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How to install Joomla on Google Cloud Server

This post shows students and new users the steps to install Joomla on Google Cloud servers running Ubuntu Linux. We’ve been through a series of posts that started with registering a domain name, setting up a Google Cloud server, and installing software and packages to help us build a functional website online.

Now we are ready to install Joomla to help us build our first dynamic, professional and beautiful website to publish our wonderful content that we were dying to publish.

Joomla is a free and open source, mobile ready and easy to use way to create your website. With Joomla, you can create dynamic websites using free templates, plugins, and a support base to help us throughout the process.

This is the seventh post in this series that can be used as a beginner’s guide to learning how to create a website domain, configure a Google Cloud server with Ubuntu Linux, and install software and packages to create and run an online website.

In this series:

Now that you have learned how to create a website domain, configure a Google Cloud server, install Apache, Nginx, PHP, and MySQL or MariaDB, you can proceed below to tie it all together with Joomla.

When we started this series, we said that a web server enables content to be published and served to web clients and the public browsing your website. A PHP or server-side scripting language allows for a more functional and dynamic website. A database server enables you to store your website content efficiently.

Other programs and packages may also be required to enhance the functionality of a website. Next, we will show you how to install these tools with Joomla.

In our first post, we also said that after creating a domain name, it cannot be used until it is forwarded or pointed to a server. In the second post, we showed you how to point a domain to a server that we created. We then show you how to install software and packages to help us run an online website.

At this point, we are ready to connect to our Google Cloud server and install Joomla by linking the software and packages installed in our previous posts.

How to connect to Google Cloud servers

The Google Cloud (Compute Engine) server allows users to connect using SSH from the browser window to your virtual machine (VM) instance from within the Google Cloud Console.

Browser SSH supports the following:

  • web browsers
    • Latest version of Google Chrome
    • Firefox
    • Microsoft Edge
    • Microsoft Internet Explorer 11 and later
    • Safari 8 and later. Please note that Safari in private browser mode is not supported.
  • Virtual machine configurations
    • All Linux VM images that are available natively on Google Cloud.

No additional software or browser extensions are required. Just log in to the Google Cloud Console and go to Menu ==> Compute Engine ==> VM instances.

In the list of virtual machine instances, click SSH in the row of the instance you want to connect to.

Alternatively, you can open an SSH connection to an instance by clicking its name and clicking SSH from the instance details page.

An SSH terminal window will open with the Ubuntu Linux instance that was created in the second posts in the series.

You should now be able to run commands on Ubuntu Linux created on the Google Cloud server.

How to use Joomla on Google cloud servers

Installing and managing a Joomla website on Ubuntu Linux is no different, whether it’s on Google Cloud servers or a local VM instance.

Once you have installed all the necessary packages, Joomla can be configured directly from your browser by navigating to the server’s hostname or IP address.

A detailed post and help on how to install Joomla on Ubuntu Linux with Apache or Nginx is at the link below. Click on it for more information on how to install and manage Joomla on Ubuntu Linux.

How to install Joomla on Ubuntu Linux with Apache

How to install Joomla on Ubuntu Linux with Nginx

Each link above will show you all the steps we took in our previous posts to get here. You will also learn how to protect your Joomla website with free Let’s Encrypt SSL certificates.

You should do that!

Conclusion:

This post is the final post in this series on installing Joomla on Ubuntu Linux on Google Cloud. If you find any errors above or have something to add, use the comment form below.

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