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Quick installer

Overview

The Quick installer has been designed to assist users with creating an instance of RaspAP both quickly and with a great deal of flexibility. The install loader will respond to several command line arguments, or switches, to customize your installation in a variety of ways, or install one of RaspAP's optional helper tools.

Alternatives

The installer gives you the greatest level of flexibility for creating an instance of RaspAP. However, if your goal is to use RaspAP as a component of a larger project, or wish to isolate its dependencies from existing software on your system, consider deploying RaspAP in a Docker container instead.

Usage

The Quick installer has several options for configuring a RaspAP installation. You can get usage notes from your command shell by requesting the installer like so:

curl -sL https://install.raspap.com | bash -s -- --help

Appending -s -- [option] to the Quick Install directive will activate one or more options. Several options may be chained together to customize an installation. Examples are given below.

Examples

The installer may be invoked locally or remotely via curl. Examples with both cases and various options are given below.

Invoke installer remotely, run non-interactively with option flags:

curl -sL https://install.raspap.com | bash -s -- --yes --wireguard 1 --adblock 0

Invoke remotely, uprgrade an existing install to the Insiders Edition. The --name and --token arguments are optional; if they are not specified the user will be prompted to authenticate with GitHub:

curl -sL https://install.raspap.com | bash -s -- --upgrade --insiders --name <name> --token <token>

Invoke remotely, perform an unattended update to the latest release version:

curl -sL https://install.raspap.com | bash -s -- --yes --update --path /var/www/html

Run locally specifying a GitHub repo and branch:

raspbian.sh --repo foo/bar --branch my/branch

Run locally requesting release info:

raspbian.sh --version

Switches

-y, --yes, --assume-yes

This option enables unattended installations, such that the installer assumes "yes" as an answer to all user prompts. This behavior is identical to how the same option with the apt-get package handler works.

-c, --cert, --certificate

This option installs an SSL certificate with mkcert and configures lighttpd for HTTPS support. It does not (re)install RaspAP. Details are provided here.

-o, --openvpn <flag>

Used with the -y, --yes option above, this sets the OpenVPN install option (0 = don't install OpenVPN). Given that OpenVPN support is an optional extra, this enables an unattended setup without installing it.

-s, --rest, --restapi <flag>

Used with the -y, --yes option above, this sets RestAPI install option (0 = don't install the RestAPI). Given that the RestAPI is an optional extra, this enables an unattended setup without installing it.

-a, --adblock <flag>

Used with the -y, --yes option above, this sets the Ad Blocking install option (0 = don't install Adblock). Given that Adblock support is an optional extra, this enables an unattended setup without installing it.

-w, --wireguard <flag>

Used with the -y, --yes option above, this sets the WireGuard install option (0 = don't install WireGuard). Given that WireGuard support is an optional extra, this enables an unattended setup without installing it.

-e, --provider <value>

Used with the -y, --yes option above, this sets the VPN provider install option. Valid numeric option values are:

  1 = ExpressVPN
  2 = Mullvad VPN
  3 = NordVPN
  0 = None

-r, --repo, --repository <name>

If you have forked this project to your own GitHub repo, this option lets you override the default GitHub repo (RaspAP/raspap-webgui) used to install RaspAP. An alternate repository name is a required parameter.

-b, --branch <name>

Similarly, this option overrides the default git branch. This is useful if you have created a feature branch (my-feature) and wish to perform an installation using the Quick Installer. An alternate branch name is a required parameter.

An example combining the -r, --repo and -b, --branch options is given below:

curl -sL https://install.raspap.com | bash -s -- --repo foo/bar --branch my-feature

-t, --token <accesstoken>

Specify a GitHub personal access token to authenticate with a private repository. Used together with the -n, --name option (below).

-n, --name <username>

Specify a GitHub username to access a private repository. An example combining the --token and --name options is given below:

curl -sL https://install.raspap.com | bash -s -- --name billz --token [my-token]

-u, --upgrade

Upgrades an existing RaspAP installation to the latest release version.

-d, --update

Performs a minimal update of an existing installation to the latest release version. This differs from the -u, --upgrade option in several ways. The user is not prompted to install optional RaspAP components, and several steps used for an initial installation are not performed. Existing configuration files remain intact.

-p, --path <path>

Sets the application path for an existing RaspAP installation.

It may be combined with the -d, --update and -y, --yes options to perform an unattended update. An example is given below:

curl -sL https://install.raspap.com | bash -s -- --update --path /var/www/html --yes

-i, --insiders

Installs from the Insiders Edition (RaspAP/raspap-insiders).

-m, --minwrite

Configures a microSD card for minimum write operation.

-v, --version

Queries the Github API, outputs the latest RaspAP release version and exits.

-n, --uninstall

Loads and executes the uninstaller.

-h, --help

Outputs these usage notes and exits.

Discussions

Questions or comments about using RaspAP's Quick installer? Join the discussions here.