Advanced on-premises installation

TIP
Lost? Need a helping hand? Try our Quick start install or Contributor install guides.
NOTE
If you chose to enable SELinux, see SELinux and iptables.

Command-line interface (CLI)

Adobe Commerce and Magento Open Source have a single command-line interface for installation and configuration tasks: <magento_root>/bin/magento. The interface performs multiple tasks, including:

  • Installation (and related tasks such as creating or updating the database schema, creating the deployment configuration).
  • Clearing the cache.
  • Managing indexes, including reindexing.
  • Creating translation dictionaries and translation packages.
  • Generating non-existent classes such as factories and interceptors for plug-ins, generating the dependency injection configuration for the object manager.
  • Deploying static view files.
  • Creating CSS from Less.

Other benefits:

  • A single command (<magento_root>/bin/magento list) lists all available installation and configuration commands.
  • Consistent user interface based on Symfony.
  • The CLI is extensible so third-party developers can “plug in” to it. This has the additional benefit of eliminating users’ learning curve.
  • Commands for disabled modules do not display.

This topic discusses installing the Adobe Commerce or Magento Open Source software using the CLI. For information about configuration, see the Configuration Guide.

The installer can be run multiple times if necessary so you can:

  • Provide different values

    For example, after you configure your web server for Secure Sockets Layer (SSL), you can run the installer to set SSL options.

  • Correct mistakes in previous installations

  • Install Adobe Commerce or Magento Open Source in a different database instance

Before you start your installation

Before you begin, complete the following steps:

NOTE
You must install Adobe Commerce or Magento Open Source from the bin subdirectory.

You can run the installer multiple times with different options to complete installation tasks like the following:

  • Install in phases — For example, after you configure your web server for Secure Sockets Layer (SSL), you can run the installer again to set SSL options.

  • Correct mistakes in previous installations.

  • Install Adobe Commerce or Magento Open Source in a different database instance.

NOTE
By default, the installer does not overwrite the database if you install the software in the same database instance. You can use the optional cleanup-database parameter to change this behavior.

See also Update, reinstall, uninstall.

Secure installation

To use Secure Sockets Layer (SSL), also referred to as HTTPS, for both the Admin and the storefront, you must set all of the following parameters:

  • --use-secure: Set to 1
  • --base-url-secure: Set to a secure URL (that is, starting with https://)
  • --use-secure-admin Set to 1

More details about these parameters can be found later in this topic.

Installer help commands

You can run the following commands to find values for some required arguments:

Installer argument
Command
Language
bin/magento infolist
Currency
bin/magento infolist
Time zone
bin/magento infolist
NOTE
If an error displays when you run these commands, verify that you updated installation dependencies as discussed in Update installation dependencies.

Install from the command line

The install command uses the following format:

bin/magento setup:install --<option>=<value> ... --<option>=<value>

The following tables describe the installation option names and values. For example installation commands, see Sample localhost installations.

NOTE
Any options that contain spaces or special characters must be enclosed in either single or double quotes.

Admin credentials:

The following options specify the user information and credentials for the Admin user.

You can create the Admin user during or after installation. If you create the user during installation, all admin credential variables are required. See Sample localhost installations.

The following tables provide many but not all available install parameters. For a complete list, see the Command-line Tools Reference.

Name
Value
Required?
--admin-firstname
Administrator user’s first name.
Yes
--admin-lastname
Administrator user’s last name.
Yes
--admin-email
Administrator user’s e-mail address.
Yes
--admin-user
Administrator username.
Yes
--admin-password
Administrator user password. The password must be at least 7 characters in length and must include at least one alphabetic and at least one numeric character. We recommend a longer, more complex password. Enclose the entire password string in single quotes. For example, --admin-password='A0b9%t3g'
Yes

Site and database configuration options:

Name
Value
Required?
--base-url
Base URL to use to access your Admin and storefront in any of the following formats:

http[s]://<host or ip>/<your install dir>/.

Note: The scheme (http:// or https://) and a trailing slash are both required.

<your install dir> is the docroot-relative path in which to install the Adobe Commerce or Magento Open Source software. Depending on how you set up your web server and virtual hosts, the path might be magento2 or it might be blank.

To access Adobe Commerce or Magento Open Source on localhost, you can use either http://127.0.0.1/<your install dir>/ or http://127.0.0.1/<your install dir>/.

