OK, if you change to the "nobody" user (or whoever you run the server as)
can you write to that directory?

Sometimes file permissions get missed. I did this recently and couldn't run
X-windows until I corrected the permissions on /usr. The easy 

If you can't change to "nobody", it may be worth considering creating a user
for your web server to run under. Change the "User" and "Group" settings in
httpd.conf to reflect this user. Some systems cannot run a web server as
nobody.

John

-----Original Message-----
From: G�ran Fr�jdh [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: 08 November 2000 12:56
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Problem with ssl_scache


00-11-08 13.04, skrev [EMAIL PROTECTED] p� [EMAIL PROTECTED]
f�ljande:

> This is probably a daft question, but does the directory
> /usr/local/apache/conf/ssl actually exist?
> 
Well... yes...

bash-2.04# pwd
/usr/local/apache/conf/ssl


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