> You may want to do a phpinfo() on your existing installation, to
> determine the configuration directives that were used. Likely, you
> will want to use the same ones (or nearly the same) with this new
> build.
I have that :
System Linux localhost.localdomain 2.4.7-10BOOT #1 Thu Sep 6 16:15:0
>> If you were the person who installed PHP before, then you probably
>> remember the process. It's a configure/make/make install process.
CI> Sure :)
CI> But I rent a dedicated server with all preinstalled, PHP, MySQL ...
Ok, if you're saying you do not have root access, then you have to
h
> If you were the person who installed PHP before, then you probably
> remember the process. It's a configure/make/make install process.
Sure :)
But I rent a dedicated server with all preinstalled, PHP, MySQL ...
Bye
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CI> I have a dedied server (with linux RedHat 7.2) and PHP 4.1.2.
CI> I'd like to update to the version 4.2.1
Wise. Be sure to read the changelog!
CI> Is it enought :
CI> tar -zxvf phpfile4-2-1.gz
No. All that does is unpack the distribution. You must now build the PHP
module.
If you were t
Hello,
I have a dedied server (with linux RedHat 7.2) and PHP 4.1.2.
I'd like to update to the version 4.2.1
Is it enought :
tar -zxvf phpfile4-2-1.gz
It's the first time I install PHP on linux in general I work on Windows.
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*shakes head* i know that $date is a string.
your script is failing because you are trying to
write to directory "C:\\ccl_www\\$date", which
does not exist. you have to create it before
you try and write files into it.
jtjohnston wrote:
> No!? $date is a string?!
>
> $date = date ("MD");
>
>
At 17.03.2002 17:09, you wrote:
Hey folks, I read this with half of mind, but as I know, the function
date needs something to convert from.
> > $date = date ("MD");
for my opinion it should be called $date=date("MD",time());
or $date=date("MD",mktime(..));
then everything should work
$to_p
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] says...
> No!? $date is a string?!
>
> $date = date ("MD");
>
> How does that make a difference?
>
> $to_path = "c:\\ccl_www\\".$date."\\ccl_www\\";
>
> You want me to change it to:
>
> $to_path = "c:\\ccl_www\\$date\\ccl_www\\";
>
> Does an
No!? $date is a string?!
$date = date ("MD");
How does that make a difference?
$to_path = "c:\\ccl_www\\".$date."\\ccl_www\\";
You want me to change it to:
$to_path = "c:\\ccl_www\\$date\\ccl_www\\";
Does anyone follow why?
>Scott Furt wrote:
> I meant, have you created a physical director
I meant, have you created a physical directory
named $date?
That's your problem. There's no directory
named $date on your computer, and you're
trying to write files into a non-existent
directory.
jtjohnston wrote:
> I have created date :)
> $date = date ("MD");
> That's not it. It seems to fail
I have created date :)
$date = date ("MD");
That's not it. It seems to fail at one level or another, I think, becuase the
function calls itself - and probably gets lost somehow.
John
> ... i think you might have to create the
> $date directory before writing a file to it.
> writing to /tmp/dir/fi
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