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Install Cockpit on Ubuntu 20.04/18.04/19.04 & Debian 10/9
Welcome to our guide on How to Install Cockpit on Ubuntu 20.04/18.04/16.04 & Debian 10/9. Linux Cockpit is an Open Source, lightweight, web-based Server/system administration tool originally written for RHEL family Linux distributions. Cockpit interacts directly with the operating system from a real Linux session in a browser with easy to use interface.
Features of Cockpit
Cockpit allows you to perform:
- Service Management – Start, stop, restart, reload, disable, enable, mask e.t.c
- User Account Management – Add users, delete, Lock, assign Administrator role, set password, force password change, Add Public SSH keys e.t.c.
- Firewall Management
- Cockpit Container management
- SELinux Policy management
- Journal v2
- iSCSI Initiator configurations
- SOS-reporting
- NFS Client setup
- Configure OpenConnect VPN Server
- Privileged Actions – Shutdown, Restart system
- Join Machine to Domain
- Hardware Device Management
- System Updates for dnf, yum, apt hosts
- Manage the Kubernetes Node
Install Cockpit on Ubuntu 20.04/18.04
Cockpit is available on Ubuntu official repositories. The installation is as simple as running a one-liner set of commands:
sudo apt update
sudo apt install cockpit
Install Cockpit on Debian 10 / Debian 9
Install Cockpit on Debian 10:
sudo apt update
sudo apt install cockpit
Install Cockpit on Debian 9:
Cockpit is included in Debian 9 (Stretch) backports. Enable backports repository on Debian 9 by running the command:
echo 'deb http://deb.debian.org/debian stretch-backports main' | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/backports.list
Then update your package list and install cockpit:
sudo apt update
sudo apt install cockpit
Accessing cockpit web interface
Cockpit service should be automatically started after the installation. You can confirm if service is running using:
$ systemctl status cockpit
If the service is not running, start it by running the following command in your terminal:
sudo systemctl start cockpit
Cockpit service binds to port 9090
once it is started. Access its web interface by opening http://[ServerIP|Hostname]:9090
.
If you have a running UFW firewall service, allow port 9090.
sudo ufw allow 9090
Ignore Invalid Certificate Warning.
Ubuntu Login Page:
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