Report post You have 30 minutes to complete this form before the CAPTCHA will expire. Security image * Required field JavaScript is required to view this page. Either you do not have JavaScript enabled in your web browser, you do not have cookies enabled in your web browser, or this website is misconfigured such that cookies do not save correctly. This is a reported post for a post in the topic <input class="cms_keep_ui_controlled" size="45" title="[post param="Install ONLYOFFICE on a Nextcloud Server"]375[/post]" type="button" value="post Comcode tag (dbl-click to edit/delete)" />, by jblake<br /><br /><comcode-quote param="257">Thanks Jacob! This is a very thorough and excellent tutorial! This is a game changer and I just totally dropped Google office today.<br /><br />I’ve been a long time Nextcloud user and previously Owncloud. I have a Intel Nuc running Ubuntu 18.04 with version 16.08 Nextcloud.<br /><br />For those using Ubuntu instead of Debian, I thought that I would post a few tips showing the differences:<br /><br />STEP 0: This may be obvious to most, but all these steps must be run as superuser. To help you NOOBS out there, run this command first to be a superuser: sudo su –<br /><br />STEP 3: No need to change this command even though it points to a Debian release of OnlyOffice. The correct version is automatically downloaded from the Ubuntu repository.<br /><br />STEP 7: The install does not fail as noted in the video. The Ubuntu version does not show errors. However, still proceed to step 8.<br /><br />STEP 8: The file is not in the “sites-enabled” directory. It can be found in the “sites-available” directory. Do not move the file. I moved the file and then completed the install. Everything worked until I powered down my server and restarted. Nginx did not restart since the file was not in the expected location. It took me a while to figure out why Nginx didn’t start. So keep the file in its original directlory. The new command is:<br /><br />nano /etc/nginx/sites-available/default<br /><br />I still ran the command “dpkg –configure –a”,but since step 7 didn’t fail, the command seems unnecessary.<br /><br />STEP 9: My version of Nextcloud had a different conf file name so the command is slightly different:<br /><br />cp /etc/apache2/sites-available/000-default.conf /etc/apache2/sites-available/onlyoffice.conf<br /><br />Step 11: The spellchecker works fine for the Ubuntu version. You can skip this step.<br /><br />Et Voila! You’re finished.<br /><br />Also, don’t forget to update your DDclient.conf file to update your new subdomain IP address for only office. Otherwise, if your ISP changes your IP address, your OnlyOffice subdomain will not be available.<br /><br /></comcode-quote><br />//// PUT YOUR REPORT BELOW \\\\<br /><br /> Add: Add: Font Size Color [Font] Arial Courier Georgia Impact Times Trebuchet Verdana Tahoma Geneva Helvetica [Size] 0.8 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 4 [Color] Black Blue Gray Green Orange Purple Red White Yellow This is a reported post for a post in the topic [post param="Install ONLYOFFICE on a Nextcloud Server"]375[/post], by jblake [quote="257"] Thanks Jacob! This is a very thorough and excellent tutorial! This is a game changer and I just totally dropped Google office today. I’ve been a long time Nextcloud user and previously Owncloud. I have a Intel Nuc running Ubuntu 18.04 with version 16.08 Nextcloud. For those using Ubuntu instead of Debian, I thought that I would post a few tips showing the differences: STEP 0: This may be obvious to most, but all these steps must be run as superuser. To help you NOOBS out there, run this command first to be a superuser: sudo su – STEP 3: No need to change this command even though it points to a Debian release of OnlyOffice. The correct version is automatically downloaded from the Ubuntu repository. STEP 7: The install does not fail as noted in the video. The Ubuntu version does not show errors. However, still proceed to step 8. STEP 8: The file is not in the “sites-enabled” directory. It can be found in the “sites-available” directory. Do not move the file. I moved the file and then completed the install. Everything worked until I powered down my server and restarted. Nginx did not restart since the file was not in the expected location. It took me a while to figure out why Nginx didn’t start. So keep the file in its original directlory. The new command is: nano /etc/nginx/sites-available/default I still ran the command “dpkg --configure –a”,but since step 7 didn’t fail, the command seems unnecessary. STEP 9: My version of Nextcloud had a different conf file name so the command is slightly different: cp /etc/apache2/sites-available/000-default.conf /etc/apache2/sites-available/onlyoffice.conf Step 11: The spellchecker works fine for the Ubuntu version. You can skip this step. Et Voila! You’re finished. Also, don’t forget to update your DDclient.conf file to update your new subdomain IP address for only office. Otherwise, if your ISP changes your IP address, your OnlyOffice subdomain will not be available. [/quote] //// PUT YOUR REPORT BELOW \\\\ View all Use of this website implies that you agree to the website rules and privacy policy. Statistics Forum statistics: 141 topics, 610 posts, 603 members Our newest member is Sophiathebest178 Birthdays: ameer21zeth (42)