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To install Bamboo Standalone on Linux,
Bamboo Standalone is available for download here.
To install Bamboo using the Linux archive version (atlassian-bamboo-x.x-standalone.tar.gz), you need to extract the files to a Bamboo installation directory of your choice. By default, the root directory of the tar file is "Bamboo".
You will also need to setup your Bamboo home directory — this is the directory where Bamboo will store its configuration data. To do this, open the file named bamboo-init.properties in the <Bamboo instllation directory>/webapp/WEB-INF/classes directory. In this file, insert the property "bamboo.home", with an absolute path to your Bamboo home directory. Your file should look something like this:
bamboo.home=/test/bamboo-home
You must use forward-slashes in your directory path. Backslashes are not recognised by Bamboo.
There are two ways you can launch Bamboo on Linux:
bamboo.sh startup scriptYou can start Bamboo with the default bamboo.sh file in your installation root directory. The bamboo.sh command accepts the following options (e.g. ./bamboo.sh start):
start — this starts Bamboo.stop — this stops Bamboo.restart — this restarts Bamboostatus — this provides the current status of Bamboo. Alternatively, you can start Bamboo via a Java Service Wrapper, which provides services such as automatic restarting. To do this, you will need to use the start-bamboo command available in the /wrapper folder of the Bamboo installation. You will need to fire the command with one of the following options (e.g. ./start-bamboo start):
console — this starts Bamboo in a console. The logs will scroll to standard out.start — this starts Bamboo.stop — this stops Bamboo.restart — this restarts Bamboostatus — this provides the current status of Bamboo. Once Bamboo has started, you can access it by going to your web browser and entering the address:
http://localhost:8085/.