On Tue, 10 Oct 2000, Ron Johnson, Jr. wrote:
> Thank you. Since this is a minor agrivation at a low volume
> site, I think, though, that I will wait until 7.2 is released.
> Since 7.2 is still beta, the -30mdk might increase to -31 or -32.
7.2 is in feature freeze, so don't wait for -31 or -32.
>"Ron Johnson, Jr." wrote:
> > Messages aren't flushed to the access_log until apache is
> > shut down nicely via "httpd stop". Also, when they are flushed,
> > they are not in chronological order.
> >
> > Has anyone else experienced this problem?
Actually, it will write when some trigger thres
Apache will know... ;-)
"Ron Johnson, Jr." wrote:
> Cecil Watson wrote:
> >
> > apachectl graceful
> > Will gracefully restart Apache and write to the log file. This is done when
> > there are no active connections.
>
> Interesting. Obvious question: how do u know when there are
> no active co
Cecil Watson wrote:
>
> apachectl graceful
> Will gracefully restart Apache and write to the log file. This is done when
> there are no active connections.
Interesting. Obvious question: how do u know when there are
no active connections?
Ron
--
+
apachectl graceful
Will gracefully restart Apache and write to the log file. This is done when
there are no active connections.
"Ron Johnson, Jr." wrote:
> Messages aren't flushed to the access_log until apache is
> shut down nicely via "httpd stop". Also, when they are flushed,
> they are not
Jean-Michel Dault wrote:
>
> On Mon, 9 Oct 2000, Ron Johnson, Jr. wrote:
>
> > Messages aren't flushed to the access_log until apache is
> > shut down nicely via "httpd stop". Also, when they are flushed,
> > they are not in chronological order.
>
> Yes, it is due to the SGI optimizations, mor
On Mon, 9 Oct 2000, Ron Johnson, Jr. wrote:
> Messages aren't flushed to the access_log until apache is
> shut down nicely via "httpd stop". Also, when they are flushed,
> they are not in chronological order.
Yes, it is due to the SGI optimizations, more precisely, the buffered_logs
feature. T
Messages aren't flushed to the access_log until apache is
shut down nicely via "httpd stop". Also, when they are flushed,
they are not in chronological order.
Has anyone else experienced this problem?
Ron
--
+--+
| Ron Johnson, Jr.