On 11/2/07 11:12 AM, Daniel Brown [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Rahul,
I believe all of the modern MacOS variants still use the
*nix-style (due to being based on BSD) rc.d startups, right? If so:
sudo echo sudo -u www mount_smbfs -f 0777 -d 0777
//usr:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/share
On 11/6/07, Rahul S. Johari [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I couldn't find an /etc/rd.d or rc3.d on my system at all. I've been
manually mounting after each boot, so still looking for an automated
mounting solution.
look for /etc/fstab
-nathan
On 11/6/07 12:03 PM, Nathan Nobbe [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 11/6/07, Rahul S. Johari [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I couldn't find an /etc/rd.d or rc3.d on my system at all. I've been
manually mounting after each boot, so still looking for an automated
mounting solution.
look for
On 11/6/07, Rahul S. Johari [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 11/6/07 12:03 PM, Nathan Nobbe [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 11/6/07, Rahul S. Johari [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I couldn't find an /etc/rd.d or rc3.d on my system at all. I've been
manually mounting after each boot, so still looking
On 11/6/07 12:57 PM, Nathan Nobbe [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 11/6/07, Rahul S. Johari [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 11/6/07 12:03 PM, Nathan Nobbe [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 11/6/07, Rahul S. Johari [EMAIL PROTECTED]
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I couldn't find an /etc/rd.d or
On 11/6/07 12:57 PM, Nathan Nobbe [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
perhaps if you google around on something like mac os x /etc/fstab
something useful will turn up. im sure there is an alternative mechanism
to mount things at boot time on that system.
-nathan
For whatever reason, when I first
On 11/6/07, Rahul S. Johari [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I guess I can officially consider this case closed with all problems solved!
Thanks All!
We are the geniuses that are the core PHP community. Hear us roar!
--
Daniel P. Brown
[office] (570-) 587-7080 Ext. 272
[mobile] (570-) 766-8107
On 11/6/07 4:07 PM, Daniel Brown [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
We are the geniuses that are the core PHP community. Hear us roar!
:D
You know the funniest thing? As my discussion progressed, and the
contributions back forth, the problem became evidently little to do with
PHP and a whole lot
On 11/2/07, Rahul Sitaram Johari [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 11/2/07 8:26 AM, Jason Pruim [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Nov 1, 2007, at 5:54 PM, Jim Lucas wrote:
Sounds like a clear case of Apache being chroot'ed.
This is based off the BSD style setup I believe. Which I believe
Mac
On Nov 2, 2007, at 9:57 AM, Daniel Brown wrote:
On 11/2/07, Jason Pruim [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have been a Mac user for my entire computing life
Well, then way to chime in 14 hours late there, Pruim! ;-P
What can I say? :) Better late then never :P
--
Jason Pruim
Raoset Inc.
On Nov 2, 2007, at 10:18 AM, Daniel Brown wrote:
On 11/2/07, Jason Pruim [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Nov 2, 2007, at 9:57 AM, Daniel Brown wrote:
On 11/2/07, Jason Pruim [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have been a Mac user for my entire computing life
Well, then way to chime in 14 hours
On 11/2/07 11:12 AM, Daniel Brown [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 11/2/07, Rahul Sitaram Johari [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
That sounds like a good place to look.
I actually did figure out a way to make this work. It appears that Apache
Web Server did not have enough permissions to read files
On Nov 1, 2007, at 5:54 PM, Jim Lucas wrote:
Rahul Sitaram Johari wrote:
Ave,
Somehow my PHP won't access, won't even acknowledge the existence
of a file
that is outside the /Library/WebServer/Documents folder. This was
never a a
problem before in any Mac version - it just started with
On 11/2/07 8:26 AM, Jason Pruim [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Nov 1, 2007, at 5:54 PM, Jim Lucas wrote:
Sounds like a clear case of Apache being chroot'ed.
