Installation

Version 94.2 by Vincent Massol on 2016/09/09

XWiki is a Java-based wiki and runs on a Servlet Container such as Tomcat, Jetty, JBoss, WebLogic, WebSphere, etc. It also uses a relational database to store its content. It can run on almost any database (HSQL, MySQL, etc) but XWiki and the database need to be setup correctly.

There are several ways of installing XWiki:

  • Use the Standalone distribution which already packages a Servlet Container (Jetty) and a database (HSQL), filled with default wiki pages. This is the recommended option for first time XWiki users and for users who wish to quickly try out XWiki.
  • Use the WAR distribution and configure both your container and your database to work with it.
  • Use the .deb package to install the last version of XWiki and the dependencies.
  • Use a non-official installation method.

If you're upgrading an existing XWiki install check the Upgrade instructions page.

Pick one of the trails in the outline on the right to get started.

Once you've finished the installation check the other topics in the Admin Guide for configuring and securing your wiki.

If you want to make a manual installation or need to migrate an existing XWiki installation, check the Release Notes.

Hardware and Software requirements

  • Java 8 or greater installed for XWiki >= 8.1 (Java 7 or greater for XWiki < 8.1, Java 6 or greater for XWiki versions < 6.0)
  • A Servlet Container supporting Servlet 3.0.1 (Servlet 2.4 for XWiki versions < 7.0)
  • A JDBC 4 Driver for your database (JDBC 3 was required for XWiki versions < 7.0)
  • Enough memory, check the Memory section of the Performance Guide.
  • Check the release notes for the version you're installing to see what browsers and databases are supported for it. You can also check our general support strategy.

Installation Methods

Using a standalone distribution 

It provides a built-in XWiki, with a portable database and a lightweight Java container.

This standalone distribution is not recommended in a production environment. If you need to use it in a production basis, you may look at the two other options.

Using .war package (usable for production)

It provides a Java application package that has to be installed in a Java container (such as Tomcat). This can be used on almost any operating system.

Using .deb package (usable for production)

It provides a .deb package that can be used on a Debian-based operating system. It can be installed with dpkg or apt; installation is thus automated.

Other Installation Methods

This section is about other, non-official ways of installing XWiki that have been contributed by the community.

Tutorials external to the xwiki.org site have not been validated for correctness by the XWiki Development Team and it's also possible that they are out of date or even not working.

Troubleshooting

You can verify some basic settings of your XWiki installation (on Tomcat, MySQL) using the Admin Tools application. Keep in mind that some of these tools only work in a Linux environment.

Running multiple instances of XWiki in the same container

If you get this error:

com.xpn.xwiki.XWikiException: Error number 3 in 0: Could not initialize main XWiki context
Wrapped Exception: Failed to get cache factory component
...
Caused by:
org.infinispan.jmx.JmxDomainConflictException: Domain already registered org.xwiki.infinispan

You need to edit WEB-INF/cache/infinispan/config.xml for each instance of XWiki, and change the jmxDomain value (found under the globalJmxStatistics tag) to have a unique name.

Running XWiki behind proxy-server

Extension manager relies on remote repositories for searching and fetching available extensions, so if your XWiki is installed in a network accessing the internet through proxy-server, most likely extensions search will return you nothing and log files will contain connection refused exceptions.

In such cases you should configure XWiki to know your proxy-server.

XWiki uses default Java proxy configuration through Apache httpclient. See the Java Networking and Proxies documentation for more details.
The main idea is to add a set of proxy-related properties to system scope.

E.g. for Tomcat 6 it could be done in the following way: modify /<tomcat-home>/bin/catalina.sh and added proxies to the JAVA_OPTS variable definition:

JAVA_OPTS="$JAVA_OPTS -Dappserver.home=$CATALINA_HOME -Dappserver.base=$CATALINA_HOME -Dhttp.proxyHost=proxy.mycompany.com -Dhttp.proxyPort=7777 -Dhttps.proxyHost=proxy.mycompany.com -Dhttps.proxyPort=7777 -Xmx512m -XX:MaxPermSize=196m $XWIKI_OPTS"

Unsupported major.minor version 51.0

This is because starting with version 6.0, XWiki requires Java 7 and you're using Java 6. You need to upgrade your Java version.

Installing without internet connection

Three solutions:

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