from more consistent releases.
Issue the following commands, to create and change the working
directory. Modify these commands to reflect your own environment::
mkdir -p /srv/mediagoblin.example.org/
cd /srv/mediagoblin.example.org/
Clone the MediaGoblin repository::
git clone git://gitorious.org/mediagoblin/mediagoblin.git
And set up the in-package virtualenv::
cd mediagoblin
(virtualenv --system-site-packages . || virtualenv .) && ./bin/python setup.py develop
.. note::
If you have problems here, consider trying to install virtualenv
with the ``--distribute`` or ``--no-site-packages`` options. If
your system's default Python is in the 3.x series you man need to
run ``virtualenv`` with the ``--python=python2.7`` or
``--python=python2.6`` options.
The above provides an in-package install of ``virtualenv``. While this
is counter to the conventional ``virtualenv`` configuration, it is
more reliable and considerably easier to configure and illustrate. If
you're familiar with Python packaging you may consider deploying with
your preferred the method.
Assuming you are going to deploy with FastCGI, you should also install
flup::
./bin/easy_install flup
This concludes the initial configuration of the development
environment. In the future, when you update your
codebase, you should also run::
./bin/python setup.py develop --upgrade && ./bin/gmg dbupdate
Deploy MediaGoblin Services
---------------------------
Configure MediaGoblin to use the PostgreSQL database
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If you are using postgres, edit the ``[mediagoblin]`` section in your
``mediagoblin_local.ini`` and put in::
sql_engine = postgresql:///mediagoblin
if you are running the MediaGoblin application as the same 'user' as the
database owner.
Update database data structures
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Before you start using the database, you need to run::
./bin/gmg dbupdate
to populate the database with the MediaGoblin data structures.
Test the Server
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
At this point MediaGoblin should be properly installed. You can
test the deployment with the following command::
./lazyserver.sh --server-name=broadcast
You should be able to connect to the machine on port 6543 in your
browser to confirm that the service is operable.
.. _webserver-config:
Connect the Webserver to MediaGoblin with FastCGI
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This section describes how to configure MediaGoblin to work via
FastCGI. Our configuration example will use nginx, however, you may
use any webserver of your choice as long as it supports the FastCGI
protocol. If you do not already have a web server, consider nginx, as
the configuration files may be more clear than the
alternatives.
Create a configuration file at
``/srv/mediagoblin.example.org/nginx.conf`` and create a symbolic link
into a directory that will be included in your ``nginx`` configuration
(e.g. "``/etc/nginx/sites-enabled`` or ``/etc/nginx/conf.d``) with
one of the following commands (as the root user)::
ln -s /srv/mediagoblin.example.org/nginx.conf /etc/nginx/conf.d/
ln -s /srv/mediagoblin.example.org/nginx.conf /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/
Modify these commands and locations depending on your preferences and
the existing configuration of your nginx instance. The contents of
this ``nginx.conf`` file should be modeled on the following::
server {
#################################################
# Stock useful config options, but ignore them :)
#################################################
include /etc/nginx/mime.types;
autoindex off;
default_type application/octet-stream;
sendfile on;
# Gzip
gzip on;
gzip_min_length 1024;
gzip_buffers 4 32k;
gzip_types text/plain text/html application/x-javascript text/javascript text/xml text/css;
#####################################
# Mounting MediaGoblin stuff
# This is the section you should read
#####################################
# Change this to update the upload size limit for your users
client_max_body_size 8m;
server_name mediagoblin.example.org www.mediagoblin.example.org;
access_log /var/log/nginx/mediagoblin.example.access.log;
error_log /var/log/nginx/mediagoblin.example.error.log;
# MediaGoblin's stock static files: CSS, JS, etc.
location /mgoblin_static/ {
alias /srv/mediagoblin.example.org/mediagoblin/mediagoblin/static/;
}
# Instance specific media:
location /mgoblin_media/ {
alias /srv/mediagoblin.example.org/mediagoblin/user_dev/media/public/;
}
# Theme static files (usually symlinked in)
location /theme_static/ {
alias /srv/mediagoblin.example.org/mediagoblin/user_dev/theme_static/;
}
# Mounting MediaGoblin itself via FastCGI.
location / {
fastcgi_pass 127.0.0.1:26543;
include /etc/nginx/fastcgi_params;
# our understanding vs nginx's handling of script_name vs
# path_info don't match :)
fastcgi_param PATH_INFO $fastcgi_script_name;
fastcgi_param SCRIPT_NAME "";
}
}
Now, nginx instance is configured to serve the MediaGoblin
application. Perform a quick test to ensure that this configuration
works. Restart nginx so it picks up your changes, with a command that
resembles one of the following (as the root user)::
sudo /etc/init.d/nginx restart
sudo /etc/rc.d/nginx restart
Now start MediaGoblin. Use the following command sequence as an
example::
cd /srv/mediagoblin.example.org/mediagoblin/
./lazyserver.sh --server-name=fcgi fcgi_host=127.0.0.1 fcgi_port=26543
Visit the site you've set up in your browser by visiting
. You should see MediaGoblin!
.. note::
The configuration described above is sufficient for development and
smaller deployments. However, for larger production deployments
with larger processing requirements, see the
":doc:`production-deployments`" documentation.