RaspberryPi2

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DreamFactory can be installed and configured on Raspberry Pi 2 as an open source IoT gateway.

Since DreamFactory relies on PHP and Laravel frameworks, the existing Raspbian distribution needs to be upgraded from Wheezy to Jessie. The upgrade process involves some manual work, including updating the package sources for Jessie and building PHP 5.6 from the sources. [Ubuntu Mate](https://ubuntu-mate.org/) is a stable, easy-to-use Debian distribution that can run on Raspberry Pi 2. Since it comes with PHP 5.6, it is easy to install all the required dependencies through simple apt-get install commands.

Here is a step-by-step guide to install DreamFactory on Raspberry Pi 2.

      1. Install Ubuntu Mate on Raspberry Pi 2

Follow the same procedure as setting up Raspbian for installing Ubuntu Mate on Raspberry Pi 2. Download the [image](https://ubuntu-mate.org/raspberry-pi/), uncompress it, and write it to a SD card. You can take the help of [Pi Filler](http://ivanx.com/raspberrypi/) to burn the .img file to the SD card. Boot Raspberry Pi with the SD card and follow the on-screen instructions. Make sure that the operating system is successfully installed.

Pi-filler.png

Pi Filler prompting to insert the SD card

Ubuntu-mate.png

Ubuntu Mate Desktop on Raspberry Pi 2

      1. Install Apache, MySQL, and PHP

Open the terminal window and run the following commands:


$ sudo apt-get install –y curl apache2 php5 php5-common php5-cli php5-curl php5-json 
mcrypt php5-mcrypt php5-gd php5-mysql mysql-server mysql-client git


You may be prompted to enter the password for MySQL root user.

Once that's done, open Firefox in Ubuntu Mate Desktop and visit http://localhost to confirm the installation of Apache. You should see the default Apache2 Ubuntu page.

      1. Install phpMyAdmin

phpMyAdmin will be a handy tool that we can use later. Installing it will confirm that the LAMP stack is properly configured. You can setup phpMyAdmin with just one command:


$ sudo apt-get install phpmyadmin


      1. Set up the DreamFactory database in MySQL

DreamFactory expects a database to be in place during the installation. Run the following commands to set up the database in MySQL:


$  mysql -u root –p


Within the MySQL environment, run the following SQL commands:


mysql> create database dreamfactory;
mysql> grant all privileges on dreamfactory.* to df_admin'@'localhost' identified by df_admin';
mysql> quit