Installing WeBWorK on Live USB
WeBWorK on a USB memory drive
These instructions explain how to download and install a disk image of a fully functioning WeBWorK 2.4 system onto a 2 GB or larger USB flash memory drive.
Contents
Installing WeBWorK on a 2 GB or larger USB flash memory drive
Overview
After installing the disk image on a USB flash memory drive, you will have a full fledged Ubuntu 9.04 system with WeBWorK, Apache2, MySQL, etc. installed and configured. You just have to plug the USB drive in and boot your computer from your USB drive. The system is persistent (if you choose to set up a persistent system, see below), i.e. any changes you make (to Ubuntu, WeBWorK, anything) are saved and will be there the next time you boot the system. Also nothing on your computer's hard drive will be touched so there will be no change to your standard operating system. If you want to run everything locally as a test, nothing else is required. If you want to connect your system to the internet so that people (students, professors) can connect to WeBWorK and you can login remotely (via ssh) to Ubuntu, you may have to configure networking (see below). Also it is imperative that you CHANGE THE PASSWORDS for the OS users root
and ubuntu
(which has sudo privileges), for the MySQL users root
and webworkWrite
, and for the WeBWorK users admin
and ubuntu
which have professor privileges (see below).
There are more detailed instructions for Ubuntu 9.04 and WeBWorK 2.4 at Installation_Manual_for_2.4_on_Ubuntu_9.04
Requirements
- You need a PC that can be booted from USB. This seems to exclude all Mac's and very old PC's. Most PC's less the 5 or 6 years old should be OK.
- You meed a 2GB or larger USB flash memory drive. For most purposes, any flash drive should work. If you plan to have a small production system with a number of people using WeBWorK simultaneously, you probably want a drive with decent read and write speeds. For example, the SanDisk Extreme Cruzer Contour with 25MB/sec read and 18MB/sec write speeds.
USB Creator
- Go to http://www.linuxliveusb.com/ and then download and install LinuxLive USB Creator 2.5. LinuxLive USB Creator runs on Windows.
- If you want create the live USB on a Linux system, use e.g. UNetbootin (http://unetbootin.sourceforge.net/). The directions below are for LinuxLive USB Creator 2.5 but I have used UNetbootin in the past and the method is very similar (but follow the UNetbootin directions)
Downloads
- Go to http://devel.webwork.rochester.edu/ww-downloads/WW2.4_Ubuntu10.04_64bit_Vanilla_LiveDVD.iso and download
WW2.4_Ubuntu10.04_64bit_Vanilla_LiveDVD.iso
(it is a 1.18 GB file) - Click on http://devel.webwork.rochester.edu/ww-downloads/WW2.4_Ubuntu10.04_64bit_Vanilla_LiveDVD.iso.md5 and save the MD5 checksum
- Verify the MD5 checksum of your downloaded file
- Note that the above instructors assume you will be using the Live USB on a computer with a 64 bit processor. If you have an old computer with a 32 bit processor, instead go to http://devel.webwork.rochester.edu/ww-downloads/WW2.4_Ubuntu9.10_Vanilla_LiveDVD.iso and download
WW2.4_Ubuntu9.10_Vanilla_LiveDVD.iso
(it is a 1.25 GB file). The MD5 checksum is at http://devel.webwork.rochester.edu/ww-downloads/WW2.4_Ubuntu9.10_Vanilla_LiveDVD.iso.md5
Install WeBWorK on USB drive
- Plug your 2 GB or larger USB drive into the computer and make sure the computer recognizes it.
- Run UNetbootin and check "Diskimage". Then browse for the file
WW2.4_Ubuntu9.04_LiveDVD.iso
and select it - Make sure your USD drive is selected (often drive D: but check before you write to it)
- Hit
OK
and sit back while the installation onto the USB drive takes place
Persistence
If you don't do anything more you will have a non-persistent system meaning that when you reboot the USB flash memory drive everything will be in exactly the same state it was in originally (i.e. any changes you made to Ubuntu, WeBWorK, anything will not be saved).
A persistent system means that when you reboot the USB flash memory drive everything will be in exactly the same state it was when you last shut down the system (i.e. any changes you made to Ubuntu, WeBWorK, anything will be saved). If you want a persistent system (most people probably do especially if you are connecting to the web and want to save new passwords, etc) do the following
- Go to http://unetbootin.sourceforge.net/diskimg/ and download
512mb.zip
- http://unetbootin.sourceforge.net/diskimg/readme.txt gives the instruction we repeat below we some slight amplifications.
Go to http://unetbootin.sourceforge.net/diskimg/ and download one of the files (128mb.zip, 256mb.zip, or 512mb.zip) corresponding to the amount of persistent space you want (make sure the size of the persistent disk image is smaller than the free space you have on your USB drive). Since the .iso file is a 1.1GB file you need a 2GB flash memory card and this gives plenty of space for the extra 512 MB of persistent space so download the 512mb.zip
file.
Now extract the file "casper.rw" from the zip file to your USB drive.
Now edit D:\syslinux.cfg (assuming D:\ is where your USB drive is) and add in "persistent" in two places at the end of the first two lines that begin with "append", and save the file, so your syslinux.cfg should look something like this:
default unetbootin label unetbootin kernel /ubnkern append initrd=/ubninit file=/cdrom/preseed/ubuntu.seed boot=casper quiet splash persistent --
label ubnentry0 menu label live kernel /casper/vmlinuz append initrd=/casper/initrd.gz file=/cdrom/preseed/custom.seed boot=casper quiet splash persistent --
Don't forget the space before the --
Now you will have persistence if you boot the default or live options. For more info see https://help.ubuntu.com/community/LiveCD/Persistence
Boot from USB drive
- With the USD drive plugged in reboot your system and boot from USB. You will probably have to hold down a certain key (e.g. F12 or F11) to bring up a boot menu. Or possibly you may have to edit your BIOS to allow booting from USB. Select USB Storage Device as the boot device and boot.
You will be presented with a list of options. Select the first (default) or second (live) and log in. Use ubuntu
as the Username and admin
as the Password.
If you do not want to connect your server to the internet, you can just open firefox and access the URL: http://localhost/webwork2 . If you connect to a network using DHCP, networking will be set up automatically.
What to do next
The installation on your USB flash memory drive is identical to the installation given in the instructions Installing from WW2.4_Ubuntu9.04_LiveDVD except that the installation occured on your USB flash memory drive, not on your hard drive. All the sections on Passwords, Setting up networking using a static IP address, Global Configuration and File and Directory Locations and System Information apply and you should read them. If you set up a persistent system, all changes you make will be preserved the next time you boot from your USB flash memory drive. If you set up a non-persistent system, the changes will only last until you shut down the system.