![]() It is already installed and configured as part of the LAMP stack. ![]() MediaWiki stores data in a relational database management system such as MariaDB or MySQL. 2) Create a new database and user for MediaWiki php7.3 php7.3-mysql libapache2-mod-php7.3 php7.3-xml php7.3-mbstring php7.3-apcu php7.3-intl php7.3-gd php7.3-cli php7.3-curlĪnyway, as you can see, they are basic modules that probably any server would already have installed. This will ensure that the functioning of the application is as expected. However, make sure you have these PHP modules installed. Since this is a web application that requires a database manager, we need LAMP on our server. Install MediaWiki on Debian 10 1) Install LAMP on Debian 10 ![]() Of course, it supports many different languages including the most spoken worldwide. Therefore, we can examine the source code for bugs or vulnerabilities. Like almost all quality applications there are, it is open source. It has support for extensions that allow you to extend the functionality of the application. According to the project website, it is used by many companies and websites to present their content in a dynamic and fast way. MediaWiki is a web-based tool that allows you to deploy a collaborative project in the form of a Wiki. With MediaWiki we will be able to deploy a wiki for our projects or website. Well, in this post we will show you how to install MediaWiki on Debian 10. And thanks to the open-source development we have a tool that will allow us to create one on our server quickly and easily. This model presents the information in a pleasant way for the view and above all in a functional way. This user is important even if you plan to create a different one for yourself later, because it has administrator privileges, so if you want to give yourself administrator privileges (and you will), the best way to do it is via that user.Nowadays it is quite common to come across projects that have a wiki. Since LocalSettings.php is not there, MediaWiki will guide you on the browser through a series of steps where you have to specify the wiki's name, the name of the database to be created, and other settings, including the username and password for the wiki's first user (by default, the username is “WikiSysop LocalSettings.php is the initialization file for MediaWiki, holding all the user-modifiable settings for the wiki we'll get to many of them over the course of this book. LocalSettings.php – by default, it's not there, and its absence tells MediaWiki that this is a new installation. At that point, assuming you have PHP, a database system and a web server running, the MediaWiki code should get executed correctly, and it will then look for a file called Once you've downloaded the main MediaWiki code, go to the URL for that code in a browser. ( ) – a “MediaWiki Command-Line Interface” that installs via Docker, similar in concept to Canasta, although it does not include any extensions or skins. MediaWiki-Docker ( ) – “a Docker based development environment” that comes pre-installed with MediaWiki core so you still need to download (and install) MediaWiki in the standard way in order to use it.Docker's own MediaWiki image ( ) – created with no involvement from the Wikimedia Foundation, but it's easy to install, and seems to work fine.( ) – a MediaWiki Docker image that comes with its own command-line interface, and a large set of pre-installed extensions and skins. Some of the notable Docker-based MediaWiki pages are: Docker, or at least virtualization (since there are some notable Docker competitors, like Podman) seems to represent the future of MediaWiki installation. The mini-OS is referred to as a “container”, while the package that defines it is called an “image”, and this approach makes it much easier for package/image developers to ensure that what gets downloaded will work correctly regardless of the machine it is run on. Docker is extremely popular software that uses an approach called virtualization to simulate an entire an entire mini-operating system within your real operating system.
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