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Thanos Kyritsis, 2009-11-02 09:14
corrected a missing semi-colon in the pgsql commands
Installing Redmine¶
- Table of contents
- Installing Redmine
Requirements¶
Operating system¶
Redmine should run on most Unix, Linux, Mac and Windows systems as long as ruby is available on this platform.
Ruby & Ruby on Rails¶
The required Ruby and Ruby on Rails versions for a given Redmine version is:
Redmine version | Supported Ruby versions | Required Rails version |
---|---|---|
current trunk | ruby 1.8.6, 1.8.7 | Rails 2.3.4 |
trunk from r2493 to r2886 | ruby 1.8.6, 1.8.7 | Rails 2.2.2 |
trunk before r2493 | ruby 1.8.6, 1.8.7 | Rails 2.1.2 |
0.8.x | ruby 1.8.6, 1.8.7 | Rails 2.1.2 |
0.7.x | ruby 1.8.6 | Rails 2.0.2 |
Official releases include the appropriate Rails version in their vendor
directory. So no particular action is needed.
If you checkout the source from the Redmine repository, you can install a specific Rails version on your machine by running:
gem install rails -v=2.2.2
Notes:
- RubyGems 1.3.1 is required
- Rake 0.8.3 is required
Database¶
- MySQL 4.1 or higher (recommended) [One exception- the ruby mysql gem does not currently support mysql 5.1]
- make sure to install the C bindings for ruby that dramatically improve performance. You can get them by running
gem install mysql
.
- make sure to install the C bindings for ruby that dramatically improve performance. You can get them by running
- PostgreSQL 8
- make sure your database datestyle is set to ISO (Postgresql default setting). You can set it using:
ALTER DATABASE "redmine_db" SET datestyle="ISO,MDY";
- make sure your database datestyle is set to ISO (Postgresql default setting). You can set it using:
- SQLite 3
Optional components¶
- SCM binaries (eg.
svn
), for repository browsing (must be available in your PATH). See RedmineRepositories for SCM compatibility and requirements. - RMagick (to enable Gantt export to png image)
- Ruby OpenID Library (to enable OpenID support) [only on Redmine trunk / 0.9-dev] Version 2 or greater is required.
Installation¶
1. Download and extract the archive or checkout Redmine.
2. Create an empty database and accompanying user named redmine
for example.
For MySQL:
create database redmine character set utf8; create user 'redmine'@'localhost' identified by 'my_password'; grant all privileges on redmine.* to 'redmine'@'localhost';
For PostgreSQL:
CREATE ROLE redmine LOGIN ENCRYPTED PASSWORD 'my_password' NOINHERIT VALID UNTIL 'infinity'; CREATE DATABASE redmine WITH ENCODING='UTF8' OWNER=redmine;
3. Copy config/database.yml.example
to config/database.yml
and edit this file in order to configure your database settings for "production" environment.
Example for a MySQL database:
production: adapter: mysql database: redmine host: localhost username: redmine password: my_password
If your server is not running on the standard port (3306), use this configuration instead:
production: adapter: mysql database: redmine host: localhost port: 3307 username: redmine password: my_password
Example for a PostgreSQL database (default port):
production: adapter: postgresql database: <your_database_name> host: <postgres_host> username: <postgres_user> password: <postgres_user_password> encoding: utf8 schema_search_path: <database_schema> (default - public)
4. Generate a session store secret. This is only required on the trunk version of Redmine at r2493 or above. Users installing a released version of 0.8.x can skip this step.
Redmine stores session data in cookies by default, which requires a secret to be generated. This can be done by running:
rake config/initializers/session_store.rb
5. Create the database structure, by running the following command under the application root directory:
RAILS_ENV=production rake db:migrate
It will create tables and an administrator account.
6. Insert default configuration data in database, by running the following command:
RAILS_ENV=production rake redmine:load_default_data
This step is optional but highly recommended, as you can define your own configuration from scratch. It will load default roles, trackers, statuses, workflows and enumerations.
7. Setting up permissions
NB: Windows users have to skip this section.
The user who runs Redmine must have write permission on the following subdirectories: files
, log
, tmp
(create the last one if not present).
Assuming you run Redmine with a redmine
user:
mkdir tmp public/plugin_assets sudo chown -R redmine:redmine files log tmp public/plugin_assets sudo chmod -R 755 files log tmp public/plugin_assets
8. Test the installation by running WEBrick web server:
ruby script/server webrick -e production
Once WEBrick has started, point your browser to http://localhost:3000/. You should now see the application welcome page.
9. Use default administrator account to log in:
- login: admin
- password: admin
You can go to Admin & Settings
to modify application settings.
SMTP server Configuration¶
0.8.x releases¶
Copy config/email.yml.example
to config/email.yml
and edit this file to adjust your SMTP settings.
See the email configuration examples.
0.7.x releases¶
In config/environment.rb, you can set parameters for your SMTP server:
- config.action_mailer.smtp_settings: SMTP server configuration
- config.action_mailer.perform_deliveries: set to false to disable mail delivering
Don't forget to restart the application after any change.
Backups¶
Redmine backups should include:- data (stored in your redmine database)
- attachments (stored in the
files
directory of your Redmine install)
Here is a simple shell script that can be used for daily backups (assuming you're using a mysql database):
# Database /usr/bin/mysqldump -u <username> -p<password> <redmine_database> | gzip > /path/to/backup/db/redmine_`date +%y_%m_%d`.gz # Attachments rsync -a /path/to/redmine/files /path/to/backup/files
Updated by Thanos Kyritsis about 15 years ago · 64 revisions locked