During the package installation, the installer prompts to configure the Jitsi Meet package, the first configuration window will prompt us to enter the hostname, set this to the subdomain for accessing Jitsi Meet, for example,. If none of the above is found it then it installs NGINX by default.Ĥ. So, during the installation process, the installer will check if NGINX or Apache HTTP server is present, (in that order) and configure a server block (or virtual host) within the configuration of the webserver it finds installed on your system, to serve Jitsi Meet. Note: Jitsi Meet requires an HTTP server to serve it. Next, update the APT package manager’s package listings from its known repositories, and install the Jitsi Meet package as follows. $ echo 'deb stable/' | sudo tee /etc/apt//jitsi-stable.list > /dev/nullģ. $ curl | sudo sh -c 'gpg -dearmor > /usr/share/keyrings/jitsi-keyring.gpg' The echo command adds the official Jitsi package repository to the apt package management system and tells apt to utilize it to install the package. The curl command downloads and installs the Jitsi GPG package signing key and imports it into apt package manager configuration. Let’s add the Jitsi repository to the package sources to make the Jitsi Meet packages available to install by running the following commands. Next, we need to install the Jitsi package from the official project repository. Create A Record for Domain in DNS Step 2: Installing Jitsi in Ubuntu ServerĢ. Let’s go to the domain name registration service provider’s web console and access the domain’s advanced settings, click Add New Record of type A and point the record to your server public IP address as shown in the following screenshot. Our test domain is, so we need to create a subdomain, for example, to enable team members to access Jitsi Meet to have conferences. To start with, we will create a DNS A record for accessing the Jitsi Meet application. Step 1: Creating a Domain DNS A Record for Accessing Jitsi Meetġ.
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