Amahi 8 Install
Contents
NOTES:
- The only officially supported install media is Fedora 21 Server.
- Ensure your system meets the minimum hardware requirements for Amahi before proceeding.
- 32-bit installs are not available nor supported in Amahi 8.
- You must install Fedora 21 Server prior to installing Amahi 8.
For assistance, visit the Amahi Forums or live support on the Amahi IRC channel.
Install Fedora 21
There are two ways to install Fedora: Minimal (CD), so-called Netinstall, which is recommended, and the Full (DVD) install for cases that need more hardware support.
Minimal (CD) Install
We recommend this method for a quick download and fast installation.
Download the Fedora 21 Netinstall CD for 64 bit (424MB).
- Primary: Fedora 21 Netinstall 64-bit (http)
- Alternate: Fedora 21 Netinstall 64-bit (http)
Burn the ISO to CD (or DVD), insert the DVD into your server, reboot the system, and follow the Fedora 21 Minimal Install instructions.
Full (DVD) Install
This is only recommended for cases where the Minimal install does not work well (e.g. if your hardware needs extra drivers).
Download the Fedora 21 Server DVD for 64 bit (1.91GB), preferably using torrents
- Torrents:
- Primary: Fedora 21 Server 64-bit (torrent)
- Alternate: Fedora 21 Server 64-bit (torrent)
- Direct http download:
- Primary: Fedora 21 Server 64-bit (http)
- Alternate: Fedora 21 Server 64-bit (http)
Burn the ISO to DVD, insert the DVD into your server, reboot the system, and follow the Fedora 21 Server Install instructions.
USB Install
You may follow the USB Install guidance for USB installs using one of the ISO images above if needed.
Install Amahi 8
Next, install Amahi 8 proper on top of Fedora 21.
You need to obtain an install code (denoted YOUR-INSTALL-CODE below) from the Amahi control panel after configuring a profile for the system you are installing, with proper network configuration for your network.
From text console or using SSH, login with the user created in the Fedora 21 installation and become root for the Amahi installation
sudo su -
After that, type these commands in the console:
rpm -Uvh http://f21.amahi.org/noarch/hda-release-6.9.0-1.noarch.rpm yum -y install mariadb-libs mariadb-server yum -y install hda-ctl hda-platform hda-install YOUR-INSTALL-CODE
What this does is this: Installs the Amahi F21 repo, gets the mariadb base packages to avoid dependency conflicts, and installs base Amahi packages (that part should install several packages).
If there are no errors, install Amahi (replace YOUR-INSTALL-CODE above with install code you got when creating a profile at your Amahi control panel).
If all goes well, it should tell you to reboot. Go ahead and reboot!
Once it comes back from the reboot, you should have a fully functional home server using the IP address you set up in your network!
Next you need to transition your network to use it!
Transitioning to using your Amahi server
Once installed, you will want to transition your network to using your Amahi server. Here are some of the things you should know:
- Your server will boot with the static IP you pre-configured in the Amahi control panel
- You can verify if the dashboard is available by accessing from any client using the IP address of your server http://IPADDRESS/ or http://hda/ (in most Windows clients this works even without DNS from your HDA)
- For best results, it's recommended that you turn off the previous DHCP server and let Amahi handle DHCP so that DNS falls into place automatically. If not, then you must turn off the HDA DHCP server.
- Reboot all clients (or turn off network and turn back on) to get them to use DHCP leases from your Amahi server
- The first time it will initialize, ask you to login, and enter a dashboard password for the admin user created earlier
- Once you reach your dashboard, you should create shares as needed, add more drives, install apps, etc., etc.
- Optionally refer to Greyhole to install/configure storage pooling.
Troubleshooting
Visit the troubleshooting page if you find yourself in trouble.
Go back to the Amahi 8 page.