wallabag uses a large number of PHP libraries in order to function. These libraries must be installed with a tool called Composer. You need to install it if you have not already done so and be sure to use the 1.2 version (if you already have Composer, run a ``composer selfupdate``).
Install Composer:
::
curl -s http://getcomposer.org/installer | php
You can find specific instructions `here <https://getcomposer.org/doc/00-intro.md>`__.
You'll also need the following extensions for wallabag to work. Some of these may already activated in your version of PHP, so you may not have to install all corresponding packages.
To define parameters with environment variables, you have to set these variables with ``SYMFONY__`` prefix. For example, ``SYMFONY__DATABASE_DRIVER``. You can have a look at `Symfony documentation <http://symfony.com/doc/current/cookbook/configuration/external_parameters.html>`__.
..caution:: With this package, wallabag doesn't check for mandatory extensions used in the application (theses checks are made during ``composer install`` when you have a dedicated web server, see above).
If you changed the database configuration to use MySQL or PostgreSQL, you need to create a user via this command ``php bin/console wallabag:install --env=prod``.
We provide you a Docker image to install wallabag easily. Have a look at our repository on `Docker Hub <https://hub.docker.com/r/wallabag/wallabag/>`__ for more information.
When you want to import large files into wallabag, you need to add this line in your nginx configuration ``client_max_body_size XM; # allows file uploads up to X megabytes``.
Assuming you install wallabag in the ``/var/www/wallabag`` folder, here's the recipe for wallabag (edit your ``lighttpd.conf`` file and paste this configuration into it):
When we just want to test wallabag, we just run the command ``make run`` to start our wallabag instance and everything will go smoothly because the user who started the project can access to the current folder naturally, without any problem.
As soon as we use Apache or Nginx to access to our wallabag instance, and not from the command ``make run`` to start it, we should take care to grant the good rights on the good folders to keep safe all the folders of the project.
To do so, the folder name, known as ``DocumentRoot`` (for apache) or ``root`` (for Nginx), has to be absolutely accessible by the Apache/Nginx user. Its name is generally ``www-data``, ``apache`` or ``nobody`` (depending on linux system used).
So the folder ``/var/www/wallabag/web`` has to be accessible by this last one. But this may not be enough if we just care about this folder, because we could meet a blank page or get an error 500 when trying to access to the homepage of the project.
This is due to the fact that we will need to grant the same rights access on the folder ``/var/www/wallabag/var`` like those we gave on the folder ``/var/www/wallabag/web``. Thus, we fix this problem with the following command:
If SELinux is enabled on your system, you will need to configure additional contexts in order for wallabag to function properly. To check if SELinux is enabled, simply enter the following:
``getenforce``
This will return ``Enforcing`` if SELinux is enabled. Creating a new context involves the following syntax:
``semanage fcontext -a -t <context type> <full path>``
For example:
``semanage fcontext -a -t httpd_sys_content_t "/var/www/wallabag(/.*)?"``
This will recursively apply the httpd_sys_content_t context to the wallabag directory and all underlying files and folders. The following rules are needed: