#!/bin/bash -ex

HOSTNAME=orange

# set hostname
echo "$HOSTNAME" > /etc/hostname
sed -i "s|127.0.1.1 \(.*\)|127.0.1.1 $HOSTNAME|" /etc/hosts


rm -rf /var/www/*

cd

wget http://downloads.sourceforge.net/project/orangehrm/stable/2.6/orangehrm-2.6.0.2.tar.gz

tar xzf orangehrm-2.6.0.2.tar.gz

rm -f orangehrm-2.6.0.2.tar.gz

mv orangehrm-2.6.0.2/orangehrm-2.6.0.2/* /var/www/

rm -rf orangehrm-2.6.0.2

mv /root/Conf.php /var/www/lib/confs/Conf.php

mv /root/databases.yml /var/www/symfony/config/databases.yml

chown -R www-data.www-data /var/www

chmod -R 755 /var/www/ 



/etc/init.d/mysql start

mysql -uroot  --execute "create database dborange;"

mysql -uroot  --execute "grant all on dborange.* to usrorange@localhost identified by 'passwdorange' ;"

/etc/init.d/mysql stop

rm -rf /var/lib/mysql/dborange

cd

unzip dborange.zip

rm -f dborange.zip

mv dborange /var/lib/mysql/dborange

chown -R mysql.mysql /var/lib/mysql/dborange

chmod 700 /var/lib/mysql/dborange

chmod -R 660 /var/lib/mysql/dborange/*

# I know this is an ugly backup-restore method . In this application the normal mysqldump restore method is not working.


echo "" > /etc/debian_chroot