- {{base_url}} which represents a base URL defined by a virtual host setting or by a virtualization environment like Docker. For example, if you set up a virtual host with the hostname magento.example.com, you can install the software with --base-url={{base_url}} and access the Admin with a URL like http://magento.example.com/admin.
Yes
--backend-frontname
Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) to access the Admin. You can omit this parameter to let the application generate a random URI for you with the following pattern admin_jkhgdfq.

We recommend a random URI for security purposes. A random URI is harder for hackers or malicious software to exploit.

The URI displays at the end of the installation. You can display it later at any time using the bin/magento info:adminuri command.

If you choose to enter a value, we recommend you not use a common word like admin, backend. The Admin URI can contain alphanumeric values and the underscore character (_) only.
No
--db-host
Use any of the following:

- The database server’s fully qualified hostname or IP address.

- localhost (default) or 127.0.0.1 if your database server is on the same host as your web server.localhost means the MySQL client library uses UNIX sockets to connect to the database. 127.0.0.1 causes the client library to use the TCP protocol. For more information about sockets, see the PHP PDO_MYSQL documentation.

Note: You can optionally specify the database server port in its hostname like www.example.com:9000
Yes
--db-name
Name of the database instance in which you want to install the database tables.

Default is magento2.
Yes
--db-user
Username of the database instance owner.

Default is root.
Yes
--db-password
Database instance owner’s password.
Yes
--db-prefix
Use only if you’re installing the database tables in a database instance that has Adobe Commerce or Magento Open Source tables in it already.

In that case, use a prefix to identify the tables for this installation. Some customers have more than one Adobe Commerce or Magento Open Source instance running on a server with all tables in the same database.

The prefix can be a maximum of five characters in length. It must begin with a letter and can include only letters, numbers, and underscore characters.

This option enables those customers to share the database server with more than one Adobe Commerce or Magento Open Source installation.
No
--db-ssl-key
Path to the client key.
No
--db-ssl-cert
Path to the client certificate.
No
--db-ssl-ca
Path to the server certificate.
No
--language
Language code to use in the Admin and storefront. (If you have not already done so, you can view the list of language codes by entering bin/magento info:language:list from the bin directory.)
No
--currency
Default currency to use in the storefront. (If you have not already done so, you can view the list of currencies by entering bin/magento info:currency:list from the bin directory.)
No
--timezone
Default time zone to use in the Admin and storefront. (If you have not already done so, you can view the list of time zones by entering bin/magento info:timezone:list from the bin/ directory.)
No
--use-rewrites
1 means you use web server rewrites for generated links in the storefront and Admin.

0 disables the use of web server rewrites. This is the default.
No
--use-secure
1 enables the use of Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) in storefront URLs. Make sure that your web server supports SSL before you select this option.

0 disables the use of SSL. In this case, all other secure URL options are assumed to also be 0. This is the default.
No
--base-url-secure
Secure base URL to use to access your Admin and storefront in the following format: http[s]://<host or ip>/<your install dir>/
No
--use-secure-admin
1 means you use SSL to access the Admin. Make sure that your web server supports SSL before you select this option.

0 means you do not use SSL with the Admin. This is the default.
No
--admin-use-security-key
1 causes the application to use a randomly generated key value to access pages in the Admin and in forms. These key values help prevent cross-site script forgery attacks. This is the default.

0 disables the use of the key.
No
--session-save
Use any of the following:

- db to store session data in the database. Choose database storage if you have a clustered database; otherwise, there might not be much benefit over file-based storage.

- files to store session data in the file system. File-based session storage is appropriate unless the file system access is slow, you have a clustered database, or you want to store session data in Redis.

- redis to store session data in Redis. If you are using Redis for default or page caching, Redis must be already installed. See Use Redis for session storage for additional information about configuring support for Redis.
No
--key
If you have one, specify a key to encrypt sensitive data in the database. If you don’t have one, the application generates one for you.
Yes
--cleanup-database
To drop database tables before installing Adobe Commerce or Magento Open Source, specify this parameter without a value. Otherwise, the database is left intact.
No
--db-init-statements
Advanced MySQL configuration parameter. Uses database initialization statements to run when connecting to the MySQL database. Consult a reference similar to this one before you set any values.

