Describes production proven Bonsai Framework approach to setup of a Ubuntu server.
Bash script version is also maintained for quick setup.
To follow through these tutorials you should have basic understanding of networks and know how to edit files on Ubuntu through terminal or sftp.
For security reasons may want to replace the account names in this tutorial especially setupadmin with something else of your choosing. |
If you are working for a large organization, it is recommended to use the LTS (Long Term Support) version,
https://www.ubuntu.com/download/server
Before paying for hosting, practice on your desktop using virtualization technology. If you have minimal needs, you might want to host from home.
When using a hosting company, currently KVM based solutions the most cost effective where 1GB of RAM is required. See the Bonsai Framework discussion on Hosting for further details.
Cloud
You may also consider using Cloud with instructions here,
If you are installing Ubuntu from scratch within a Virtual environment Ubuntu has a special Virtual option to optimize performance.
These instructions are currently written and then updated for Ubuntu 12.10, 13.x, 14.04.2 (April 2015), 16.04.1 (Oct 2016) You may use these instructions for other versions, but there may be slight differences in the order of events. |
With most Virtual Server Hosting solutions you will be asked to select a virtual server image operating system which is then built as defined by the hosting provider. Some providers also allow you to install from a linked iso image which provides the most fined grained control and security.
Some hosting providers modify the Ubuntu Setup or only let you load a pre-configured image. In that case they are just asking for credentials. With older hosting provider they may ask for a root password. Make sure to select a VERY complex password for the root account. It might be a little annoying, but as you walk through the article you will find that we actually stop using root altogether. Modern Cloud servers like Microsoft Azure will create a default user account or provide option to provide your public ssh keys. For now choose password. SSH keys with how to load them into your OS will be covered later. |
In this example, the server is a virtual machine provided by a hosting company and the following attributes,
Server Name - tinman
Memory - 1024 MB
Disk Space - 40 GB
Our current preferred Virtual Server Hosting solution is vServer Center which also allows users to install Ubuntu from scratch. See the Bonsai Framework discussion on Hosting for further details. |
The very first thing to do is to log into the server. There are two main types of login, remote and console.
With a remote login, you are not physically at the machine. This is often accomplished using SSH. By default following these instructions SSH login will not be enabled.
With a console login, you are for all intents and purposes physically at the server. Most hosted solution provide a web based interface to simulate this type of behaviour.
If your system is on the Internet and you only have SSH login with a user name and password, make sure it is strong. Your password can be broken in within minutes. |
The ntp daemon calculates the drift of your system clock and continuously adjusts it.
Determine the systems current timezone,
date # determine current timezone |
If you did a fresh setup, you should have the correct time zone and you can skip this step. If your timezone is incorrect, change it,
sudo dpkg-reconfigure tzdata # sets the timezone |
Before proceeding to below instructions, please do an update on ubuntu setup
sudo apt-get update # updates your basic installation |
Install the ntp daemon,
sudo apt-get install ntp |
If you do not want to spare the processing power and memory, consider using other approaches documented by the Ubuntu Community or the traditional cron approach. |
If you used a hosting company like Slice or Rackspace chances are the server image provided is minimal with no locale set. This will cause problems with Perl (used to install quite a few things) and in my case, it caused me head-aches setting up PostgreSQL.
locale # Look at your current locale. LANG=en_CA.UTF-8 LC_CTYPE="en_CA.UTF-8" LC_NUMERIC="en_CA.UTF-8" LC_TIME="en_CA.UTF-8" LC_COLLATE="en_CA.UTF-8" LC_MONETARY="en_CA.UTF-8" LC_MESSAGES="en_CA.UTF-8" LC_PAPER="en_CA.UTF-8" LC_NAME="en_CA.UTF-8" LC_ADDRESS="en_CA.UTF-8" LC_TELEPHONE="en_CA.UTF-8" LC_MEASUREMENT="en_CA.UTF-8" LC_IDENTIFICATION="en_CA.UTF-8" LC_ALL= setupadmin@tinman:~$ |
If the results show an error or the locale is not set up for UTF-8 as shown above, then run the following commands,
If you are not from Canada, you can choose another language, just make sure to use UTF-8.
If you changed the locale, log off and then back on. Finally, verify the locale changes took effect,
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As of Ubuntu 8.10 it this has been simplified. We used to have to edit the sources.list to point your server to the universe and multi verse repository in order to install more popular packages. Now, even the minimal Server install already has what you need. So we can go straight to updating the indexes,
sudo apt-get update |
If you are behind a proxy you may run into a problem with how the proxy is caching. To resolve the GPG errors follow my instructions on resolving proxy caching issues with Ubuntu Updates.
Next perform a dist-upgrade.
sudo apt-get dist-upgrade # upgrade to the newest kernel |
Once you have applications and software running and stable, it is advisable to only perform incremental upgrades and judiciously perform dist-upgrades as appropriate.
During the update, all the update installers are downloaded to your system and kept there for future reference in case you need to re-install. With fast connections, this is not necessary. Clean up,
sudo apt-get autoclean # use this if you only want to clean out nolonger used packages sudo apt-get clean # clean out all downloaded packages - I usually use this one sudo apt-get autoremove # cleans out unused packages |
Read Upgrading Ubuntu Packages for more in depth details. |
Since this is still a fresh system, restart the system,
sudo reboot |
Continue to Ubuntu Firewall Software.