Using OS X 10.9.1 and AMPPS 2.1 (dated 11/18/13) I can launch the Apache server, but when attempting to go to the admin or configuration pages I get 404 errors for both localhost/ampps-admin and localhost/ampps.
Where should I be looking to track down this problem?
When you close ampps and look at localhost, is it still saying "It works!"?
Mine was, which meant my mac was running its version of apache. I fixed it by killing my mac's apache and then restarting AMPPS.
Kill apache:
sudo launchctl unload -w /System/Library/LaunchDaemons/org.apache.httpd.plist
Related
I have installed and configured and also used TV the first time today in Nvidia jetson Xavier,
but after restart Im getting this issue:
teamviewerd.service: Can't open PID file /var/run/teamviewerd.pid (yet?) after start: No such file or directory
Please tell me why and how to fix it, it is of extreme importance !
I use TeamViewer to connect to a machine (Ubuntu 20.04) that not always have a graphical user session started and I noticed that even with teamviewerd running the machine is offline.
I fixed the problem running:
sudo teamviewer setup
From teamviewer --help:
teamviewer setup Configure headless modes (non-gui/console)
Without running this, the only way for me was to start manually a graphical user session and open the TeamViewer GUI on the host I wanted to use.
Make sure you enable/start gdm.service or another supported login manager
Found this question via a search when facing the same issue on Fedora 30 x86_64.
Solution for me was to edit /etc/systemd/system/teamviewerd.service and comment out the line that says:
PIDFile = /run/teamviewerd.pid
So it reads:
# PIDFile = /run/teamviewerd.pid
(or whatever PIDFile it specifies)
then run:
systemctl daemon-reload
systemctl start teamviewerd
systemctl status teamviewerd
I am trying to install CKAN on my local computer using Ubuntu 14.04 LTS.
I followed the instructions for installing from source found here and I try to check if solr is running by visiting http://localhost:8983/solr/.
I can see that Jetty is running because when I visit http://localhost:8983 I see that it is up.
I added the jdk as follows:
JAVA_HOME=/usr/lib/jvm/java-1.6.0-openjdk-amd64
I am getting a 500 error when i try to open the solr page:
HTTP ERROR 500
Problem accessing /solr/index.jsp. Reason:
JSP support not configured
Powered by Jetty://
Any ideas? Should I redo the whole thing from the start?
Edit/Update
I just couldn't do anything with this installation. The bigger problem was that installation files were meshed up! I tried to install tomcat/solr instead of jetty/solr and things went sour. So I just created a VM and did a fresh install there. For anyone interested I did a tomcat/solr installation following this and a CKAN installation following this (with out of course the solr instructions). Also, for some reason the CKAN installation has commented out the solr URL, so even if it is right, I had to delete the comment.
A fix has been documented by #mstantoncook here [2939] & [1651] How to solr-jetty JSP support
Note the last comment, sudo service jetty restart
It's a Jetty BUG on Ubuntu 14.04!
There is nothing wrong with Ckan itself.
Actually, there is a bug in the libjetty-extra-java package (version 6.1.26 and newer) in Ubuntu 14.04. The bug was introduced after Jetty (in Ubuntu) has changed it's dependences from libtomcat6-java to libtomcat7-java.
You can get more info about this bug in Ubuntu Launchpad: Bug #1508562 "Broken symlinks for JSP support in libjetty-extra-java version 6.1.26-1ubuntu1.1".
The bug is already fixed on Debian, and I'm hope it will be solved in Ubuntu 14.04 soon.
There are workarounds that may work for your case
I proposed some workarounds in this bug report, and since they can be useful for the Ckan users, I'll also replicate them here.
All of them consist on use both jetty and libtomcat7-java, but adding/replacing some classes (code ported from libtomcat6, in put in the jsp-2.1-6.0.2.jar file) to the Jetty classpath.
I don't know if they have some problem. Use them at your own risk!
Workaround 1 - Install the fix package proposed by vshn
I found this workaround here: https://github.com/ckan/ckan/pull/2966
In short:
wget https://launchpad.net/~vshn/+archive/ubuntu/solr/+files/solr-jetty-jsp-fix_1.0.2_all.deb
dpkg -i solr-jetty-jsp-fix_1.0.2_all.deb
service jetty restart
This will install a JSP jar that works (the file will be named jsp-2.1-6.0.2.jar, but it contains classes ported from libtomcat6).
