Hi all,
It's probably become obvious that I don't keep up on my Linuxchix mail as
often as I should, and for that I apologize. My only excuse is that I'm
usually hip-deep in other things, including:
1. building a brand new Linuxchix site
2. wrestling with PHP
3. work (as usual)
4. a couple
Excerpts from linuxchix: 22-Oct-100 [techtalk] Re: losing time by "Mary
E. Mulderrig"@spea
> I wish it were that simple !!
> The more time that passes the further behind the clock
> falls. It has taken a week but know it is behind by a full four hours !
Is it possible that root sees the hardware
I wish it were that simple !!
The more time that passes the further behind the clock
falls. It has taken a week but know it is behind by a full four hours !
I sure as heck can't figure out why unless there is a battery
that has gone bad on the mother board. ...but then why is the time fine
in us
> /bin/mkdir ./foo
> chgrp nobody ./foo/
> chmod 770 ./foo/
Thanks so much Eric. The mod_dav module on my Apache server requires a
directory that is writable by the Apache process. I tried all variations of
directories and still I got "could not open the lock database" errors in the
httpd error_l
> So, what are they supposed to RTF? A brand-newbie often just doesn't
> know where the M is.
Very true. Your suggestions are on point. And when I am lost in the fog
(several times a day), nothing beats www.google.com! Also, it took me a long
time to find out that some files, as well as c
It's usually a good idea to back up a working copy of httpd.conf
before messing around with it ;-)
Eric R. Turner
On Mon, 23 Oct 2000, Christian MacAuley wrote:
>
> > I have found out that my webroot dir is in /home/httpd/html/index.html
> > I tried to configure as you have pointed out in etc/
Excerpts from linuxchix: 23-Oct-100 Re: [techtalk] last straw (.. by
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> I don't want to be bitchy or rtfm-y, I'd just like to point out that it's
> very important to do research.
So, what are they supposed to RTF? A brand-newbie often just doesn't
know where the M is. I also
Ok, I really need to say something. For the past few weeks I've seen
requests for help come in about pretty basic stuff. No problem with that,
everyone starts somewhere, but it strikes me as a little out of hand when
instructions on making and changing permissions on directories are necessary
Hmm... root user set to a different time zone???
"Mary E. Mulderrig" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
> Hi
>
> I have a quick question. I am using Red Hat 6.2
> and have noticed that over the past ~week my system clock
> is losing time. This is only apparent when I am in root mode.
>
> When I
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tech
Hi
I have a quick question. I am using Red Hat 6.2
and have noticed that over the past ~week my system clock
is losing time. This is only apparent when I am in root mode.
When I try a user account the time is accurate. Any ideas ?
I am running Linux on a two year old Dell Dimension and have h
> I have found out that my webroot dir is in /home/httpd/html/index.html
> I tried to configure as you have pointed out in etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
> as follow
> document root /home/antonxie/www/htdocs
> and have mkdir-ed all necessary directory
> I restart the computer...it doesn't work either
Dear Christian,
I have found out that my webroot dir is in /home/httpd/html/index.html
I tried to configure as you have pointed out in etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
as follow
document root /home/antonxie/www/htdocs
and have mkdir-ed all necessary directory
I restart the computer...it doesn't work eit
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