[users@httpd] setting mod_fcgid tmp directory?

2011-09-30 Thread startx
hello. i try to figure out if it is possible to tell mod_fcgid to use a temporary directory other then /tmp , i.e. at best to use a different temp dir for each virtual host. ( i mean the file fcgid writes to if the file is larger then max_mem_request_len) it seems to me that mod_fcgid ignores

Re: [users@httpd] setting mod_fcgid tmp directory?

2011-09-30 Thread startx
On Fri, Sep 30, 2011 at 12:59 AM, startx sta...@plentyfact.org wrote: hello. i try to figure out if it is possible to tell mod_fcgid to use a temporary directory other then /tmp , i.e. at best to use a different temp dir for each virtual host. ( i mean the file fcgid writes to if

Re: [users@httpd] setting mod_fcgid tmp directory?

2011-09-30 Thread Eric Covener
On Fri, Sep 30, 2011 at 4:50 AM, startx sta...@plentyfact.org wrote: On Fri, Sep 30, 2011 at 12:59 AM, startx sta...@plentyfact.org wrote: hello. i try to figure out if it is possible to tell mod_fcgid to use a temporary directory other then /tmp , i.e. at best to use a different temp

Re: [users@httpd] Quick Allow/Deny Question

2011-09-30 Thread Brandon Phelps
I guess I am just a little confused as to why there is a Directory / at all? If my DocumentRoot is set to /var/www then wouldn't that prevent anyone from accessing anything above /var/www in the directory structure anyway, thus making the Directory / kind of pointless? On 09/29/2011 06:44

Re: [users@httpd] Quick Allow/Deny Question

2011-09-30 Thread Pete Houston
You can always Alias or ScriptAlias outside the DocumentRoot. Igor's advice is correct. Pete On Fri, Sep 30, 2011 at 09:14:00AM -0400, Brandon Phelps wrote: I guess I am just a little confused as to why there is a Directory / at all? If my DocumentRoot is set to /var/www then wouldn't that

[users@httpd] Basic reverse proxy is much slower than directly accessing proxied sites?

2011-09-30 Thread John Klimek
I'm running Ubuntu 10.04.3 (LTS) with Apache2 v2.2.14 (Ubuntu). My configuration is 100% default except I've enabled the folllowing modules: mod_proxy mod_proxy_connect mod_proxy_ftp mod_proxy_http mod_rewrite Then, in my custom.conf (/etc/apache2/conf.d/custom) I have some very simple

[users@httpd] problem with rotatelogs time of day formatting

2011-09-30 Thread Albert Lunde
I'm trying to set up piped access and error logs, with rotatelogs, as I'm porting the configuration from Solaris box to a small cluster of Linux VMs running RHEL 5. We're trying to use file name patterns like: error_log_chnuinfow3.%Y-%m-%d-%H_%M_%S.txt The date substitutions are working, but