This is an Ansible playbook for provisioning an instance of Islandora. This repository can be used with Vagrant, or for deploying to a remote server.
As of tag 2.0.0, deployment is done in two stages:
- with
islandora_build_base_box=true
('ISLANDORA_BUILD_BASE=true' in Vagrant), to install environment components that change infrequently, and - with
islandora_build_base_box=false
('ISLANDORA_BUILD_BASE=false' [default] in Vagrant), to install and configure the Islandora software.
The base box can be stored, to save time on subsequent builds (e.g. for creating dev or testing environments).
For usage instructions, including Vagrant and remote server deployment, see Islandora Playbook in the Islandora Documentation.
For an alternative installation using Docker, please see ISLE.
With Vagrant (each of these steps may take several minutes!):
ISLANDORA_BUILD_BASE=true vagrant up # Create the base box on a bare Ubuntu.
vagrant package --output islandora_base # Shut down the VM and save it as a file, islandora_base, which is created in this directory.
vagrant destroy # You will be prompted to enter 'y' to destroy this VM
vagrant up # It will show it is importing the islandora_base base box, then will provision Islandora.
Detailed installation and usage instructions can be found on the official installation documentation for Islandora.
These Vagrant variables (in all caps) are read from the environment, so if you set them as Unix shell variables they will override the defaults defined in the Vagrantfile.
If ISLANDORA_BUILD_BASE
is true
, then the playbook will download a standard Vagrant base box of the ISLANDORA_DISTRO
and partly provision it, creating a virtual machine that can be saved as an islandora base box.
If ISLANDORA_BUILD_BASE
is false
(default), then the playbook will use an existing islandora base box and provision the islandora software.
This corresponds to the islandora_build_base_box
Ansible variable.
ISLANDORA_DISTRO
defaults to ubuntu/focal64
(20.04 LTS), which is currently the only working distribution.
This corresponds to the islandora_distro
Ansible variable.
ISLANDORA_INSTALL_PROFILE
can be one of:
starter
: Installs using theislandora/islandora-starter-site
project as a template, intended for spinning up sites for general usage.starter_dev
: Similar tostarter
, installs based on theislandora/islandora-starter-site
project; however, performs a clone of the repository with its history, intended specifically for development of the starter site.demo
: Installs the demo based on the install profile developed by Born Digital. This has a custom theme and more out-of-the-box customizations.
This corresponds to the islandora_profile
Ansible variable.
By default the virtual machine that is built uses 4GB of RAM. Your host machine will need to be able to support the additional memory use. You can override the CPU and RAM allocation by creating ISLANDORA_VAGRANT_CPUS
and ISLANDORA_VAGRANT_MEMORY
environment variables and setting the values. For example, on an Ubuntu host you could add to ~/.bashrc
:
export ISLANDORA_VAGRANT_CPUS=4
export ISLANDORA_VAGRANT_MEMORY=5040
You can connect to the machine via the browser at http://localhost:8000.
The default Drupal login details are:
- username: admin
- password: islandora
- username: drupal8
- password: islandora
The Fedora 6 REST API can be accessed at http://localhost:8080/fcrepo/rest.
Authentication is done via Syn using JWT tokens.
You can access the Solr administration UI at http://localhost:8983/solr/
You can connect to the machine via ssh:
vagrant ssh
You can access the ActiveMQ administrative interface at: http://localhost:8161/admin
- username: admin
- password: admin
You can access the Cantaloupe admin interface at: http://localhost:8080/cantaloupe/admin
- username: admin
- password: islandora
You can access the IIIF endpoint at: http://localhost:8080/cantaloupe/iiif/2/
Islandora uses JWT for authentication across the stack. Crayfish microservices, Fedora, and Drupal all use them.
Crayfish and Fedora have been set up to use a default token of islandora
to make testing easier. To use it, just set
the following header in HTTP requests:
Authorization: Bearer islandora
You can access the BlazeGraph interface at: http://localhost:8080/bigdata/
You have to select the 'islandora' namespace in the namespaces tab before you can execute queries.
You can access the FITS Web Service at http://localhost:8080/fits/
The Playbook installs an instance of the Matomo web analytics platform. You can access your instance at: http://localhost:8000/matomo
- username: admin
- password: islandora
The new architecture of the Apple silicon chips (M1, M2) is incompatible with VirtualBox, so the newest Macs cannot be used with the Vagrant method. However, they can still deploy the playbook to remote VMs, or use Docker (ISLE).
VirtualBox has not been updated to work fully with macOS Monterey as of October, 2021. A workaround exists, which is to run VirtualBox in non-headless mode.
In your Vagrantfile, add the line v.gui = true
to the configuration section near the top:
Vagrant.configure(VAGRANTFILE_API_VERSION) do |config|
config.vm.provider "virtualbox" do |v|
v.name = "Islandora 8 Ansible"
v.gui = true
end
Discussion of this issue can be found on this issue in Vagrant's GitHub project.
The playbook is in maintenance mode as new development is focused on ISLE for development and production.