Installing Moodle on Debian based distributions

From MoodleDocs

Installing Moodle as a Debian package

Moodle used to be included as a Debian package. It is not recommended to install using any kind of installer with Moodle. In the long run you will be much better to install manually (or using git) so that the code is original without any alteration.

Installing moodle from .tgz(.tar.gz) or .zip file

Step 1: Install required packages

After installing your Debian distro, install these packages (if you've not already done so). See Installing Apache, MySQL and PHP or refer to the respective user manuals. Using apt-get, aptitude or synaptic you can install these very easily.

  • Web Server (Apache highly recommended)
  • Database Server (MySQL or PostgreSQL recommended)
  • PHP, PHP-MySQL mod (or mod for your database)
  • Various PHP modules necessary for Moodle

LAMP in Debian

Setting up a LAMP in Debian is very easy. Once you get used to Debian administration including installation and configuration are much simpler compared to other linux distros. The following describes how to install apache, php and mysql on the Debian distribution.

For installation of the necessary packages the easiest option to use apt-get through the command line interface. Debian has easy access to a Root Terminal

Use the following command to install apache2, php5 and mysql (Note: Debian is now shipping with MariaDB as default database server - I have included instructions on how to install MySQL community edition instead.) MySQL Server Package install: wget https://dev.mysql.com/get/mysql-apt-config_0.8.6-1_all.deb mysql-apt-config_0.8.6-1_all.deb apt-get install gdebi-core gdebi mysql-apt-config_0.8.6-1_all.deb

Update Repositories: apt-get update

Install LAMP: apt-get install apache2 php7.1 mysql-server php7.1-mysql libapache2-mod-php7.1 php7.1-gd php7.1-curl php7.1-xmlrpc php7.1-intl php7.1-zip php7.1-mbstring

The mentioned packages are installed along with the dependencies depending on what was already installed on your Debian system.

Now you may fire up a browser and type localhost to check whether the apache2 default page is shown,

If you are familiar with apache settings, you can edit the apache configuration files using the text editor gedit or nano by typing:

gedit /etc/apache2/apache2.conf

or

nano /etc/apache2/apache2.conf

However, for a basic install, you should not need to mess with this file.

Now we must make a few changes in the php7.1 configuration file. Open it using

gedit /etc/php/7.1/apache2/php.ini

or

nano /etc/php/7.1/apache2/php.ini

add the entries

extension=mysql.so 
extension=gd.so

Sometimes these entries are provided as example lines being commented out . You can remove the commenting to activate the entries. Then make the following changes (adjust to your preference) This will allocated more memory and allow files to be uploaded up to 80MB. This should be enough for most multi-media files. Hard drive space is cheap and the default is only 2MB. It is recommended that you change the settings to the following values:

memory_limit = 40M
post_max_size = 80M
upload_max_filesize = 80M

To test the php installation, you can create a text file named phpinfo.php with the contents <?phpinfo()?> and save it at /var/www. Restart apache with the command below. Now access this file through the browser localhost/phpinfo to check the installation of php.

You can restart apache 2 by

/etc/init.d/apache2 restart

or service apache2 restart

Step 2: Setup MySQL Database

Set a secure root password for the database (you might have already done this in the initial install process)

mysqladmin -u root password "mySecurePassword"

Note that on a secure production server, you will want to create a different user than root to access the database.

Now log in

mysql -u root -p

Enter your password

Create the Moodle database

mysql> CREATE DATABASE moodle CHARACTER SET utf8mb4 COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci;

(this should set the database up correctly to work with Moodle)

Then exit the database

mysql> exit;

You can restart mysql by

/etc/init.d/mysql restart

Step 3: Download moodle

Download moodle from http://download.moodle.org/?lang=en.

Step 4: Unpack file

  • For zip file, use unzip <your_file>. For tgz(tar.gz), use tar -zxvf <your-file>. You can also use any of the GUI front-ends such as file-roller or ark or just let Debian unzip it with Archive Manager. You will get a folder moodle (or moodle-2.8.1 or something similar). It will probably be located in your Downloads folder unless you told the Archive Manager or the Download utility to save it somewhere else. We will presume it is in your Download folder.

From terminal type

cd /home/YourUSERNAME/Downloads
mv moodle /var/www

You can also copy instead of moving it in case you want a backup of the code on your machine.

cp -R moodle /var/www

You will probably need to do this as root (no problem if you are using the Root Terminal!)

Step 5: Create a data directory and set Moodle directory permissions

Switch to the correct directory

cd /var/www

Create a directory for user and course files

mkdir moodledata

Set ownership and permissions so that Apache can access the files

chown -R www-data:www-data moodle
chown -R www-data:www-data moodledata


chmod -R 755 moodle


chmod -R 755 moodledata

On a production server, you may want to tighten up privileges.

Step 6: Change Apache to use Moodle as the web site

Note that the server comes with Apache running and looking at the /var/www directory. But there is nothing in that folder, so one just gets a redirect. Edit as follows to have it point at Moodle instead:

gedit /etc/apache2/sites-available/default or

nano /etc/apache2/sites-available/default

On about line 4, change DocumentRoot "/var/www/html" to

DocumentRoot "/var/www/moodle"

On about line 10, change <Directory "/var/www/html/"> to

<Directory "/var/www/moodle/">

Around line 17, comment out the line for the default page:

# RedirectMatch ^/$ /apache2-default/

You can change other values like ServerAdmin if appropriate. For all changes, you should restart Apache for the new settings to take effect.

/etc/init.d/apache2 restart

Step 7: Finally install


Step 8: Setup Moodle

If you are only going to test Moodle on your internal network, just enter the local IP address as the web address. You can find the local IP address under DHCP by typing

ifconfig eth0


If you have a web address that points to your server, use that instead.

From a browser on another machine, enter

http:// ----- your web address -----
  • For the database user, enter root
  • For Password, enter the password for the database that you created earlier

Continue through the dialogs until installed.

Install cron

Moodle needs a periodic call to do maintenance work like sending out emails, cleaning up the database, updating feeds, etc. To run the cron every 10 minutes, do the following

crontab -u www-data -e

Add this line and save.

*/10 * * * * /usr/bin/php /var/www/moodle/admin/cli/cron.php  >/dev/null


Use CNTL-X to save