Default is SET NAMES utf8;.
No
--sales-order-increment-prefix
Specify a string value to use as a prefix for sales orders. Typically, this is used to guarantee unique order numbers for payment processors.
No

Search engine configuration options:

Name
Value
Required?
--search-engine
The version of Elasticsearch or OpenSearch to use as the search engine. The default is elasticsearch7. Elasticsearch 5 has been deprecated and is not recommended.
No
--elasticsearch-host
The host name or IP address where Elasticsearch is running. The default is localhost.
No
--elasticsearch-port
The Elasticsearch port for incoming HTTP requests. The default is 9200.
No
--elasticsearch-index-prefix
A prefix that identifies the Elasticsearch search index. The default is magento2.
No
--elasticsearch-timeout
The number of seconds before the system times out. The default is 15.
No
--elasticsearch-enable-auth
Enables authentication on the Elasticsearch server. The default is false.
No
--elasticsearch-username
The user ID to authenticate to the Elasticsearch server.
No, unless authentication is enabled
--elasticsearch-password
The password to authenticate to the Elasticsearchserver.
No, unless authentication is enabled
--opensearch-host
The host name or IP address where OpenSearch is running. The default is localhost.
No
--opensearch-port
The OpenSearch port for incoming HTTP requests. The default is 9200.
No
--opensearch-index-prefix
A prefix that identifies the OpenSearch search index. The default is magento2.
No
--opensearch-timeout
The number of seconds before the system times out. The default is 15.
No
--opensearch-enable-auth
Enables authentication on the OpenSearch server. The default is false.
No
--opensearch-username
The user ID to authenticate to the OpenSearch server.
No, unless authentication is enabled
--opensearch-password
The password to authenticate to the OpenSearch server.
No, unless authentication is enabled

RabbitMQ configuration options:

Name
Value
Required?
--amqp-host
Do not use the --amqp options unless you have already set up an installation of RabbitMQ. See RabbitMQ installation for more information about installing and configuring RabbitMQ.

The hostname where RabbitMQ is installed.
No
--amqp-port
The port to use to connect to RabbitMQ. The default is 5672.
No
--amqp-user
The username for connecting to RabbitMQ. Do not use the default user guest.
No
--amqp-password
The password for connecting to RabbitMQ. Do not use the default password guest.
No
--amqp-virtualhost
The virtual host for connecting to RabbitMQ. The default is /.
No
--amqp-ssl
Indicates whether to connect to RabbitMQ. The default is false. See RabbitMQ for information about setting up SSL for RabbitMQ.
No
--consumers-wait-for-messages
Should consumers wait for a message from the queue? 1 - Yes, 0 - No
No

Lock configuration options:

Name
Value
Required?
--lock-provider
Lock provider name.

Available lock providers: db, zookeeper, file.

The default lock provider: db
No
--lock-db-prefix
The specific db prefix to avoid lock conflicts when using db lock provider.

The default value: NULL
No
--lock-zookeeper-host
Host and port to connect to Zookeeper cluster when you use zookeeper lock provider.

For example: 127.0.0.1:2181
Yes, if you set --lock-provider=zookeeper
--lock-zookeeper-path
The path where Zookeeper saves locks.

The default path is: /magento/locks
No
--lock-file-path
The path where file locks are saved.
Yes, if you set --lock-provider=file

Consumers configuration options:

Name
Description
Value
Required
--consumers-wait-for-messages
Determines if consumers will wait for a message from the queue.
1 - Yes, 0 - No
No
  • 0: Consumers process available messages in the queue, close the TCP connection, and terminate. Consumers do not wait for additional messages to enter the queue, even if the number of processed messages is less than the --max_messages value specified during starting consumers.

  • 1: Consumers continue to process messages from the message queue until reaching the maximum number of messages (the value specified for --max_messages on the queue:consumers:start command) before closing the TCP connection and terminating the consumer process. If the queue empties before reaching --max_messages the consumer waits for more messages to arrive. If you use workers to run consumers instead of using a cron job, set this variable to 1.

WARNING
The --consumers-wait-for-messages option is a global option and cannot be configured separately for each consumer.
NOTE
To enable or disable modules after installing Adobe Commerce or Magento Open Source, see Enable and disable modules.

Sensitive data:

Adobe Commerce and Magento Open Source use your encryption key to encrypt the following:

  • Credit card information
  • Usernames and passwords specified in the Admin configuration (for example, logins to payment gateways)
  • CAPTCHA values sent over the network

Adobe Commerce and Magento Open Source do not encrypt:

  • Administrative and customer usernames and passwords (these passwords are hashed)
  • Address
  • Phone number
  • Other types of personally identifiable information except for credit card numbers

Sample localhost installations

The following examples show the commands to install Adobe Commerce locally with various options.

