On 9 Oct 2017, at 12:46, Mojca Miklavec wrote:
> On 8 October 2017 at 22:05, Ryan Schmidt wrote:
>>> On Oct 8, 2017, at 14:46, db wrote:
>>> Until then, since I always build from source, I rather save CPU time.
>>> Speaking of which, getting back to my first post, is there any way to query
>>> t
On Oct 23, 2017, at 12:16 PM, Marius Schamschula wrote:
> I ran a vanilla Mac OS X box as a server, using the built in apache, etc.,
> with a few hand compiled additions in the days of 10.2, 10.3 and 10.4. Easy
> enough, when you are used to running Linux (I switched from mkLinux - Apple’s
> mi
I ran a vanilla Mac OS X box as a server, using the built in apache, etc., with
a few hand compiled additions in the days of 10.2, 10.3 and 10.4. Easy enough,
when you are used to running Linux (I switched from mkLinux - Apple’s
microkernel Linux on PPC).
The late Mac OS X Server (10.6.8 Server
Apparently PhP is 7.1.7 - But I haven’t verified that version information yet.
There are other issues as well besides currency. . .
The Apple version is “technically” only available if you are running OSX
Server, and unless Apple has dramatically improved both the GUI and Support,
OSX Server, i
Apple is famous for not keeping these packages up to date.
MacPorts apache2 is already at version 2.4.28. When will Apple update? Who
knows…
Which version of php 7.1 does Apple have? 7.1.10? When will they update to the
current version?
Marius
--
Marius Schamschula
> On Oct 23, 2017, at 10:
OnSun, 22 Oct 2017 13:48:02 -0400,"William H. Magill" mailto:mag...@mac.com>> wrote:
>
> ...for what it’s worth. I note that High Sierra now includes both Apache2
> 2.4.27 and PhP 7.1 in its distribution … already integrated.
So why might we still need the MacPorts versions of Apache2 and PHP 7