ID:               22336
 User updated by:  alan at frostick dot com
 Reported By:      alan at frostick dot com
 Status:           Bogus
 Bug Type:         Documentation problem
 Operating System: Windows 98
 PHP Version:      4.3.0
 New Comment:

Thanks for the tip about extracting it from the installer Phil (sorry
to be so late in my response) - but if you had the installer make a
backup of the original php.ini before overwriting it, maybe no one
would have to sweat about it?

Alan


Previous Comments:
------------------------------------------------------------------------

[2004-01-24 09:42:03] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

The installer distribution does include php.ini-dist but, 
it edits it and installs it as php.ini for you. It only 
didn't do that for you because you asked it not to. You 
could have made a safe copy of your old php.ini file, and 
then used the settings from the old one as a basis for 
tweaks to the brand new file. 
Alternatively, if you really don't want the installer to 
write a php.ini to your machine, the php.ini file can be 
extracted from the installer executable, as the .exe file 
is in zip format and can be loaded into winzip. 

------------------------------------------------------------------------

[2003-02-20 13:34:44] alan at frostick dot com

I'm a long-time user of PHP (since PHP/FI days) and regularly upgrade
my offline development version as a local webserver on a Windows
machine.

A few weeks ago I upgraded to php4.3.0 from 4.0.3 as well as to
APACHE-2 and attempted to use the windows installer version, on the
grounds its a shorter download. Setup went well, but when I reached the
point where it was about to overwrite my php.ini I backed off that
stage, thinking I'd need to review my original settings and didn't want
my current C:\WINDOWS\php.ini overwritten until I could review it by
hand.

What I found when the installer finished it's job was that the files
created for me didn't include anything I could base an upgraded version
of php.ini on. No php.ini-dist as it used to be called (or even
php.ini-recommended as noted in the manual).

In the end I had to download the ZIP version in order to get this
document. Since it isn't a very large file, why not include the
recommended version in the installer distribution?

On the DOWNLOADS page at php.net it mentions that the installer version
contains no extensions. It would be useful if that were amplified
somewhat: such as what is included (and possibly what isn't?). What is
regarded as "built-in" features in the pre-compiled binary versions
have varied over the years and continues to do so with almost every
release.

I can supply no scripts or whatever, because nothing seems to be
relevant. This is the about the user experience of installing PHP on
Windows, and deficiencies in either the documentation of configuring
PHP or the downloads page at php.net. Despite searching your bug
database and site I fail to see anything like the problem I encountered
so am resorting to a bug report. I hope this is not a waste of your
time.

ps. I am currently upgrading to 4.3.1 (via the ZIP version) although I
think the CGI issue is probably not relevant to my use.

Alan Frostick
www.frostick.com
www.goatrance.de/kernel/

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