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Owncloud cli cheatsheet » History » Revision 3

Revision 2 (Jessie Lee, 03/16/2016 01:35 PM) → Revision 3/14 (Jessie Lee, 03/16/2016 01:47 PM)

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 h1. Owncloud cli cheatsheet 

 h2. Architecture  

 * Owncloud by default is installed to /var/www/owncloud 
 * The apache conf file is in /etc/apache2/conf-available/owncloud.conf 
 ** by default this redirects any http[s[://[url]/owncloud to the owncloud directory 
 ** I often change this to redirect / to owncloud if on subdomain or office fileserver 
 * owncloud config file is in /var/www/owncloud/config/config.php 
 ** note: if setting changes in the config file do not take, check the permissions for this file 
 * the owncloud directory also has a detailed .htaccess file that is vital to the security of owncloud 
 * The data directory can be found in the config file and is also the location of the owncloud.log file 
 ** the data directory can and at office servers is often supplemented or replaced by local storage or SMB 
 * the backend database is mysql which is used by default for everything. 
 ** some larger installs (ex. NDWA) use redis instead of mysql for file locking.  
 * caching is performed by memcached or redis 

 h2. OCC 

 Occ is the cli command tool for owncloud. Through this tool most user/file/maintenance operations can be performed.  
 detailed instructions can be found here https://doc.owncloud.org/server/9.0/admin_manual/configuration_server/occ_command.html 

 key notes/favorite commands:  

 * Occ must be run as the www-data user!  
 ** 8.0+ should no longer even allow running as root but if that happens there might be a permission mess to deal with! 
 ** always use sudo -u www-data php occ (I have aliased this to occ) 
 * occ upgrade is needed for any major or minor release of owncloud! 
 ** this will do a database upgrade test and then perform the upgrade 
 ** for larger installs, this could take some time so only perform this during off hours.  
 * occ maintenance:mode --off/--on this will gracefully close connections and turn on maintenance mode (or off) 
 * occ file:scan [user] this will rescan the file cache for [user] or --all for all 
 ** this doesn't work for samba shares with OC login credentials as OC has no easy capacity for caching credentials for this purpose. (currently being worked on) 
 *  
 


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