It may as well be access rights.
The service will run as SYSTEM by default.
Does SYSTEM has file-system access rights to all your openSA files and directories ?
------------------- "TIP Integral Software Suite" -------------------
Olivier Mascia T.I.P. Group S.A.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] "Accounting & Operational Management Software"
Chief Software Architect "C++, Interbase and 3-Tiers Technologies"
IEEE Computer Society Member Contact ? http://www.tipgroup.com
----- Original Message -----
From: John McNally
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, March 02, 2000 6:44 PM
Subject: installing as a service.
I just downloaded OpenSA 0.20 and the installation was a breeze. Thank you
for such a great product.
I tried to install the server as a service, but cannot get it started. It
appeared the -D SSL directive was being ignored when running as a service
(the service would start, but https did not work,) so I commented the <if
SSL> related statements and now the service will not start.
My simple guess since I know little about the inner workings of NT or
Apache+SSL is that SSL requires a user to start it so it can have some
appropriate permissions set up. But since this has a very good chance at
being a wrong assumption, I thought I'd ask.
Is there something related to SSL that will not allow Apache to start as a
service, or does the conf file just need a little tweaking? (And what might
that involve?)
Thanks again.
John McNally