Res wrote:
On Sun, 24 May 2009, Lester Caine wrote:
This is a general anarchy problem with everybody reinterpreting the
'rules' for standardisation of the directory structure to their own
ends. Since the
Not just directory naming, they rename binaries as well *THAT* is my key
objection :)
On Sun, 24 May 2009, Lester Caine wrote:
This is a general anarchy problem with everybody reinterpreting the 'rules'
for standardisation of the directory structure to their own ends. Since the
Not just directory naming, they rename binaries as well *THAT* is my key
objection :)
--
Res
-B
Res wrote:
Sander,
Maybe a vote should be taken to issue notice to them, to cease renaming
key apache components, its bad enough the butchering they do, but
renaming is crossing the line IMHO, as we've just seen why in this
thread, for every one you hear, you know there's many thousands more y
Sander,
Maybe a vote should be taken to issue notice to them, to cease renaming
key apache components, its bad enough the butchering they do, but renaming is
crossing the line IMHO, as we've just seen why in this thread, for every
one you hear, you know there's many thousands more you don't.
One would assume the Apache Debian packager is on this list, perhaps they
would like to comment as to why they do this, but I suspect they will not.
Nothing beats the source install, if you screwup it takes seconds to
revert to previous version and you know you are using just that version.
I
On May 22, 2009, at 5:39 AM, John Hudak wrote:
WHY does the Debian distro 'relocate'
things such as apache?
Don't ask us, ask them.
S.
--
Sander Temme
scte...@apache.org
PGP FP: 51B4 8727 466A 0BC3 69F4 B7B8 B2BE BC40 1529 24AF
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME cryptographic signature
Not to add to the hijack, but I hear ya brother. I've been trying to
get a local HTTPd/bugzilla set up for the last two weeks. I tried using
the Ubuntu/Debian packages and not only do they splay files (seemingly)
wherever they feel like it, they change the names so that the online
product doc is a
There is not httpd on Debian/Ubuntu. It's called apache2 and /etc/apache2 is
the config folder. To check if apache is installed and where you run the
dpkg command, something like this:
# sudo dpkg -s apache2
and
# sudo dpkg -S apache2
Igor
On Sat, May 23, 2009 at 12:27 AM, Stephen wrote:
> Joh
John Hudak wrote:
I've seen apps installed in sbin, and /home/username when from my
perspective, they should have been in bin. While I haven't used a lot
of different distros (slackware, RH (prior to their business model
change), and commercial Unix distros by att, sun, dec, HP), I've never
run
I've seen apps installed in sbin, and /home/username when from my
perspective, they should have been in bin. While I haven't used a lot
of different distros (slackware, RH (prior to their business model
change), and commercial Unix distros by att, sun, dec, HP), I've never
run into 'sudo'...I can
On Fri, May 22, 2009 at 8:39 AM, John Hudak wrote:
> Forexample, their use of bin, and sbin, and root being acquired by
> 'sudo'..
> Just curious...
Aren't those all pretty conventional?
--
Eric Covener
cove...@gmail.com
-
Th
Hi:
I don't want to hijack this thread, but since the question has been
answered, I have a related one...WHY does the Debian distro 'relocate'
things such as apache? Since I've been getting into the guts of
Debian and Ubuntu over the last 2-3 years, I am finding a lot of 'non
standard' things that
On Thu, 21 May 2009, Frank Gingras wrote:
The debian maintainers though it would be suitable to rename it to apache2 /
apache2ctl.
See: http://wiki.apache.org/httpd/DistrosDefaultLayout
I often wonder who is worse, Micro$oft or Debian, both want everything
"their" way.
My solution for the
Slack-Moehrle [mailingli...@mailnewsrss.com]
Sent: 05/21/2009 07:34 PM MST
To: users@httpd.apache.org
Subject: [us...@httpd] Httpd on Ubuntu 9.04
Hello All,
am I blind, I am trying to install ColdFusion on Ubuntu 9.04 and it
asks for where httpd is.
I looked in /usr/sbinnothing
I did a
21, 2009, at 7:36 PM, Peter J Milanese wrote:
find / -name httpd
- Original Message -
From: Jason Todd Slack-Moehrle [mailingli...@mailnewsrss.com]
Sent: 05/21/2009 07:34 PM MST
To: users@httpd.apache.org
Subject: [us...@httpd] Httpd on Ubuntu 9.04
Hello All,
am I blind, I am trying
009, at 7:36 PM, Peter J Milanese wrote:
>
> find / -name httpd
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> - Original Message -
>> From: Jason Todd Slack-Moehrle [mailingli...@mailnewsrss.com]
>> Sent: 05/21/2009 07:34 PM MST
>> To: users@httpd.apache.org
>&
Subject: [us...@httpd] Httpd on Ubuntu 9.04
Hello All,
am I blind, I am trying to install ColdFusion on Ubuntu 9.04 and it
asks for where httpd is.
I looked in /usr/sbinnothing
I did a locate for httpd and I get /etc/apache2/httpd.conf
stuff in /usr/lib/apache2
stuff in /usr/share/doc
No
find / -name httpd
- Original Message -
From: Jason Todd Slack-Moehrle [mailingli...@mailnewsrss.com]
Sent: 05/21/2009 07:34 PM MST
To: users@httpd.apache.org
Subject: [us...@httpd] Httpd on Ubuntu 9.04
Hello All,
am I blind, I am trying to install ColdFusion on Ubuntu 9.04 and it
Hello All,
am I blind, I am trying to install ColdFusion on Ubuntu 9.04 and it
asks for where httpd is.
I looked in /usr/sbinnothing
I did a locate for httpd and I get /etc/apache2/httpd.conf
stuff in /usr/lib/apache2
stuff in /usr/share/doc
No httpd binary.
Apache works though
What s
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