There are two locations I look at, but it depends on your OS: I use Debian 10 
and LMDE (Debian 10.2).

/etc/apache2 - where most configuration files are stored. Use the "ls -la" 
command to find out what's inside.
/var/log/apache2/ - where most logs and events are written. Use the "ls -la" 
command to find out what's inside. Some files are compressed if they're older 
than 48 hours but you can unpack them at your leisure.

Use "sudo systemctl status apache2" to list all processes associated with the 
apache2 server.

Eric Shields 🚏 MassTransitHonchkrow

Ask me about the Krowverse Suite of Services.

‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐
On Wednesday, April 28th, 2021 at 8:46 AM, Fabio Aragao 
<fabio_ara...@yahoo.com.br.INVALID> wrote:

> Hello, thanks for answering but what would be these configuration files ??
>
> ____________________________________________________________
> “Nosso futuro é construído pelas decisões que tomamos e não pelas desculpas 
> que damos.”
> (Tiago Brunet)
>
> Fábio Aragão
>
> Em quarta-feira, 28 de abril de 2021 09:02:06 BRT, Nick Folino 
> <n...@folino.us> escreveu:
>
> I suggest a detailed examination of your configuration files to determine 
> what Apache is using the RAM for.
>
> On Wed, Apr 28, 2021 at 7:33 AM Fabio Aragao 
> <fabio_ara...@yahoo.com.br.invalid> wrote:
>
>> Hello, I wish I could answer a question.
>> Is there any tool, command or way to monitor Apache in its processes 
>> regarding the consumption of RAM?
>> If using HTOP in linux I see that apache is consuming a lot of memory, how 
>> can I evaluate what is the call, or URL that is causing this ??

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