Christian Spoo wrote:
In my opinion, copying application's files to a webroot is something,
which I could do myself. Instead of constructing a long commandline for
webapp-config some little 'cp' commands could do the same. Hardlinking
the files saves space, but then I can't modify the sources wit
Ich werde ab 12.08.2006 nicht im Büro sein. Ich kehre zurück am 03.09.2006.
Ich werde Ihre Nachricht nach meiner Rückkehr beantworten.
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gentoo-server@gentoo.org mailing list
Rich, would you consider not top-posting? (Yes, I know it is the default
in MS Exchange)
Jesse, Rich wrote:
> H...not very constructive criticism, but I tend to agree. To me,
> webapp-config makes an easy process of installing and LAPP
> (MySQL->PostgreSQL) programs like SquirrelMail unbearab
Then again, I despise the new-fangled fascination with "/var" these
days. I still haven't seen a compelling argument why *data* needs to
live there, but that's just me.
Rich
More like old-fangled. Under the new Linux Filesystem Standard (LFS)
agreed upon by a number of distro's (gentoo among t
On Mon, 14 Aug 2006 at 17:24, Christian Spoo wrote:
webapp-config some little 'cp' commands could do the same. Hardlinking
the files saves space, but then I can't modify the sources without
affecting other installations of the same version.
I consider that a benefit :)
--David
--
gentoo-server
In my opinion, copying application's files to a webroot is something,
which I could do myself. Instead of constructing a long commandline for
webapp-config some little 'cp' commands could do the same. Hardlinking
the files saves space, but then I can't modify the sources without
affecting other ins
H...not very constructive criticism, but I tend to agree. To me,
webapp-config makes an easy process of installing and LAPP
(MySQL->PostgreSQL) programs like SquirrelMail unbearably difficult. I
was hoping that it would help with multiple domains on the same server,
but again it was easier fo