However, I require the IP address of the client to be my server using the following entry: It may get fixed one day, but I have had many problems with Jira which tries to access itself using port 80 and there is no correcting that port to 443 (if you try that it breaks everything).įor that to work, I also have a proxy on port 80, as shown above. This is what I use to make Jira listen on port 8009.
![jira client linux jira client linux](http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-h3lZN2UUAPY/UyxGdoEMQ2I/AAAAAAAAANc/bl3RjAqUZR8/s1600/blog_04.png)
You'll need to setup a Proxy so here are the entries I use to get that to work:įor that to work, you'll have to enable the AJP in the Jira server.xml configuration file. I'm used to Apache, though, and it's the easiest for me. WIth your own VPS on your computer, you can also add a new drive or just enlarge your existing drive. With a system such as DigitalOcean you can also create a new separate Disk Drive and copy the files there and then mount the new drive to the correct mount point. With Jira installed and one backup of everything I use 36% of that 100Gb. My new instance, I setup 100Gb just to be sure.
#Jira client linux full#
So trying to keep 10 backups and you'd get Disk Full errors quickly. We are a small shop at the moment and our data is already 5Gb compressed (one instance). However, when you do backups of your data, that space goes really fast. I had an instance at DigitalOcean with 50Gb and it was enough. I now have an instance with 8 CPUs and it runs nicely. However, Jira uses many threads (around 70) so having more CPUs will help greatly. That allows Jira and your database to run concurrently. It is likely to use that much in caches between your Jira instance and the database.Įven if you're by yourself, I strongly suggest that you setup a computer with at least 2 CPUs. However, if you can get at least 16Gb, you'll be better off. The minimum amount of memory you should setup for Jira is 4Gb.
![jira client linux jira client linux](https://almworks.com/images/jiraclient-logo-big.png)
#Jira client linux install#
With Jira, since they only offer a "tarball" type of file (it's a shell script for Linux), it's not going to automatically install the dependencies for you. The problem being that usually you just do apt-get install (on Debian/Ubuntu) and all dependencies get installed automatically. It is complimentary so you can quickly get it installed on your servers. This is not a replacement for the installation instructions found on the Atlassians website. The list should also work on your other Linux systems, such as Debian, Fedora, RedHat, etc. I have to install Jira on two new VPSes so I wanted to have notes about the various tools that I need to install to make it all work.