[HOWTO] Install phpMyAdmin in CentOS 5
14
September 25th, 2010
- Tagged mysql, phpmyadmin, rpmforge, yum
I am using CentOS 5 in one of my Virtual Servers and I wanted it to have
phpMyAdmin. I tried installing it by doing yum install phpmyadmin but it said No
package phpmyadmin available. So I add to add a repo. I discovered that rpmforge
repo had this package. To add it, I executed the [...]
I am using CentOS 5 in one of my Virtual Servers and I wanted it to have
phpMyAdmin. I tried installing it by doing yum install phpmyadmin but it said No
package phpmyadmin available. So I add to add a repo. I discovered that rpmforge repo had this package. To add it, I executed the
following commands:
wget http://packages.sw.be/rpmforge-release/rpmforge-release-0.5.1-1.el5.rf.i386.rpm rpm -Uhv rpmforge-release-0.5.1-1.el5.rf.i386.rpm
If you have 64-bit version installed, you should try this one out:
wget http://packages.sw.be/rpmforge-release/rpmforge-release-0.5.1-1.el5.rf.x86_64.rpm rpm -Uhv rpmforge-release-0.5.1-1.el5.rf.x86_64.rpm
If you get a 404 Not Found, then you will need to figure out the latest
updated version of repo url from rpmforge
usage page.
After that, you may like to update your packages by doing this:
yum update
and then continue installing phpmyadmin
yum install phpmyadmin
It should ask you for confirmation and you can continue installing
phpMyAdmin with dependencies.
When installation is done, you can edit /etc/httpd/conf.d/phpmyadmin.conf
and allow it to be opened from anywhere and not just the same computer. You are
going to need this if you have installed it in a remote virtual server.
To do so, open up /etc/httpd/conf.d/phpmyadmin.conf using:
To do so, open up /etc/httpd/conf.d/phpmyadmin.conf using:
nano /etc/httpd/conf.d/phpmyadmin.conf
You will see:
<Directory "/usr/share/phpmyadmin"> Order Deny,Allow Deny from all Allow from 127.0.0.1 </Directory>
Just change the line “Allow from 127.0.0.1″ to “Allow from [yourip]“, where
[yourip] is IP address of your computer if you have public static IP. Otherwise,
you can also set it to “Allow from all”.
Press Ctrl+O followed by Enter to save and Ctrl+X to exit nano.
Press Ctrl+O followed by Enter to save and Ctrl+X to exit nano.
Now, you must restart apache. To do so, run
service httpd restart
Now, you can access phpMyAdmin by visiting
http://vps_server_IP_or_domain/phpmyadmin. But you will get the following
error:
Error
The configuration file now needs a secret passphrase (blowfish_secret).
To make it work, you will need to edit config.inc.php. To do so, type
in:
nano /usr/share/phpmyadmin/config.inc.php
Find a line saying:
$cfg['blowfish_secret'] = ''; /* YOU MUST FILL IN THIS FOR COOKIE AUTH! */
Fill in any secret keyword there, eg mysecretpassphrase, so that it looks
like:
$cfg['blowfish_secret'] = 'mysecretpassphrase'; /* YOU MUST FILL IN THIS FOR COOKIE AUTH! */
and then save it.
If you don’t have mysql server installed, you will get the following
error:
Error
#2002 – The server is not responding (or the local MySQL server’s socket is not correctly configured)
To install mysql-server, just run:
yum install mysql-server
and then start it:
service mysqld start
Then change the root password:
mysqladmin -u root password PASSWORD_HERE
Now, you will have to remove phpmyadmin:
yum remove phpmyadmin
and reinstall it again:
yum install phpmyadmin
Then you will need to edit the config.inc.php again to enter blowfish
secret (see above). Then, you can login.
If however, you want phpMyAdmin to connect to a remote server, you can
change the line by replacing localhost with your server IP:
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['host'] = 'localhost';
Hope this helps.