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Symphony 2

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Contents

Overview

Symphony is a PHP & MySQL based CMS that utilises XML and XSLT as its core technologies. This repository represents version 2.6.7 and is considered stable.

Useful places:

Server requirements

  • PHP 5.3 or above
  • PHP’s LibXML module, with the XSLT extension enabled (--with-xsl)
  • MySQL 5.5 or above is recommended
  • A webserver (known to be used with Apache, Litespeed, Nginx and Hiawatha)
  • Apache’s mod_rewrite module or equivalent
  • PHP’s built in json functions, which are enabled by default in PHP 5.2 and above; if they are missing, ensure PHP wasn’t compiled with --disable-json

Installing

Before installation, see the notes on file permissions.

Via Git

  1. Clone the Symphony Git repository to the desired location:

     git clone git://github.com/symphonycms/symphony-2.git target-directory
     cd target-directory
    

    (Replace target-directory with your chosen new directory name.)

  2. (Optional) If you would like to add the bundled optional extensions, run the following commands to checkout the bundle branch which contains the Git submodules references and update the submodules:

    git checkout --track origin/bundle
    git submodule update --init --recursive
    

    The extensions included in the optional bundle:

  3. (Optional) If you would like to install the example workspace, which aims to teach newcomers by showcasing basic features and functionalities using a typical blog set-up, run:

     git clone git://github.com/symphonycms/workspace.git
    
  4. Point your web browser at the install subdirectory (e.g., http://example.com/install/) and provide details on establishing a database connection and your server environment.

  5. Chuckle villainously and tap your fingertips together (or pet a cat) as your installation completes.

  6. Remove installer files:

     rm -rf install/ workspace/install.sql
    

Via the old-fashioned way

  1. This step assumes you downloaded a zip archive from the Symphony website. Upload the following files and directories to the root directory of your website:

    • index.php
    • /extensions
    • /install
    • /symphony
    • /workspace (leave out if you don’t require the example workspace)
    • /vendor
  2. Point your web browser at the install subdirectory (e.g., http://example.com/install/) and provide details on establishing a database connection and your server environment.

  3. Pose like you’re being filmed for a dramatic close-up while your installation completes.

  4. Remove installer files:

    rm -rf install/ workspace/install.sql

File permissions

  1. Symphony’s installer will inform you if it needs write access to directories that it doesn’t already have, but you can ensure it has the access it needs by temporarily setting the root to world-writeable.

    chmod 777 /your/site/root/

  2. Once Symphony is successfully installed, you should change file/directory permissions to something tighter for security reasons. Symphony recommends 755 for directories and 644 for files as a good default, but this may need to be changed depending on your server’s users and groups configuration. For example, you may need to change directories and files that Symphony needs to subsequently write to to 777 and 666 respectively.

Useful commands

You may find these commands useful when adjusting file and directory permissions.

To recursively chmod directories only:

find /your/site/root -type d -exec chmod 755 {} \;

To recursively chmod files only:

find /your/site/root -type f -exec chmod 644 {} \;

Updating from an older version

Version-specific notes

Versions prior to 2.3

Symphony 2.3 officially only supports updating from a 2.2.x release. There are various changes between 2.1 and 2.3 that make this update unlikely to be successful. Symphony 2.3 also enforces that all authors have unique email addresses, so please ensure that this constraint is met before updating.

Versions prior to 2.2

Symphony 2.2 introduces numerous improvements that may affect extension compatibility. Before updating, be sure to consult the extension compatibility table to verify that the extensions you’re using have all been updated for Symphony 2.2.

Versions prior to 2.1

As of version 2.1, Symphony stores passwords using the more secure SHA1 algorithm (previous versions used MD5). When updating to 2.1, the primary user’s login password will be reset (the new password will be displayed by the updater—please note it).

Please also note that all other users’ passwords will no longer be valid and will require a manual reset through Symphony’s forgotten password feature. Alternatively, as an administrator, you can also change your users’ passwords on their behalf.

We are now using GitHub’s organisations feature. As a result, all submodules—as well as the main Symphony 2 repo—are forks owned by the Symphony CMS organisation.

To fully update your Git-based installation, please edit your .git/config and the .git/config of each core extension (debugdevkit, profiledevkit, markdown, maintenance_mode, selectbox_link_field, jit_image_manipulation and export_ensemble) and change the URL of the remote repo from symphony or pointybeard to be symphonycms.

For example:

[remote "origin"]
	fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
	url = git://github.com/pointybeard/markdown.git

Change git://github.com/pointybeard/markdown.git to git://github.com/symphonycms/markdown.git

Versions prior to 2.0.5

Version 2.0.5 introduced multiple includable elements in the Data Source Editor for a single field. After updating from 2.0.5 or lower, the DS editor will seem to “forget” about any Textarea fields selected when you are editing existing Data Sources. After updating, you must ensure you re-select them before saving. Note, this will only effect Data Sources that you edit and were created prior to 2.0.5. Until that point, the field will still be included in any front-end XML.

Updating via Git

  1. Pull from the master branch at git://github.com/symphonycms/symphony-2.git

  2. Use the following two commands to bring extensions up to date:

     git submodule update --init --recursive
     git submodule update --recursive
    
  3. If updating from a version older than 2.0.5, enable the Debug DevKit and Profile DevKit extensions.

  4. Point your web browser at the install subdirectory (e.g., http://example.com/install/) to complete the update process.

  5. You and your website are now in the future. Buy yourself a silver jumpsuit.

Updating via the old-fashioned way

Follow the instructions below if you are updating from Symphony 2.0 (not from Git)

Note: As of 2.0.6, there is no longer a need to backup /symphony/.htaccess.

  1. Upload /symphony, /install, /vendor & index.php, replacing what is already on your server.

  2. If updating from a version older than 2.0.5, enable the Debug DevKit and Profile DevKit extensions.

  3. Point your web browser at the install subdirectory (e.g., http://example.com/install/) to complete the update process.

  4. Call a friend and brag that your copy of Symphony is newer than theirs.

Contributing

Symphony uses Grunt to build concatenated and minified assets:

  1. Install grunt-cli globally (see the Grunt documentation):

     npm install -g grunt-cli
    
  2. Install all dependencies from the repository’s root:

     npm install
    
  3. Run the watch task:

     grunt watch
    

Symphony’s minified script and style files will be updated automatically when saving source files.

More information: Contributing to Symphony.

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This is the official Symphony CMS repository.

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