Table of Contents for
Magento 2 - Build World-Class online stores

Version ebook / Retour

Cover image for bash Cookbook, 2nd Edition Magento 2 - Build World-Class online stores by Jonathan Bownds Published by Packt Publishing, 2017
  1. Cover
  2. Table of Contents
  3. Magento 2 - Build World-Class online stores
  4. Magento 2 - Build World-Class online stores
  5. Credits
  6. Preface
  7. 1. Module 1
  8. 1. Magento Fundamentals
  9. XAMPP installation
  10. Magento
  11. Summary
  12. 2. Magento 2.0 Features
  13. An introduction to the Magento order management system
  14. Magento 2.0 command-line configuration
  15. The command-line utility
  16. Summary
  17. 3. Working with Search Engine Optimization
  18. Store configuration
  19. SEO and searching
  20. SEO catalog configuration
  21. Google Analytics tracking code
  22. Optimizing Magento pages
  23. Summary
  24. 4. Magento 2.0 Theme Development – the Developers' Holy Grail
  25. Magento 2.0 theme structure
  26. The Magento Luma theme
  27. Magento theme inheritance
  28. CMS blocks and pages
  29. Custom variables
  30. Creating a basic Magento 2.0 theme
  31. Summary
  32. 5. Creating a Responsive Magento 2.0 Theme
  33. Composer – the PHP dependency manager
  34. Building the CompStore theme
  35. CSS preprocessing with LESS
  36. Applying new CSS to the CompStore theme
  37. Creating the CompStore logo
  38. Applying the theme
  39. Creating CompStore content
  40. Customizing Magento 2.0 templates
  41. Summary
  42. 6. Write Magento 2.0 Extensions – a Great Place to Go
  43. Using the Zend framework
  44. Magento 2.0 extension structure
  45. Developing your first Magento extension
  46. The Twitter REST API
  47. The TweetsAbout module structure
  48. Using TwitterOAuth to authenticate our extension
  49. Developing the module
  50. Summary
  51. 7. Go Mobile with Magento 2.0!
  52. Adjusting the CompStore theme for mobile devices
  53. The Magento 2.0 responsive design
  54. The Magento UI
  55. Implementing a new CSS mixin media query
  56. Adjusting tweets about extensions for mobile devices
  57. Summary
  58. 8. Speeding up Your Magento 2.0
  59. Indexing and caching Magento
  60. Indexing and re-indexing data
  61. The Magento cron job
  62. Caching
  63. Fine-tuning the Magento hosting server
  64. Selecting the right Magento hosting service
  65. Apache web server deflation
  66. Enabling the expires header
  67. Minifying scripts
  68. Summary
  69. 9. Improving Your Magento Skills
  70. Magento knowledge center
  71. Improving your Magento skills
  72. Summary
  73. 2. Module 2
  74. 1. Magento 2 System Tools
  75. Installing Magento 2 sample data via GUI
  76. Installing Magento 2 sample data via the command line
  77. Managing Magento 2 indexes via the command line
  78. Managing Magento 2 cache via the command line
  79. Managing Magento 2 backup via the command line
  80. Managing Magento 2 set mode (MAGE_MODE)
  81. Transferring your Magento 1 database to Magento 2
  82. 2. Enabling Performance in Magento 2
  83. Configuring Redis for backend cache
  84. Configuring Memcached for session caching
  85. Configuring Varnish as the Full Page Cache
  86. Configuring Magento 2 with CloudFlare
  87. Configuring optimized images in Magento 2
  88. Configuring Magento 2 with HTTP/2
  89. Configuring Magento 2 performance testing
  90. 3. Creating Catalogs and Categories
  91. Create a Root Catalog
  92. Create subcategories
  93. Manage attribute sets
  94. Create products
  95. Manage products in a catalog grid
  96. 4. Managing Your Store
  97. Creating shipping and tax rules
  98. Managing customer groups
  99. Configuring inventories
  100. Configuring currency rates
  101. Managing advanced pricing
  102. 5. Creating Magento 2 Extensions – the Basics
  103. Initializing extension basics
  104. Working with database models
  105. Creating tables using setup scripts
  106. Creating a web route and controller to display data
  107. Creating system configuration fields
  108. Creating a backend data grid
  109. Creating a backend form to add/edit data
  110. 6. Creating Magento 2 Extensions – Advanced
  111. Using dependency injection to pass classes to your own class
  112. Modifying functions with the use of plugins – Interception
  113. Creating your own XML module configuration file
  114. Creating your own product type
  115. Working with service layers/contracts
  116. Creating a Magento CLI command option
  117. 3. Module 3
  118. 1. Planning for Magento
  119. Technical considerations
  120. Global-Website-Store methodology
  121. Planning for multiple stores
  122. Summary
  123. 2. Managing Products
  124. Managing products the customer focused way
  125. Creating products
  126. Managing inventory
  127. Pricing tools
  128. Autosettings
  129. Related products, up-sells, and cross-sells
  130. Importing products
  131. Summary
  132. 3. Designs and Themes
  133. The concept of theme inheritance
  134. Default installation of design packages and themes
  135. Installing third-party themes
  136. Inline translations
  137. Working with theme variants
  138. Customizing themes
  139. Customizing layouts
  140. Summary
  141. 4. Configuring to Sell
  142. Payment methods
  143. Shipping methods
  144. Managing taxes
  145. Transactional e-mails
  146. Summary
  147. 5. Managing Non-Product Content
  148. Summary
  149. 6. Marketing Tools
  150. Promotions
  151. Newsletters
  152. Using sitemaps
  153. Optimizing for search engines
  154. Summary
  155. 7. Extending Magento
  156. The new Magento module architecture
  157. Extending Magento functionality with Magento plugins
  158. Building your own extensions
  159. Summary
  160. 8. Optimizing Magento
  161. Indexing and caching
  162. Caching in Magento 2 – not just FPC
  163. Tuning your server for speed
  164. Summary
  165. 9. Advanced Techniques
  166. Version control
  167. Magento cron
  168. Backing up your database
  169. Upgrading Magento
  170. Summary
  171. 10. Pre-Launch Checklist
  172. System configurations
  173. Design configurations
  174. Search engine optimization
  175. Sales configurations
  176. Product configurations
  177. Maintenance configurations
  178. Summary
  179. Index

