On Sun, Feb 27, 2022 at 3:24 PM Stormy wrote:
>
> On 2022-02-27 10:31 a.m., Tom Browder wrote:
> > On Sun, Feb 27, 2022 at 09:11 Jeroen Verhoeckx
> > wrote:
> >
> >> Why do you need a predefined user with a writeable home directory?
...
Sorry, I was not very clear: Raku has expectations about
On 2022-02-27 10:31 a.m., Tom Browder wrote:
On Sun, Feb 27, 2022 at 09:11 Jeroen Verhoeckx
wrote:
Why do you need a predefined user with a writeable home directory?
Because that user executes the server loop behind the reverse proxy. The
program running that server uses the Raku
On 2022-02-27 8:39 a.m., Tom Browder wrote:
Your query is probably too vague for a helpful response. What system
are you using? What FAQs and documents have you read? What specific
details are unclear?
In order to run a service behind my reverse proxy I need to have a defined
user with
On Sun, Feb 27, 2022 at 09:11 Jeroen Verhoeckx
wrote:
> Why do you need a predefined user with a writeable home directory?
Because that user executes the server loop behind the reverse proxy. The
program running that server uses the Raku programming language which needs
some default settings
Why do you need a predefined user with a writeable home directory?
I have one, but I only use it to log in the system with ssh.
You can save all configuration in the directory '/etc/httpd/conf.d' (on RHEL).
- Jeroen
Support the
In order to run a service behind my reverse proxy I need to have a defined
user with some kind of writeable home directory.
The easy choice to get started is to create a /home/apache directory for my
apache user.
Is that safe or should I do something else?
I do have my systemd service file