Odoo version 11 is officially released now. You can find its Source Code for Community Edition from this GITHUB LINK
Here, in this tutorial I`ll explain how to install Odoo version 11 (Community Edition) on Ubuntu 16.04, same steps can also work for previous Ubuntu version(s) till version 14.
If Python Is Already Installed, Make Sure It Is 3.5 Or Above That, Previous Versions Are Not Compatible With Odoo 11
Open the terminal and execute below commands step-by-step to achieve excellence:
Update apt source-lists:
sudo apt-get update
Create the Odoo user that will own and run the application
sudo adduser --system --home=/opt/odoo --group odoo
Install and configure the database server, PostgreSQL
sudo apt-get install -y postgresql
Once the PostgreSQL is installed, next we setup a new PostgreSQL user for our application. This user will be used for making all the database interaction form the Odoo.
sudo service postgresql start sudo su - postgres createuser --createdb --username postgres --no-createrole --no-superuser --pwprompt odoo Enter password for new role: ***** Enter it again:*****
Finally exit from the Postgres user account:
exit
Your Odoo server may encounter some issue(s), so I`m also mentioning few issues & their way around to fix them:
FIX 1: You need to upgrade ”wkhtmltopdf” to 0.12.1 You can also check this LINK
sudo wget https://github.com/wkhtmltopdf/wkhtmltopdf/releases/download/0.12.1/wkhtmltox-0.12.1_linux-trusty-amd64.deb
sudo dpkg -i wkhtmltox-0.12.1_linux-trusty-amd64.deb
sudo cp /usr/local/bin/wkhtmltopdf /usr/bin sudo cp /usr/local/bin/wkhtmltoimage /usr/bin
FIX 2: Check if your PostgreSQL has a proper encoding(UTF-8) or not, used in Odoo Application, if not you can do like this:
sudo su - postgres psql update pg_database set encoding = pg_char_to_encoding('UTF8'); \q exit
sudo service postgresql restart
Install the necessary Python libraries & other needed libraries needed for the application:
Odoo 11 will use python 3.5(which is pre-installed on our Ubuntu), previously it uses Python 2.7, so in order to install all dependent libraries easily we`ll install pip3 in our server, as:
sudo apt-get install -y python3-pip
Once pip3 is installed on your server, we can proceed with installing other dependent libraries using pip3 as:
pip3 install Babel decorator docutils ebaysdk feedparser gevent greenlet html2text Jinja2 lxml Mako MarkupSafe mock num2words ofxparse passlib Pillow psutil psycogreen psycopg2 pydot pyparsing PyPDF2 pyserial python-dateutil python-openid pytz pyusb PyYAML qrcode reportlab requests six suds-jurko vatnumber vobject Werkzeug XlsxWriter xlwt xlrd p
Next is to install Odoo Web Dependencies:
sudo apt-get install -y npm
sudo ln -s /usr/bin/nodejs /usr/bin/node
sudo npm install -g less less-plugin-clean-css
sudo apt-get install -y node-less
Once all the packages are installed we are ready to proceed with installing Odoo server.
Installing ODOO version 11 Community Edition hosted on GITHUB.
Make sure you have GIT installed on your system and if not then install with the simple command:
sudo apt-get install -y git
Switch to the Odoo user:
sudo su - odoo -s /bin/bash
Clone the latest branch of Odoo, in our case it is 11.0 from Github:
git clone https://www.github.com/odoo/odoo --depth 1 --branch 11.0 --single-branch .
exit
Next step is to create a configuration file for Odoo. But before doing so w`ll first create the directory for storing logs of Odoo server and assigning proper ownership to the directory:
sudo nano /etc/odoo-server.conf
A sample configuration file will look like this:
[options] ; This is the password that allows database operations: ; admin_passwd = admin db_host = False db_port = False db_user = odoo db_password = False logfile = /var/log/odoo/odoo-server.log addons_path = /opt/odoo/addons,/opt/odoo/odoo/addons
(* You need to use the same password you used back in step 3.)
Once the configuration file is created we will set the ownership rights
sudo chown odoo: /etc/odoo-server.conf
sudo chmod 640 /etc/odoo-server.conf
Installing the boot script
For the final step we need to install a script which will be used to start-up & shut-down the Odoo server automatically, with the correct user. Here is a Link, you can use this script for the same purpose, as:
Paste the same contents of this script to this file. Once it is in the right place you will need to make it executable and owned by root:
sudo chmod 755 /etc/init.d/odoo-server
sudo chown root: /etc/init.d/odoo-server
Testing the server
To start the Odoo server type:
sudo /etc/init.d/odoo-server start
You should now be able to view the log-file as:
sudo nano /var/log/odoo/odoo-server.log
If there are any problems in this step you need to go back and check, feel free to comment on this blog I`ll try my best to help you
[OPTIONAL] Also, in order to debug, you can start the server manually just to check if it actually runs well or not, as:
sudo su – odoo -s /bin/bash
/opt/odoo/odoo-bin
If the log file looks OK, you can check Odoo server running on your browser with url:
http://yourip:8069