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.
Opt | Options | Description |
---|---|---|
--adminuser [USERNAME] |
To set the WebAdmin username for LiteSpeed instead of admin. | |
-A |
--adminpassword [PASSWORD] |
To set the WebAdmin password for LiteSpeed 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. |
Opt | Options | Description |
---|---|---|
--lsphp [VERSION] |
To set the LSPHP version, such as 83. We currently support 74 80 81 82 83 84. |
Opt | Options | Description |
---|---|---|
--mariadbver [VERSION] |
To set MariaDB version. We currently support 10.5 10.6 10.11 11.4 11.6 11.8. | |
-R |
--dbrootpassword [PASSWORD] |
To set the database root password. |
--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. | |
--prefix [PREFIXNAME] |
To set the WordPress table prefix. | |
--pure-mariadb |
To install LiteSpeed and MariaDB. | |
--pure-mysql |
To install LiteSpeed and MySQL. | |
--pure-percona |
To install LiteSpeed and Percona. | |
--with-mysql |
To install LiteSpeed/App with MySQL. | |
--with-percona |
To install LiteSpeed/App with Percona. |
Opt | Options | Description |
---|---|---|
-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 WordPress installation or use for an existing WordPress. | |
--wpuser [WP_USER] |
To set the WordPress admin user for WordPress dashboard login. | |
--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. |
Opt | Options | Description |
---|---|---|
--listenport [PORT] |
To set the HTTP server listener port, default is 80. | |
--ssllistenport [PORT] |
To set the HTTPS server listener port, default is 443. | |
--proxy-r |
To set a proxy with rewrite type. | |
--proxy-c |
To set a proxy with config type. |
Opt | Options | Description |
---|---|---|
--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. | |
--fail2ban-enable |
To enable fail2ban for webadmin and wordpress login pages. |
Opt | Options | Description |
---|---|---|
-U |
--uninstall |
To uninstall LiteSpeed and remove installation directory. |
-P |
--purgeall |
To uninstall LiteSpeed, 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. |
# To install LiteSpeed with default PHP Version.
./ols1clk.sh
# To install LiteSpeed with WordPress and MariaDB"
./ols1clk.sh -W
# To install LiteSpeed with WordPress and Mysql"
./ols1clk.sh -W --with-mysql
# To enable OWASP feature for ols. This single option can be used even if the web server is already installed.
./ols1clk.sh --owasp-enable
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/ols/password. If you have custom value, please update /usr/local/ols/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 admin@example.com -f
Note: The -f
option is to force https redirection
Follow the Build WordPress Image guide to quickly set up OpenLiteSpeed, WordPress, LSCache, phpMyAdmin, Let's Encrypt, and Redis with WebSocket support in just two commands.
Note: For additional supported CMS scripts, visit the ls-cloud-image Wiki.
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