The PHP issues were primarily involved with Wordpress plugins. I had to go 
through and find several that were not compatible with PHP 7. I _think_ I found 
and fixed all of those, but it’s certainly possible that the issue might be 
caused by a bad plugin.

But I don’t know for sure. I’ve tried digging through Apache’s error.log and 
have not found any more obvious error messages to point me at things that need 
fixing.

I’ve tried uninstalling and reinstalling PHP, on the theory that I may have 
confused it by making the jump not only through multiple versions of Debian, 
but also multiple versions of PHP. And yes, I have the PHP mod active in 
Apache. 

Re: getting a core dump… that’s the part I need help with. I did get the 
debugger installed but I am not experienced with how to use it in a way that’d 
let me actually get useful data. 

The big blocking problem would seem to be that I don’t actually know what’s 
causing the problem, so I can’t trigger it on purpose. So it would seem that 
I’d need to run Apache with the debugger somehow in the hope that I’d actually 
catch the problem when it happens? But I don’t know how to do that either.

> On Jan 17, 2020, at 9:12 PM, <to...@tuxteam.de> <to...@tuxteam.de> wrote:
> 
> I'd look first into that PHP part (I'm assuming you're running
> mod_php, so it's in the Apache binary, and a crash in PHP would
> crash the server, too).
> 
> Which kind of problems did you have with PHP?
> 
> Any possibility of getting a core dump you can look into with
> the debugger?
> 
> (Sorry for not looking at your web site -- bad connectivity
> at the moment),
> 
> Cheers
> -- tomás

Reply via email to