Installing EPrints 3 on Debian
Download an appropriate EPrints Release
Contents
Setting up Debain
This instructions assume a working Debian ("Edgy Eft") installation (or close approximation thereof).
Install EPrints Dependencies
Install Apache and mod_perl:
root@debian$ apt-get install apach2-mpm-prefork libapache2-mod-perl2
Install MySQL:
root@debian$ apt-get install install mysql-server
Install perl dependencies:
root@debian$ apt-get install libxml-libxml-perl libunicode-string-perl \ libterm-readkey-perl libmime-lite-perl libdbd-mysql-perl libxml-parser-perl.
Auxiliary Packages
You need further packages for the seamless work of Eprints; these might or might not be installed on the system:
Packages for building eprints:
root@debian$ apt-get install gzip tar unzip make lynx wget ncftp ftp
Programs for extracting content:
root@debian$ apt-get install gs xpdf xv antiword elinks
Programs making pictures, formulas, etc.
root@debian$ apt-get install pdftk tetex-bin psutils imagemagick
Configuring MySQL
It is strongly recommended that you set a root password in mysql:
$ mysqladmin -u root password <new password>
Create an 'eprints' system user
root@debain$ adduser --system --home /opt/eprints3 --group eprints
Add the 'www-data' user to the 'eprints' group:
root@debain$ adduser www-data eprints
Install EPrints
Download EPrints 3. Unpack and install the tarball:
$ tar xzvf eprints-3.x.y.tar.gz $ cd eprints-3.x.y $ ./configure --with-smtp-server=smtp.yourdomain $ sudo ./install.pl
Set up Apache2
Add this line to /etc/apache2/sites-available/eprints
Include /opt/eprints3/cfg/apache.conf
and enable the site
$ sudo a2ensite eprints
(this leaves /etc/apache2/apache.conf untouched, making future Apache upgrades easier)
Set up the indexer as a service
$ sudo ln -s /opt/eprints3/bin/epindexer /etc/init.d/epindexer
Make the indexer start automatically when the machine is rebooted:
$ sudo update-rc.d epindexer defaults 99 99
Configure an archive
Follow the steps in the main EPrints documentation to configure an archive.
Restarting Apache
$ sudo /etc/init.d/apache2 force-reload