Running Drupal 7.7 On Nginx (LEMP) On Debian Squeeze/Ubuntu 11.04
Running Drupal 7.7 On Nginx (LEMP) On Debian Squeeze/Ubuntu 11.04Version 1.0 This tutorial shows how you can install and run a Drupal 7.7 web site on a Debian Squeeze or Ubuntu 11.04 system that has nginx installed instead of Apache (LEMP = Linux + nginx (pronounced "engine x") + MySQL + PHP). In addition to that I will also show you how you can use the Drupal Boost plugin with nginx. nginx is a HTTP server that uses much less resources than Apache and delivers pages a lot of faster, especially static files. I do not issue any guarantee that this will work for you!
1 Preliminary NoteI want to install Drupal in a vhost called www.example.com/example.com here with the document root /var/www/www.example.com/web. You should have a working LEMP installation, as shown in these tutorials:
A note for Ubuntu users: Because we must run all the steps from this tutorial with root privileges, we can either prepend all commands in this tutorial with the string sudo, or we become root right now by typing sudo su
2 Installing APCAPC is a free and open PHP opcode cacher for caching and optimizing PHP intermediate code. It's similar to other PHP opcode cachers, such as eAccelerator and XCache. It is strongly recommended to have one of these installed to speed up your PHP page. APC can be installed as follows: apt-get install php-apc If you use PHP-FPM as your FastCGI daemon (like in Installing Nginx With PHP5 (And PHP-FPM) And MySQL Support On Ubuntu 11.04), restart it as follows: /etc/init.d/php5-fpm restart If you use lighttpd's spawn-fcgi program as your FastCGI daemon (like in Installing Nginx With PHP5 And MySQL Support On Debian Squeeze), we must kill the current spawn-fcgi process (running on port 9000) and create a new one. Run netstat -tap to find out the PID of the current spawn-fcgi process: root@server1:~# netstat -tap In the above output, the PID is 1542, so we can kill the current process as follows: kill -9 1542 Afterwards we create a new spawn-fcgi process: /usr/bin/spawn-fcgi -a 127.0.0.1 -p 9000 -u www-data -g www-data -f /usr/bin/php5-cgi -P /var/run/fastcgi-php.pid
3 Installing DrupalThe document root of my www.example.com web site is /var/www/www.example.com/web - if it doesn't exist, create it as follows: mkdir -p /var/www/www.example.com/web Next we download Drupal from http://ftp.drupal.org/files/projects/drupal-7.7.tar.gz and place it in our document root: cd /tmp It is recommended to make the document root and the Drupal files in it writable by the nginx daemon which is running as user www-data and group www-data: chown -R www-data:www-data /var/www/www.example.com/web If you haven't already created a MySQL database for Drupal (including a MySQL Drupal user), you can do that as follows (I name the database drupal in this example, and the user is called drupal_admin, and his password is drupal_admin_password): mysqladmin -u root -p create drupal mysql -u root -p GRANT SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, CREATE, DROP, INDEX, ALTER ON drupal.* TO 'drupal_admin'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'drupal_admin_password'; FLUSH PRIVILEGES; quit; Next we create an nginx vhost configuration for our www.example.com vhost in the /etc/nginx/sites-available/ directory as follows: vi /etc/nginx/sites-available/www.example.com.vhost
To enable that vhost, we create a symlink to it from the /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/ directory: cd /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/ Reload nginx for the changes to take effect: /etc/init.d/nginx reload
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