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 >> -- View this message in context: http://www.nabble.com/no-PHP-scripts-can-write-to-files-tf3846587.html#a10919905 Sent from the Php - Install mailing list archive at Nabble.com.