/hgv-deploy-full

This Ansible Playbook is designed to setup a Mercury-Like environment on a Production server without the configuration hassle.

Primary LanguagePHP

WARNING: DEPRECATED

Unfortunately I don't have the time to upkeep this project or provide updates for issues. I'd recommend using Carl Alexander's DebOps for WordPress project which does the same thing as this project. You can find it here:

https://github.com/carlalexander/debops-wordpress

Mercury Vagrant (HGV) Deployment Playbook

Click here for the basic version

Introduction

This Ansible Playbook is designed to setup a Mercury-Like environment on a Production server without the configuration hassle. This playbook was forked from WPEngine's Mercury Vagrant. It includes the ability to install multiple hostnames and installs of WordPress on one server super easily.

Note: Remember not to run weird scripts on your server as root without reviewing them first. Please review this playbook to ensure I'm not installing malicious software.

This Playbook will setup:

  • Percona DB (MySQL) (Looking for MariaDB? Try this)
  • HHVM (Default PHP Parser)
  • PHP-FPM (Backup PHP Parser)
  • Nginx
  • Varnish (Running by default)
  • Memcached and APC
  • Clean WordPress Install (Latest Version)
  • WP-CLI

This playbook will only run on Ubuntu 14.04 LTS

Installation

  1. SSH onto a newly created server 1.5. Add necessary Apt package (if not already installed) with sudo apt-get install software-properties-common
  2. Add Ansible with sudo add-apt-repository ppa:ansible/ansible
  3. Update Apt with sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get upgrade
  4. Install Git and Ansible with sudo apt-get install ansible git
  5. Clone this repository with git clone https://github.com/zach-adams/hgv-deploy-full/
  6. Move into hgv-deploy-full
  7. Edit the hosts file and change yourhostname.com to your host name. If you have more than one website that you want to install on this server add each on a new line.
  8. Edit the name of yourhostname.com file in the host_vars folder to your hostname. If you have more than one website that you want to install on this server copy the current one and name it the hostname of the website.
  9. Change your sites specific information including passwords inside the hostname file inside the host_vars directory
  10. Run Ansible with sudo ansible-playbook -i hosts playbook.yml -c local. If you have any errors please open a new issue in this repository.
  11. Remove the cloned git directory from your server with rm -rf hgv-deploy-full/
  12. Run /usr/bin/mysql_secure_installation to install MySQL and secure it. Your root password will be blank by default
  13. Restart Varnish and Nginx with: sudo service varnish restart && sudo service nginx restart
  14. You're good to go! A new WordPress install running HHVM and Varnish should be waiting for you at your hostname/s!

Installing a New Website/Hostname

This only works on sites that were installed using the method above. Always backup your server before running code that could break it.

  1. Backup your server
  2. Follow steps 1-6 above
  3. When you come to your hosts file follow the same steps however do not include any previous installations of WordPress or hostnames, only list the new ones you want.
  4. Likewise with your host_var folder
  5. Follow steps 9-12 and if you run into any issues or errors post them in this repository!

Turning off Varnish (Use only Nginx)

If you are having issues making changes or having issues with the backend while using Varnish, you can turn it off and just use Nginx while maintaining good performance. Here's how you can do that:

  1. Open each of the Nginx configurations of the sites installed on your server with sudo nano /etc/nginx/sites-available/your-hostname.com
  2. Change listen = 8080; to listen = 80;
  3. Make sure you do this to all sites installed on your server
  4. Stop Varnish and Restart Nginx with sudo service varnish stop && sudo service nginx restart
  5. You should be good to go! If you do not have a caching plugin installed I would highly recommend one.

Switching HHVM back to PHP-FPM

Your Nginx configuration should automatically facilitate switching to PHP-FPM if there's an issue with HHVM, however if you want to switch back manually you can do so like this:

  1. Open your Nginx configuration with vim|emacs|nano /etc/nginx/sites-available/( Your Hostname )
  2. Find the following section towards the bottom:
    location ~ \.php$ {
        proxy_intercept_errors on;
        error_page 500 501 502 503 = @fallback;
        fastcgi_buffers 8 256k;
        fastcgi_buffer_size 128k;
        fastcgi_intercept_errors on;
        include fastcgi_params;
        fastcgi_param SCRIPT_FILENAME $document_root$fastcgi_script_name;
        fastcgi_pass hhvm;
    }
  1. Change fastcgi_pass hhvm; to fastcgi_pass php;
  2. Restart Nginx with sudo service nginx restart
  3. You should now be running PHP-FPM! Check to make sure using phpinfo();

Issues

Please report any issues through GitHub or email me at zach@zach-adams.com and I'll do my best to get back to you!