Audio,
You can always start your scripts with [re]nice() syscall to lower
your process (perl script in this case) priority.
Regards,
Tamer
-Original Message-
From: Audio Phile [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, August 26, 2008 8:57 PM
To: users@httpd.apache.org
Subject: [EMAIL PROT
Hi Guys,
I have a "little" problem: my server is running whit mod_vhost_alias and
mod_fastcgi (i only use it whit php5-cgi). I Use it whit VirtualScriptAlias
directive so i haven't to restart the webserver every time i add an user
(of course i haven't any vhost).
For security reasons i MUST use
Hi,
Thank you for the reply, much appreciated.
The permissions in the /apache/logs directory are all
-rw-rw-r--
however, in my attempt (temporarily) to get things working, i did chmod 777
on all directories - and this still didn't work (i got the rewrite lock
error still).
The reason why i am
Hi Michael,
Did you tried the following "ulimit -S -n `ulimit -H -n` ?
This will assign the max open file hard limits value to your soft limit.
Can you check the output of ulimit -H -n and ulimit -S -n?Former gives your
hard and the latter gives your soft limits respectively.
Even if the above step
Hi,
is the owner of that directories the same user thet you have set in "User"
and "Group" (apache2.conf)?
On Wed, 27 Aug 2008 09:30:45 +0100, "Sam Wootton" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Thank you for the reply, much appreciated.
>
> The permissions in the /apache/logs directory are al
Hi,
Yeap, in the conf/httpd.conf, i have:
User snapple
Group admin
This is the gourp i had in my old apache 1.3 set up.
This is my admin user for my machine, and the user i used when isntalling
apache2.
This is the odd thing, its all the same set up as my old apache, fairly
simple stuff - just
Is there a way how to restart Apache if pid file is missing?
I use my own demon.It happened that the demon deleted /var/run/apache2.pid
file.
Then I can not use /etc/init.d/apache2 restart
but I must restart my Debian server by init 6 .
After that the Apache starts normally.
So, if the init
Others will answer this better I'm sure and I haven't used Debian in a
while but I would do:
$sudo ps ax | grep httpd
$sudo kill "lowest httpd process id goes here"
$sudo /etc/init.d/apache2 start
Or, since it looks like /var/run/httpd.pid contains only the pid of
the first (lowest number
Hello list,
I've spent a lot of time trying to find a way to use at least 2 Radius
Servers in order to authenticate users in a reverse proxy config.
I currently use httpd-2.2.9 & mod_auth_xradius-0.4.6. I have tried a lot
of combination even with several Radius products (RSA, ActivID, ...) but
to
On Wed, Aug 27, 2008 at 7:41 AM, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Is there a way how to restart Apache if pid file is missing?
> I use my own demon.It happened that the demon deleted /var/run/apache2.pid
> file.
> Then I can not use /etc/init.d/apache2 restart
>
> but I must restart my Debian ser
On Aug 27, 2008, at 6:13 AM, Bradley Giesbrecht wrote:
Others will answer this better I'm sure and I haven't used Debian in
a while but I would do:
Debian names its httpd 'apache2'.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ cat /var/run/apache2.pid
5692
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ sudo rm /var/run/apache2.pid
[sudo] p
On Wed, Aug 27, 2008 at 01:41:48PM +0200, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Is there a way how to restart Apache if pid file is missing?
> I use my own demon.It happened that the demon deleted /var/run/apache2.pid
> file.
> Then I can not use /etc/init.d/apache2 restart
>
> but I must restart my Deb
Tamer,
Thank you very much for the reply. I googled around for the proper syntax of
your suggestion as well as which config file I need to edit with it, but I came
up with a big fat 0. Can you provide a few more details for me? Apologies in
advance, I am a newbie with apache2 :)
Tamer Embab
I wish to add a user account for my friend on my Apache2 webserver
(running in Debian).
How can I limit how much disk space he can use and limit how much bandwidth?
Also I would like it so he cannot explore the filesystem and is
limited to his $HOME directory only.
Zach
If you are running on unix, the easiest way to probably do this is by calling
the "setpriority" from within your perl script like this:
setpriority(WHICH,WHO,PRIORITY);
To set your current running perlscript to the lowest priority, you would call
setpriority(0, $$, 20);
$$ is your script's proces
Audio Phile:
Do you have a comparable example for ActiveState Perl on Windows?
At 03:12 PM 8/27/2008, you wrote:
If you are running on unix, the easiest way to probably do this is
by calling the "setpriority" from within your perl script like this:
setpriority(WHICH,WHO,PRIORITY);
To set your
Hi Sam
> The permissions in the /apache/logs directory are all
Lower case A? No 2?
See below.
> -rw-rw-r--
>
> however, in my attempt (temporarily) to get things working, i did
> chmod 777 on all directories - and this still didn't work (i got the
> rewrite lock error still).
[snip]
>
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