On Mon, 31 Dec 2001 21:18:02 -0800
James Sparenberg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> studiouisly spake these words to
ponder:
> Ken,
> Actually a hand edit isn't that bad it's well documented as you go
> through the doc. Most important change is to workgroup.... (all
> boxes must be the same workgroup Windows and Linux... to avoid a
> lot of hassles) Try one more thing... ESPECIALLY if your using
> Netscape with it's search turned on. Instead of localhost go to
> 127.0.0.1:901
>
ken,
unless you configured your webserver specifically run with xinetd you're
not going to get any joy by trying to bump start that horse by mucking
about like that with xinetd. httpd isn't handled by that guy anyhow. why
not just try restarting the webserver alone like this:
/etc/init.d/httpd status
to see if it's running and:
/etc/init.d/httpd start # to make it go
/etc/init.d/httpd restart # to restart the beast
If, when you check Apache's status and it's is running you'll see a
report back to the screen that looks something like this:
[root@mdw1982 mdw1982]# /etc/init.d/httpd status
Apache is running.
httpd: 9113 5717 5716 5715 5714 20795
Apache-mod_perl is running.
httpd-perl: 20788 20787 20786 20785 20778
Use /etc/init.d/httpd extendedstatus for more information.
As far as i can remember Apache isn't handled by xinetd by default. it
would have to be placed there on purpose for that to be so.
[root@mdw1982 mdw1982]#
--
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