On Tue, Nov 15, 2011 at 10:29 PM, Mark Montague m...@catseye.org wrote:
On November 15, 2011 15:34 , =?utf-8?B?w5h5dmluZCBMb2RlIC0gRm9ydW1z?=
for...@lode.is wrote:
Have you configured log rotation? When rotating logs, it is common to
gracefully restart apache to write to new log files.
I
Hi:
I have also noticed that apache restarts without me telling it to.
But I don't think this is related to my other question in another thread.
From the log:
[Tue Nov 15 06:45:48 2011] [notice] SIGUSR1 received. Doing graceful restart
[Tue Nov 15 06:45:48 2011] [notice] Apache/2.2.14
Tom Evans [mailto:tevans...@googlemail.com] wrote:
Someone sent it USR1 - as the name suggests, it is a user signal. The
most common/easiest way to send apache a SIGUSR1 is to run apachectl
graceful. Apache doesn't restart itself.
Have you configured log rotation? When rotating logs, it is
On November 15, 2011 15:34 , =?utf-8?B?w5h5dmluZCBMb2RlIC0gRm9ydW1z?=
for...@lode.is wrote:
Have you configured log rotation? When rotating logs, it is common to
gracefully restart apache to write to new log files.
I found the answer in /etc/logrotate.d/apache2
/etc/init.d/apache2 reload is