Murmur: Difference between revisions

From Alpine Linux
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Start the murmur service.
Start the murmur service.
{{Cmd|rc-service murmur start}}
{{Cmd|rc-service murmur start}}
{{Note|Optional steps.}}
You can add the murmur service to the default runlevel.
You can add the murmur service to the default runlevel.
{{Cmd|rc-service add murmur default}}
{{Cmd|rc-service add murmur default}}
In case you don't want murmur to be default on runlevel, rollback with this command
In case you don't want murmur to be default on runlevel, rollback with this command
{{Cmd|rc-service delete murmur default}}
{{Cmd|rc-service delete murmur default}}

Revision as of 06:07, 9 October 2019

Murmur (also called Mumble-Server) is the server component for Mumble. Murmur allows you to run your own private or public voice chat server for the Mumble client.

Installation

First of all we need Murmur in our server.

apk add murmur

Open the murmur.ini configuration file and edit it so murmur can be run by the 'murmur' user created by the package.

vim /var/lib/murmur/murmur.sqlite

Contents of /var/lib/murmur/murmur.sqlite

uname=murmur

Now give permissions to the murmur database, so the user 'murmur' can read it.

chown murmur /var/lib/murmur/murmur.sqlite

Setting up SSL certificates

If you already have used Certbot to set up certificates in your web server, then you can easily make a new certificate for a subdomain 'mumble' and add the cert paths to the mumble.ini configuration file. You can use vim and edit the file manually.

vim /etc/murmur.ini

It should look something like this.

Contents of /etc/murmur.ini

sslCert=/etc/letsencrypt/live/your_domain.com/fullchain.pem sslKey=/etc/letsencrypt/live/your_domain.com/privkey.pem

Starting up the service

Start the murmur service.

rc-service murmur start

You can add the murmur service to the default runlevel.

rc-service add murmur default

In case you don't want murmur to be default on runlevel, rollback with this command

rc-service delete murmur default