Moodle, a free and open-source course management system (CMS) works great out of the box after installation. However, to give your students and users the best experience, you may want to consider using Cloudflare CDN, SSL, and protection. Cloudflare provides free and paid features that help speed up websites, offers free CDN and SSL services that protect millions of websites and domains online, and many more. This setup might take a while to complete, and the process below should work on other websites as well. It doesn’t have to be Moodle. This setup should work on other CMSs and plain HTML sites out of the box. When you’re ready to set up your server and Cloudflare to use Origin Certificate, follow the steps below:

How to sign up for Cloudflare

The first step in this tutorial is to sign up for a Cloudflare account. This post assumes that you already have registered a domain name. If you don’t, then go and get one before continuing further. If you already have a Cloudflare account, then skip the registration below. https://dash.cloudflare.com/sign-up Type in your email address and click Create Account. Once the account is created and you’ve verified your email address and logged back into the Cloudflare account, click the button or link (Add a Site) to add a site to your account. Next, type in the domain name you have registered. Cloudflare service will help speed up and protect the site you add. Next, Cloudflare will begin to query your domain DNS provider for the records in the DNS table. If the domain is online, Cloudflare should find it and import the records into its DNS systems. After that, select the plan you want to use for the site. For this tutorial, we’re going to be using Cloudflare free plan. When you’re done, you should see two nameservers provided to you by Cloudflare. What you need to do is log on to your domain provider’s portal. where you have your domain, and replace the nameservers with the ones Cloudflare gives you. For example, our example.com site is hosted with Google Domains. Log on to your Google Domains account and select use custom nameservers. You’ll have to option to enter the nameservers provided to you by Cloudflare. Save your changes when you’re done. Once you’ve saved your custom nameservers changes,  go back to your Cloudflare account and wait for Cloudflare to see the changes. Depending on your domain provider, it makes take up to an hour for the DNS changes to be visible on Cloudflare. Once all is ready, you’ll see your site status as Active. When everything is done, you should also see your Cloudflare account with DNS entries as shown below. Your DNS records might have more entries than the two below. These two entries are the most important for running your website. After that, click on the Crypto tab and choose to enable Full (strict) SSL. This should turn on SSL for the site. While still on the Crypto tab, scroll down to Origin Certificates. Then click the button to create the certificate. Use the free TLS certificate signed by Cloudflare to install it on your origin server. Origin Certificates are only valid for encryption between Cloudflare and your origin server. Next, choose to Let Cloudflare generate a private key and a CSR for the domain. Click Next. Then copy a paste these into a text file onto your server. On Ubuntu, run the commands below to create the Private key, Certificate and Origin pull files (3 files in total). Copy and paste each content into the respective file. and save. For the Private key file. run this, then copy and paste the private key given to you into the file and save. For the certificate file, run this and copy and paste the certificate content into the file and save. You’ll also want to download the Cloudflare Origin Pull certificate. You can download that from the link below: Set up authenticated origin pulls · Cloudflare SSL docs Zone-Level — Cloudflare certificate Under Zone-level certificate, expand the certificate button, the copy its content. Next, run the commands below to create an origin-pull-ca.pem file, then paste the certificate content into the file below and save. Once done, you should have three files. The cloudflare_key_example.com.pem, cloudflare_example.com.pem and origin-pull-ca.pem. We will use these files in the Nginx config below After saving the key, certificate and origin pull the certificate files. Continue below. Still, on the Crypto page in your Cloudflare account, enable Always use HTTPS and you may also change settings for HSTS but not necessary. Next, turn on Authenticated Origin Pulls and Opportunistic Encryption, and continue. Then, turn on Automatic HTTPS Rewrites and continue. Next, move to the Page Rules tab. then create a new rule for the site. then type the URL and choose Always Use HTTPS HTTP://* example.com/* Always Use HTTPS Save your settings and you’re done with setting up Cloudflare.

How to Install and Configure Moodle

Now that Cloudflare is configured, log on to your server and configure Moodle. First, install the Nginx HTTP server since we’re using Nginx for this post. To install the Nginx server, run the commands below: After installing Nginx, the commands below can be used to stop, start and enable the Nginx service to always start up with the server boots. Now that Nginx is installed. to test whether the web server is working, open your browser and browse to the URL below. https://localhost If you see the page above, then Nginx is successfully installed.

How to Install MariaDB Database Server

Moodle also requires a database server to store its content. If you’re looking for a truly open-source database server, then MariaDB is a great place to start. To install MariaDB run the commands below: After installing MariaDB, the commands below can be used to stop, start and enable the MariaDB service to always start up when the server boots. Run these on Ubuntu 16.04 LTS Run these on Ubuntu 19.04 and 18.04 LTS Next, run the commands below to secure the database server with a root password if you were not prompted to do so during the installation. When prompted, answer the questions below by following the guide.