Installing Magento 2 sample data via GUI

Installing Magento 2 via the graphical user interface (GUI) is not new. Now, we will be installing a new clean version including the sample data.

The sample data can be installed during and at the end of the procedure. We will be using a composer.json file for our setup prerequisites. First, we will be installing a clean version with sample data, and later, I will show you how to install it at the end in case you already have a preinstalled version.

Getting ready

For this recipe, we will use a Droplet and NGINX, at DigitalOcean, https://www.digitalocean.com/. We will be using NGINX, PHP-FPM, and a Composer-based setup. No other prerequisites are required.

How to do it...

For the first step, you can either create a new Droplet or rebuild a clean Droplet based on a Ubuntu or RedHat DigitalOcean image.

The option to rebuild is located in the DigitalOcean control panel in the Destroy menu and then rebuild Droplet:

How to do it...

The steps to install Magento 2 sample data via GUI are as follows:

  1. Preferably, pick the new snapshot or the already created one and press Rebuild from Image. The rebuild will take around 60 seconds.
  2. Now log in to your new or current Droplet. We will be referring to a new build Droplet throughout this recipe.
  3. Now let's download the latest Magento 2 version including sample data. Go to https://www.magentocommerce.com/download, pick Full Release with Sample Data (ZIP with sample data), and unpack this in your web directory. We refer to /var/www/html in this recipe.

    If you are using a ZIP package, make sure that you install the unzip package first, running the following command on the shell:

    apt-get install unzip
    
  4. Now let's set the ownership and permissions:
    chown -R www-data:www-data /var/www/html
    
    find . -type d -exec chmod 770 {} \; && find . -type f -exec chmod 660 {} \; && chmod u+x bin/magento
    
  5. Now we use Composer to resolve all of our dependencies. Run the following command from the shell:
    cd /var/www/html/ && composer install
    

    During the installation process, you will get a notice to create a GitHub OAuth token. The download rate limit is pretty small. Copy the URL from your shell window in your browser, log in at GitHub or create an account, and create the token.

  6. Next, we will be using the setup wizard to continue the rest of the installation. In this chapter, we will be using the shell installation method. Go to your favorite browser and enter the following URL:

    http://yourdomain.com/setup

    Continue your flow until Step 4: Customize Your Store. As we have chosen a Magento 2 package including sample data, all software modules are preinstalled and listed in the advanced modules configurations list.

    Here is an overview of all the modules selected by Magento that can be managed during installation:

    How to do it...
  7. Now, continue the rest of the steps and install Magento 2. Installing sample data can take some time, so don't close or refresh your browser.

    The progress bar and console log will share all details regarding the current status:

    How to do it...

Congratulations, you just finished the installation of Magento 2 including sample data. Now go to your browser using yourdomain.com; you will see the default Magento 2 layout theme called Luma, as follows:

How to do it...

How it works…

Let's recap and find out what we did throughout this recipe. In steps 1 through 6, we created a Magento 2 version including sample data. The process is almost the same as we did in the previous chapter. The most important change is that we downloaded a full version including sample data. In this build, Magento submitted all of the media files and data sample packages that we need to complete the process. During the graphical setup, we were able to choose which sample data packages are needed. This process could take some time to complete.

There's more…

In the /var directory, you can find the following hidden file with the current state of the installed sample data:

less /var/www/html/var/.sample-data-state.flag

Want to start all over again? Magento 2 has a magic uninstall option that cleans everything on the fly, cache, and database. You can use the php bin/magento setup:uninstall command on the shell, as shown here:

root@mage2cookbook:/var/www/html# php bin/magento setup:uninstall
Are you sure you want to uninstall Magento?[y/N]y
Starting Magento uninstallation:
Cache cleared successfully
Cleaning up database `magento2`
File system cleanup:
/var/www/html/pub/static/_requirejs
/var/www/html/pub/static/adminhtml
/var/www/html/pub/static/frontend
/var/www/html/var/cache
/var/www/html/var/composer_home
/var/www/html/var/di
/var/www/html/var/generation
/var/www/html/var/log
/var/www/html/var/page_cache
/var/www/html/var/tmp
/var/www/html/var/view_preprocessed
/var/www/html/app/etc/config.php
/var/www/html/app/etc/env.php