Well Tim,
I woke up. Apparantly other file types work as well as php extensions.
Seems, when I tried this I had so much trouble.
My experience is with Windows and it's quite limited resources.
Glad it all came to a good conclusion.
Blessings,
Chetan
>It appears that SELinux was configured enabled by default with the
>CentOS installation. That was messing all of this up.
>Tim McGeary '99, '06G
>Senior Systems Specialist
>Lehigh University
>610-758-4998
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Tim McGeary wrote:
>> After getting all of my modules finally seen dynamically, I'm trying
to
>>install three different PHP applications, and all of them are
>>complaining that they cannot write to files.
>>
>> They are all owned by apache.apache so the webserver has ownership,
and
>>I have tried permissions from 644 to 777 with no luck whatsoever.
>>
>>I confirmed that /etc/php.ini does NOT have safe_mode turned on, but I
>>cannot figure out what other setting or installation issue would be
>>causing these PHP installation scripts to be unable to write.
>>
>> Any ideas?
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Tim
>>
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