Enter current password for root (enter for none): Just press the Enter Set root password? [Y/n]: Y New password: Enter password Re-enter new password: Repeat password Remove anonymous users? [Y/n]: Y Disallow root login remotely? [Y/n]: Y Remove test database and access to it? [Y/n]:  Y Reload privilege tables now? [Y/n]:  Y

Now that MariaDB is installed, to test whether the database server was successfully installed, run the commands below. type the root password when prompted. If you see a similar screen as shown above, then the server was successfully installed.

Moodle CMS is a PHP-based CMS and PHP is required. However, PHP 7.2-FPM may not be available in Ubuntu default repositories. To run PHP 7.2-FPM on Ubuntu 16.04 and previous, you may need to run the commands below: Then update and upgrade to PHP 7.2-FPM Next, run the commands below to install PHP 7.2-FPM and related modules. After installing PHP 7.2, run the commands below to open the PHP default configuration file for Nginx. The lines below are a good setting for most PHP-based CMS. Update the configuration file with these and save. Every time you make changes to the PHP configuration file, you should also restart the Nginx web server. To do so, run the commands below: Now that PHP is installed, to test whether it’s functioning, create a test file called phpinfo.php in the Nginx default root directory. ( /var/www/html/) Then type the content below and save the file. Next, open your browser and browse to the server’s hostname or IP address followed by phpinfo.php http://localhost/phpinfo.php You should see the PHP default test page.

How to Create Moodle Database

Now that you’ve installed all the packages that are required for Moodle to function, continue below to start configuring the servers. First, run the commands below to create a blank Moodle database. To log on to the MariaDB database server, run the commands below. Then create a database called moodle Create a database user called moodleuser with a new password Then grant the user full access to the database. Finally, save your changes and exit.

How to Download Moodle Latest Release

To get Moodle latest release you may want to use the GitHub repository. Install Curl and other dependencies to get started. After installing git and curl above, change into the Nginx root directory and download Moodle packages from Github. Always replace the branch number with the latest branch. The current major version is 36. Then run the commands below to set the correct permissions for Moodle to function.

How to Configure Nginx for Moodle

Finally, configure the Nginx site configuration file for Moodle. This file will control how users access Moodle content. Run the commands below to create a new configuration file called example.com.conf Then copy and paste the content below into the file and save it. Replace the highlighted line with your domain name and directory root location. Also, make sure to reference the certificate files created above during Cloudflare setup. Save the file and exit.

How to Enable the Moodle Site

After configuring the VirtualHost above, enable it by running the commands below Next, open your browser and browse to your domain name used above. You should see Moodle setup wizard complete. Please follow the wizard carefully. https://example.com/ Then follow the on-screen instructions and select the installation language here. Next, select the MariaDB connection driver and continue. On the next screen, enter the database connection info you created above and continue. Then create an admin account and the Moodle site info and finish the installation. On this page, you should configure your main administrator account which will have complete control over the site. Make sure you give it a secure username and password as well as a valid email address. You can create more admin accounts later on. Congratulation! You have successfully installed Moodle on Ubuntu 16.04 | 18.04 and may work on the upcoming 18.10. In the future when you want to upgrade to a newly released version, simply run the commands below to upgrade.

Upgrading Moodle

First, stop the web server. For students and new users who already have Moodle installed and wish to upgrade, assuming that you followed the steps above to install, run the commands below to back up your old Moodle folder. sudo mv /var/www/html/moodle /var/www/html/moodle_bak Then change into the web server root directory and download the latest version of Moodle from Github.. always change the version number to the current (latest) Next, copy Moodle config file, theme, and data folder. If you updated your themes. a theme content should be there. If you also installed additional modules. you should find them in the /mod directory. copy them to the new Moodle folder. After that, update the web server permissions. Restart your web server. The last step is to trigger the upgrade processes within Moodle. If you put your site into Maintenance mode earlier; take it out now! Once you browse to the server IP or hostname, Moodle should prompt you to begin upgrading your database. After upgrading the database, login to Moodle and go to: Administration > Site administration > Notifications. Moodle will automatically detect the new version and perform all the SQL database or file system upgrades that are necessary. If there is anything it can’t do itself (very rare) then you will see messages telling you what you need to do. Assuming all goes well (no error messages) then you can start using your new version of Moodle and enjoy the new features! That’s it! You may also like the post below:

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