Versioned libraries do not work either.
Bostjan
On Wednesday 16 March 2005 23:11, Rasmus Lerdorf wrote:
> Kim Madsen wrote:
> > -Original Message-
> > From: Rasmus Lerdorf [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Sent: Tuesday, March 15, 2005 4:05 AM
> >
> >>>That's why I'd like to stick with apach
Abandon all your hopes, this will not work (unless you do some heavy
programming/patching) because modules interfere with each other. I've been
trying this for a week without success.
Still the best/easiest approach is to set up ordinary apache/PHP4 server
combination with proxy support compile
Kim Madsen wrote:
-Original Message-
From: Rasmus Lerdorf [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, March 15, 2005 4:05 AM
That's why I'd like to stick with apache2 + php5 default and
apache2+php4 just for a single site hosted (the one that uses imp).
See my previous message describing t
-Original Message-
From: Rasmus Lerdorf [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, March 15, 2005 4:05 AM
> > That's why I'd like to stick with apache2 + php5 default and
> > apache2+php4 just for a single site hosted (the one that uses imp).
> See my previous message describing the Proxy
mbneto wrote:
Simply.
My server has moved from php4 to php5 and my webmail program IMP can't
be upgraded before I find out how to do that safely for my users.
Now I have sites that need php5 and only one that does not work with it (imp).
That's why I'd like to stick with apache2 + php5 default and
Simply.
My server has moved from php4 to php5 and my webmail program IMP can't
be upgraded before I find out how to do that safely for my users.
Now I have sites that need php5 and only one that does not work with it (imp).
That's why I'd like to stick with apache2 + php5 default and
apache2+php
Richard Lynch wrote:
...
[good stuff]
...
>
> Maybe if you told us WHY you need 4 & 5 we'd have better answers for ya.
>
Agreed! Tell us what you specifically need and we can provide better
answers. If you're wanting to test PHP5 with your current scripts then
it would make sense to do exactly w
> What I am trying to avoid is having 2 copies of the same program
> installed...
Well, if you're gonna have PHP 4 and PHP 5, you're gonna have to have two
copies of PHP...
You could run both under Apache 1.x, but running PHP 5 with Apache 1.x
means you aren't going to be taking advantage of any
Hi Hans,
What I am trying to avoid is having 2 copies of the same program installed...
- mb
On Sun, 13 Mar 2005 22:06:15 -0500, Hans Zaunere <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Any tips regarding the configuration of php and/or apache ?
>
> Per option 1 below, they were saying two installs of Ap
> Do you mean by using virtual host directives of apache ?
>
> But how about the configuration to make requests for certain
> directories to be handled by php4 or php5.
>
> For ex.
>
> /var/www/html/site needs php5 but /var/www/html/legacy does not
> support php5 so I have to run php4.
>
> Any
Hi Hans,
Do you mean by using virtual host directives of apache ?
But how about the configuration to make requests for certain
directories to be handled by php4 or php5.
For ex.
/var/www/html/site needs php5 but /var/www/html/legacy does not
support php5 so I have to run php4.
Any tips regardi
Richard Lynch wrote:
timothy johnson wrote:
Is there a way to install two version of php on the same machine, and
use them for two different users?
Option 1:
Install two copies of Apache, with different httpd.conf files, on two
different ports.
Somebody gets stuck using http://example.com:81 (or a
> > Is there a way to install two version of php on the same machine, and
> > use them for two different users?
>
> Option 1:
> Install two copies of Apache, with different httpd.conf files, on two
> different ports.
> Somebody gets stuck using http://example.com:81 (or any port but 80) but
> th
timothy johnson wrote:
> Is there a way to install two version of php on the same machine, and
> use them for two different users?
Option 1:
Install two copies of Apache, with different httpd.conf files, on two
different ports.
Somebody gets stuck using http://example.com:81 (or any port but 80) b
[snip]
[snip]
> No.
>
Yes. ;)
[/snip]
Why?
[/snip]
Never mind...Friday afternoon...it's five o'clock right here.
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[snip]
> No.
>
Yes. ;)
[/snip]
Why?
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> [snip]
> Is there a way to install two version of php on the same machine, and
> use them for two different users?
> [/snip]
>
> No.
Yes!
Having that in my LiteSpeed-Servers configuration with 3 different PHP
Versions. No problem if you use CGI or fastCgi's. On Apache also possible
via the VHo
Jay Blanchard wrote:
[snip]
Is there a way to install two version of php on the same machine, and
use them for two different users?
[/snip]
No.
Yes. ;)
--
John C. Nichel
ÜberGeek
KegWorks.com
716.856.9675
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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[snip]
Is there a way to install two version of php on the same machine, and
use them for two different users?
[/snip]
No.
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Is there a way to install two version of php on the same machine, and
use them for two different users?
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