This is based off the BSD style setup I believe. Which I believe
Mac uses, So, I would check your startup line for Apache. I did
On 11/2/07, Jason Pruim [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have been a Mac user for my entire computing life
Well, then way to chime in 14 hours late there, Pruim! ;-P
--
Daniel P. Brown
[office] (570-) 587-7080 Ext. 272
[mobile] (570-) 766-8107
Give a man a fish, he'll eat for a day. Then
On 11/2/07, Jason Pruim [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Nov 2, 2007, at 9:57 AM, Daniel Brown wrote:
On 11/2/07, Jason Pruim [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have been a Mac user for my entire computing life
Well, then way to chime in 14 hours late there, Pruim! ;-P
What can I say? :)
Ave,
Somehow my PHP won't access, won't even acknowledge the existence of a file
that is outside the /Library/WebServer/Documents folder. This was never a a
problem before in any Mac version - it just started with Leopard.
I don't know what has changed where, in httpd.conf or php.ini or
On Thu, 2007-11-01 at 09:06 -0400, Rahul Sitaram Johari wrote:
Ave,
Somehow my PHP won't access, won't even acknowledge the existence of a file
that is outside the /Library/WebServer/Documents folder. This was never a a
problem before in any Mac version - it just started with Leopard.
I
On 11/1/07, Robert Cummings [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Thu, 2007-11-01 at 09:06 -0400, Rahul Sitaram Johari wrote:
Ave,
Somehow my PHP won't access, won't even acknowledge the existence of a file
that is outside the /Library/WebServer/Documents folder. This was never a a
problem before
On 11/1/07 9:46 AM, Robert Cummings [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Thu, 2007-11-01 at 09:06 -0400, Rahul Sitaram Johari wrote:
Ave,
Somehow my PHP won't access, won't even acknowledge the existence of a file
that is outside the /Library/WebServer/Documents folder. This was never a a
problem
On 11/1/07 10:22 AM, Daniel Brown [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 11/1/07, Robert Cummings [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Thu, 2007-11-01 at 09:06 -0400, Rahul Sitaram Johari wrote:
Ave,
Somehow my PHP won't access, won't even acknowledge the existence of a file
that is outside the
On 11/1/07, Rahul Sitaram Johari [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
1.) Did you restart Apache after making any changes to php.ini or
httpd.conf?
2.) The path is cAsE-sEnSiTiVe. Did you make sure that it's
EXACTLY the same?
3.) Is any part of that symlinked, and if so, does Apache
On 11/1/07 10:41 AM, Daniel Brown [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 11/1/07, Rahul Sitaram Johari [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
1.) Did you restart Apache after making any changes to php.ini or
httpd.conf?
2.) The path is cAsE-sEnSiTiVe. Did you make sure that it's
EXACTLY the same?
3.)
On 11/1/07, Rahul Sitaram Johari [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 11/1/07 10:41 AM, Daniel Brown [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 11/1/07, Rahul Sitaram Johari [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
1.) Did you restart Apache after making any changes to php.ini or
httpd.conf?
2.) The path is
On 11/1/07 12:17 PM, Daniel Brown [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 11/1/07, Rahul Sitaram Johari [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Well FollowSymLinks was present in my httpd.conf, and it's definitely not
the problem. I think the problem is the fact that on in Panther, I was able
to specify Apache Web
On 11/1/07, Rahul Sitaram Johari [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Is there a Terminal way of figuring out the UID/GID of something like admin,
apache etcetera?
PS: I know it's going OT!
Yes, you'll find those UIDs in /etc/passwd. For example:
On 11/1/07 12:43 PM, Daniel Brown [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 11/1/07, Rahul Sitaram Johari [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Is there a Terminal way of figuring out the UID/GID of something like admin,
apache etcetera?
PS: I know it's going OT!
Yes, you'll find those UIDs in
Rahul Sitaram Johari wrote:
Ave,
Somehow my PHP won't access, won't even acknowledge the existence of a file
that is outside the /Library/WebServer/Documents folder. This was never a a
problem before in any Mac version - it just started with Leopard.
I don't know what has changed where, in
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