Example 1—Basic installation with admin user account

The following example installs Adobe Commerce or Magento Open Source with the following options:

  • The application is installed in the magento2 directory relative to the web server docroot on localhost and the path to the Admin is admin; therefore:

    Your storefront URL is http://127.0.0.1

  • The database server is on the same host as the web server.

    The database name is magento, and the username and password are both magento

  • Uses server rewrites

  • The administrator has the following properties:

    • First and last names are Magento User
    • Username is admin and the password is admin123
    • E-mail address is user@example.com
  • Default language is en_US (U.S. English)

  • Default currency is U.S. dollars

  • Default time zone is U.S. Central (America/Chicago)

  • OpenSearch 1.2 is installed on os-host.example.com and connects on port 9200

magento setup:install --base-url=http://127.0.0.1/magento2/ \
--db-host=localhost --db-name=magento --db-user=magento --db-password=magento \
--admin-firstname=Magento --admin-lastname=User --admin-email=user@example.com \
--admin-user=admin --admin-password=admin123 --language=en_US \
--currency=USD --timezone=America/Chicago --use-rewrites=1 \
--search-engine=opensearch --opensearch-host=os-host.example.com \
--opensearch-port=9200

Messages similar to the following display to indicate a successful installation:

Post installation file permissions check...
For security, remove write permissions from these directories: '/var/www/html/magento2/app/etc'
[Progress: 274 / 274]
[SUCCESS]: Magento installation complete.
[SUCCESS]: Admin Panel URI: /admin_puu71q

Example 2— Basic install without admin user account

You can install Adobe Commerce or Magento Open Source without creating the administrator user as shown in the following example.

magento setup:install --base-url=http://127.0.0.1/magento2/ \
--db-host=localhost --db-name=magento --db-user=magento --db-password=magento \
--language=en_US --currency=USD --timezone=America/Chicago --use-rewrites=1 \
--search-engine=opensearch --opensearch-host=os-host.example.com \
--opensearch-port=9200

Messages like the following display if the installation is successful:

Post installation file permissions check...
For security, remove write permissions from these directories: '/var/www/html/magento2/app/etc'
[Progress: 274 / 274]
[SUCCESS]: Magento installation complete.
[SUCCESS]: Admin Panel URI: /admin_puu71q

After installation you can create an admin user using the admin:user:create command:
Create or edit an administrator

Example 3—Install with additional options

The following example installs Adobe Commerce or Magento Open Source with the following options:

  • The application is installed in the magento2 directory relative to the web server docroot on localhost and the path to the Admin is admin; therefore:

    Your storefront URL is http://127.0.0.1

  • The database server is on the same host as the web server.

    The database name is magento, and the username and password are both magento

  • The administrator has the following properties:

    • First and last names are Magento User
    • Username is admin and the password is admin123
    • E-mail address is user@example.com
  • Default language is en_US (U.S. English)

  • Default currency is U.S. dollars

  • Default time zone is U.S. Central (America/Chicago)

  • The installer first cleans up the database before installing the tables and schema

  • You can use the sales order increment prefix ORD$ (since it contains a special character [$], the value must be enclosed in double quotes)

  • Session data is saved in the database

  • Uses server rewrites

  • OpenSearch is installed on os-host.example.com and connects on port 9200

magento setup:install --base-url=http://127.0.0.1/magento2/ \
--db-host=localhost --db-name=magento --db-user=magento --db-password=magento \
--admin-firstname=Magento --admin-lastname=User --admin-email=user@example.com \
--admin-user=admin --admin-password=admin123 --language=en_US \
--currency=USD --timezone=America/Chicago --cleanup-database \
--sales-order-increment-prefix="ORD$" --session-save=db --use-rewrites=1 \
--search-engine=opensearch --opensearch-host=os-host.example.com \
--opensearch-port=9200
NOTE
You must enter the command either on a single line or, as in the preceding example, with a \ character at the end of each line.

Messages like the following display if the installation is successful:

Post installation file permissions check...
For security, remove write permissions from these directories: '/var/www/html/magento2/app/etc'
[Progress: 274 / 274]
[SUCCESS]: Magento installation complete.
[SUCCESS]: Admin Panel URI: /admin_puu71q
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