On Tue, 21 Dec 1999, Greg Olszewski wrote about, Re: Minicom..... and an idea!!!!!!:
> On Tue, Dec 21, 1999 at 08:45:47AM -0700, John Starkey wrote:
>
> They start off by running a number specified in httpd.conf, which is
> somewhere on redhat-- Richard? -- it's in /etc/apache on my debian
> machines.. The reason for a bunch running is so that if you get a lot
> of connections at once, apache isn't totally ambushed...
redhat = /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
startfile=/etc/httpd/sbin/apachectl start | stop etc.
Slackware = /var/lib/apache/conf/httpd.conf
startfile = /var/lib/apache/sbin/apachectl start | stop etc.
httpd is only needed if you have your own home page written and waiting for
folks to look at, or you need it for proxies and cache.
>
> Oh. the other place I remeber that apache config files used to be in
> is /var/lib/apache
> also If you have 1-15 minutes to kill (dpending on size of disk
> and speed of machine )
> find / -name httpd.conf
> will tell you where the files are.
>
> Also, if you try to kill them, they will probably create more..
> to stop apache you want
>
> apachectl stop
>
> >
> > So you can log into more than 6 vts. I guess that makes sense. I think I read that
>you can have
> > a few hundred users on at once. Are these vts treated as separate users? If I sign
>on as root 4
> > times. Does Linux see that as four separate users or as root x 4???? Seems like
>users x 4 is
> > the only way.
> >
> root x4
> There's nothing to stop you from having a nearly infinite number of
> users logged on at once( except memory and cpu ).
>
> have fun
>
> greg
> --
--
Regards Richard
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://people.zeelandnet.nl/pa3gcu/
Merry Xmas.