
Sudo chown -R www-data:www-data /nas /data /nextcloud Sudo ln -s /nas /data /nextcloud /var /www /nextcloud

Wget https: // /server /releases /nextcloud-14.0.0.zip -O /nas /data /nextcloud.zip Install Nextcloud on the data drive to make sure data is backed up automatically every night. In the first article in this series, we attached two disk drives to the Raspberry Pi, one for current data and one for backups. Get the latest release's URL and copy it to download via wget on the Raspberry Pi. sudo apt install unzip wget php apache2 mysql-server php-zip php-mysql php-dom php-mbstring php-gd php-curl To run Nextcloud on your Raspberry Pi (using the setup described in the first part of this series), install the following packages as dependencies to Nextcloud using apt. You can automate dynamic DNS updates from the Raspberry Pi using ddclient. If you want to run it on your home network, you probably need to set up dynamic DNS for this domain and enable port forwarding of ports 80 and 443 (if you go for an SSL setup, which is highly recommended otherwise port 80 should be sufficient) from your router to the Raspberry Pi. This domain should be directed to your Raspberry Pi. For the sake of simplicity in this how-to, we'll use. First, you should have a domain you can use for the Nextcloud instance. To use Nextcloud conveniently, you have to meet a few prerequisites.

A guide to building a video game with Python.
