ols1clk is a one-click installation script for OpenLiteSpeed. Using this script, you can quickly and easily install OpenLiteSpeed with it’s default settings. We also provide a -W parameter that will install WordPress at the same time but it must still be configured through the wp-config.php page. By default, a MariaDB database will be set up using this script, you can also specify other DB if needed. If you already have a WordPress installation running on another server, it can be imported into OpenLiteSpeed with no hassle using the --wordpresspath parameter. To completely install WordPress with your OpenLiteSpeed installation, skipping the need for the wp-config.php page, use the --wordpressplus flag. This can be used with --wpuser, --wppassword, --wplang, and --sitetitle to configure each of the settings normally set by wp-config.php.
Our One-Click script comes with several options. Here are two commmon usages.
Install OpenLiteSpeed, LSPHP, MariaDB, WordPress, and LiteSpeed Cache plugin:
bash <( curl -k https://raw.githubusercontent.com/litespeedtech/ols1clk/master/ols1clk.sh ) -w
Install OpenLiteSpeed and LSPHP only:
bash <( curl -k https://raw.githubusercontent.com/litespeedtech/ols1clk/master/ols1clk.sh )
See below for additional options and usage examples.
./ols1clk.sh [option] [option] …
Opt | Options | Description |
---|---|---|
--adminuser [USERNAME] |
To set the WebAdmin username for OpenLiteSpeed instead of admin. | |
-A |
--adminpassword [PASSWORD] |
To set the WebAdmin password for OpenLiteSpeed instead of using a random one. |
--adminport [PORTNUMBER] |
To set the WebAdmin console port number instead of 7080. | |
-E |
--email [EMAIL] |
To set the administrator email. |
--lsphp [VERSION] |
To set the LSPHP version, such as 82. We currently support versions '71 72 73 74 80 81 82 83'. | |
--mariadbver [VERSION] |
To set MariaDB version, such as 10.9. We currently support versions '10.2 10.3 ...10.11'. | |
-W |
--wordpress |
To install WordPress. You will still need to complete the WordPress setup by browser |
--wordpressplus [SITEDOMAIN] |
To install, set up, and configure WordPress, also LSCache will be enabled | |
--wordpresspath [WP_PATH] |
To specify a location for the new WordPress installation or use for an existing WordPress. | |
-R |
--dbrootpassword [PASSWORD] |
To set the database root password instead of using a random one. |
--dbname [DATABASENAME] |
To set the database name to be used by WordPress. | |
--dbuser [DBUSERNAME] |
To set the WordPress username in the database. | |
--dbpassword [PASSWORD] |
To set the WordPress table password in MySQL instead of using a random one. | |
--prefix [PREFIXNAME] |
To set the WordPress table prefix. | |
--listenport [PORT] |
To set the HTTP server listener port, default is 80. | |
--ssllistenport [PORT] |
To set the HTTPS server listener port, default is 443. | |
--wpuser [WP_USER] |
To set the WordPress admin user for WordPress dashboard login. Default value is wpuser. | |
--wppassword [PASSWORD] |
To set the WordPress admin user password for WordPress dashboard login. | |
--wplang [WP_LANGUAGE] |
To set the WordPress language. Default value is "en_US" for English. | |
--sitetitle [WP_TITLE] |
To set the WordPress site title. Default value is mySite. | |
--pure-mariadb |
To install OpenLiteSpeed and MariaDB. | |
--pure-mysql |
To install OpenLiteSpeed and MySQL. | |
--pure-percona |
To install OpenLiteSpeed and Percona. | |
--with-mysql |
To install OpenLiteSpeed/App with MySQL. | |
--with-percona |
To install OpenLiteSpeed/App with Percona. | |
--owasp-enable |
To enable mod_security with OWASP rules. If OLS is installed, then enable the owasp directly | |
--owasp-disable |
To disable mod_security with OWASP rules. | |
--proxy-r |
To set a proxy with rewrite type. | |
--proxy-c |
To set a proxy with config type. | |
-U |
--uninstall |
To uninstall OpenLiteSpeed and remove installation directory. |
-P |
--purgeall |
To uninstall OpenLiteSpeed, remove installation directory, and purge all data in MySQL. |
-Q |
--quiet |
To use quiet mode, won't prompt to input anything. |
-V |
--version |
To display the script version information. |
-v |
--verbose |
To display more messages during the installation. |
--update |
To update ols1clk from github. | |
-H |
--help |
To display help messages. |
Examples | Description |
---|---|
./ols1clk.sh |
To install OpenLiteSpeed with a random WebAdmin password. |
./ols1clk.sh --lsphp 81 |
To install OpenLiteSpeed with lsphp80. |
./ols1clk.sh -A 123456 -e [email protected] |
To install OpenLiteSpeed with WebAdmin password "123456" and email [email protected]. |
./ols1clk.sh -R 123456 -W |
To install OpenLiteSpeed with WordPress and MySQL root password "123456". |
./ols1clk.sh --wordpressplus a.com |
To install OpenLiteSpeed with a fully configured WordPress installation at "a.com". |
Run the following command to create an additional virtual host in a few seconds. The example document root will be /var/www/www.example.com. Be sure to substitute your own domain.
/bin/bash <( curl -sk https://raw.githubusercontent.com/litespeedtech/ls-cloud-image/master/Setup/vhsetup.sh ) -d www.example.com
The first time you create an additional Virtual Host, the script will need to get your database root password from /usr/local/lsws/password. If you have custom value, please update /usr/local/lsws/password or echo the password to the specified location: /root/.db_password.
echo 'root_mysql_pass="DB_ROOT_PASSWORD"' > /root/.db_password
Then run the following command to create an additional virtual host with the WordPress.
/bin/bash <( curl -sk https://raw.githubusercontent.com/litespeedtech/ls-cloud-image/master/Setup/vhsetup.sh ) -d www.example.com -w
Please be sure that your domain is already pointing to the server.
Then run the following command to create an additional virtual host with a Let's Encrypt certificate applied. Be sure to substitute your own domain and your email address.
/bin/bash <( curl -sk https://raw.githubusercontent.com/litespeedtech/ls-cloud-image/master/Setup/vhsetup.sh ) -d www.example.com -le [email protected] -f
Note: The -f
option is to force https redirection
If you still have a question after reading these instructions, you have a few options:
- Join the GoLiteSpeed Slack community for real-time discussion
- Report any issue on the Github ols1clk project
- Report any issue or discuss any OpenLiteSpeed topic on the OLS Google Group