Hello,
I have two CentOS 5.5 boxes. What happens is that httpd goes up to 100%
CPU load, and is unable to serve any pages. I have tried to track this
down but with no success. I have had a problem since February, that
occurs on Sundays - but at different clock hours. I have of course
checked
Hi all,
I'm new in this group.
I ask you if it is possible to monitoring the function calls that Apache
makes when it must satisfy a request. For example, suppose we have a LAMP
architecture (this is my architecture) and I want to display all the users
in a database table (it exists). Is it
This is the Apache web server users' group.
Your mention of PHP suggests you might be in the wrong group.
This is not a PHP group.
HTH
Lee
On 03/05/2011 17:23, marco di sano wrote:
Hi all,
I'm new in this group.
I ask you if it is possible to monitoring the function calls that
Apache makes
On 5/3/2011 10:23 AM, marco di sano wrote:
I ask you if it is possible to monitoring the function calls that Apache
makes when it
must satisfy a request.
I tried to use strace but it traces the Unix system calls and not the php
functions that
Apache does when a request must to be served.
Thank you all once again, on assisting with this issue. The requirement was
unclear till we were asked to point all the URL that should not go to
page-not-found page to /index.php.
Now we did not have to create a negation on request_uri rather a simple
RewriteRule to point those pages to
Hi, I am using httpd 2.2.17, build from source on Debian Squeeze AMD64
(quadcore Xeon, 4GB RAM). This server is running a community website
that gets around 100,000 page requests per day - so, not really all that
busy. The system always seems to have plenty of resources available.
The site