I like your detective work, and I agree with your conclusion, however (unfortunately) there is no apache-ssl script in /etc/cron.daily! damn, I was hoping you were on to something.
On Wed, Apr 16, 2003 at 01:06:13PM -0600 or thereabouts, Art Sackett wrote: > On Wed, Apr 16, 2003 at 11:56:45AM -0600, David Wilk wrote: > > > However, I've > > had apache-ssl die two days in a row, and the culprit appears to be some > > process that is sending apache-ssl a SIGUSR1 (what apache-ssl reload or > > httpsdctl graceful issues). > > Hmmmm... I'm looking at a potato machine now, in > /etc/cron.daily/apache-ssl I find: > > # Send a reload signal to the apache server. > if [ -x /usr/bin/killall ] > then > /usr/bin/killall -HUP apache-ssl > else > /etc/init.d/apache-ssl reload > /dev/null > fi > > So, if your machine doesn't have an executable killall, you're going to > use /etc/init.d/apache-ssl's reload, which: > > reload) > echo -ne "Reloading $NAME configuration.\n" > $APACHECTL graceful > ;; > > and $APACHECTL being /usr/sbin/apache-sslctl, the appropriate lines > from graceful) are: > > if $HTTPD -t >/dev/null 2>&1; then > if kill -USR1 $PID ; then > echo "$0 $ARG: httpd gracefully restarted" > else > echo "$0 $ARG: httpd could not be restarted" > ERROR=7 > fi > > So, there's at least one way to get a USR1 sent to apache-ssl. > > -- > ---- Art Sackett ---- > http://www.artsackett.com/ > PGP/GPG Public Key: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (autoresponder) > > In spite of everything, I still believe that people are good at heart. > -- Ann Frank > > > -- > To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] > with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] > -- ******************************* David Wilk System Administrator Community Internet Access, Inc. [EMAIL PROTECTED]