I am assuming that you get hold of the file through uploading it, correct?
So, when it fails maybe another upload (i.e. script invocation) is happening 
and the previous file gets lost/corrupted/whatever. Try to move the file to 
another dir (maybe /tmp) with a random name and see what happens.

Anyway, I think that this kind of thing should really be delegated to a 
cronjob.

-Stathis

On Wednesday 21 September 2005 20:45, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Yes, but that's been done.  Since these are shared servers, on one I am
> logged in as the user the web server is running as, on the other I can't
> su to nobody, but were there permissions errors, I would have been able to
> capture them.  If permissions caused this, it would fail every time, since
> I'm always writing to the same directory.  Instead it only fails some of
> the time.
>
>   On Wed, 21 Sep 2005, Rasmus Lerdorf wrote:
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> >> You're telling me.  That's why I think php or apache kills it.
> >
> > I didn't really follow this, but typically you can debug exec problems
> > from the command line by switching to the web server user id and running
> > the exact same command.
> >
> > -Rasmus
>
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