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This document applies to Jamroom 2 only!
For current Jamroom 4 Documentation, visit the main Jamroom Documentation section.

When you first installed Jamroom, you might have installed Jamroom into the “jamroom” sub directory on your webserver (or another name you may no longer want to use). If you would like to change the directory name, or make it so that Jamroom is located in your web servers “root” directory, follow these steps:

Changing the Directory name Jamroom is installed in

  1. Log in to your server via SSH or FTP, and change the name of the directory to whatever you want it to be. If your logged in via SSH on a UNIX system, use the “mv” command - i.e. “mv jamroom music” (that’s if you wanted the name of your Jamroom directory to be “music” for example), or simply rename the jamroom folder using your FTP client.
  2. If you have customized the jamroom_path and jamroom_url settings in the jamroom/config/settings.cfg.php, edit that file and ensure that the jamroom_path and jamroom_url settings are correct for your new settings.
  3. Log in to Jamroom as the Master Admin and click on the “tools” menu. Then from the tools menu do the following:
    • Click on the “Reset Jamroom Caches” link to reset the Jamroom cache table.
    • Click on the “Regenerate Artist Themes” link to regenerate all of the artist themes in your Jamroom.
    • Click on the “Update .htaccess Files” option to rebuild the song and upload .htaccess files.

That’s it - your Jamroom should now be running in the new Jamroom Path.

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