Workaround 2 - Manually install the JSP jar
Download the same JAR file that the DEB package above would install.
wget https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/jetty/+bug/1508562/+attachment/4785985/+files/jsp-2.1-6.0.2.jar
Now, move it to a proper location inside the Jetty config dir. I did it this way:
mkdir /etc/jetty/extra-jars
mv jsp-2.1-6.0.2.jar /etc/jetty/extra-jars
And add a line like this one in the Jetty start.config file:
echo "/etc/jetty/extra-jars/jsp-2.1-6.0.2.jar" >> /etc/jetty/start.config
And:
service jetty restart
Correct solution
The correct solution is to wait for the Ubuntu Team solution. However, while waiting for this fix, you can use any of the previous workarounds (I prefer the last one).
I hope they help you!
Try this steps:
sudo mv jsp-2.1-6.0.2.jar /usr/share/jetty/lib/.
change own:
sudo chown root:root /usr/share/jetty/lib/jsp-2.1-6.0.2.jar
finally restart jetty:
sudo service jetty restart
I followed this steps and now I can see localhost:8983/solr and localhost/solr/admin
In Ubuntu 14.04 this can be fixed with:
cd /tmp
wget https://launchpad.net/~vshn/+archive/ubuntu/solr/+files/solr-jetty-jsp-fix_1.0.2_all.deb
sudo dpkg -i solr-jetty-jsp-fix_1.0.2_all.deb
sudo service jetty restart
Following http://docs.ckan.org/en/ckan-1.6/solr-setup.html#single-solr-instance
(this one a bit old, but worked perfect for me )
You will have to edit /etc/profile and add this line to the end such as this to the end (adjusting the path for your machine’s jdk install:
JAVA_HOME=/usr/lib/jvm/java-6-openjdk-amd64/ (or other version)
then
export JAVA_HOME
sudo service jetty start
I've installed snow leopard on the old tiger and I tried to run apache2 by clicking system preferences->sharing->web sharing. It seems to run but if I try to access http://localhost or http://127.0.0.1 or http://192.168.1.6/ (my ip on my network) it doesn't work. I don't know where is the log file (no files on /private/var/log/apache2/). I've seen that the port in /etc/httpd.conf is 80. But I cannot see the process on Activity Monitoring panel: there is not any httpd or apache process running...
This may not be the answer you are looking for, but MAMP seems to run relatively well for me.
You can also try
sudo apachectl start
from the command line.
I think you will find a detailed answer to your question at this URL:
http://shapeshed.com/journal/setting_up_local_websites_on_snow_leopard/
The "trick" is this line, ... which stops and then restarts apache,
sudo apachectl restart
This forces apache2 to read any changes you've made to config files.
Also, check to make sure you are using the right config file.
Under Mac OS X 10.6.4, my config files seem to be here:
/etc/apache2/httpd.conf
Logs files are found here:
/var/log/apache2/access_log
This should get you up and running, ... but I would also recommend looking into using MAMP, which is a pre-packaged Mac+Apache2+MySQL+PHP5 stack that you can get up and running very quickly.
http://www.mamp.info/
I have an issue loading xdebug in apache server.
Here are my settings:
Apache 2.2.11
MySQL 5.1.36
PHP 5.2.0
Windows 7
Wampserver 2.0
php -i and php -m show that the xdebug module php_xdebug-2.1.0RC1-5.2-vc6.dll is installed.
However phpinfo() does not show that xdebug is installed. I have tried starting apache as a service, through the Wampserver UI, and by running httpd directly (as administrator) and I have checked permissions on the php_xdebug-2.1.0RC1-5.2-vc6.dll file.
There are no warnings in the logs. In the apache error log I get:
[Thu Jun 24 11:20:55 2010] [notice] Apache/2.2.11 (Win32) PHP/5.2.0 configured -- resuming normal operations
Has anyone any ideas?
Thank you,
John
I already do like you said but nothing happens
Using WAMPSERVER 2.1 , php_xdebug-2.1.0-5.3-vc6.dll (however I renamed it becoming php_xdebug.dll)
In php.ini, I also modified as instructions
extension=php_xdebug.dll
...
zend_extension = "C:/wamp/bin/php/php5.3.3/ext/php_xdebug.dll"
xdebug.remote_enable=1
xdebug.remote_handler=dbgp
xdebug.remote_host=127.0.0.1
xdebug.remote_port=9000
xdebug.idekey="netbeans-xdebug"
After starting the server again, there are no error in Apache log, everything seems work normal.Still do not see any information about xdebug from phpinfo. I totally gave up :(
Any ideas for my case, appreciated that.
I solved my issue as I was using wampserver2.0 and naively assumed I could use c:\wamp\bin\php\php{version#}\php.ini to affect my configuration.
In actual fact one must use c:\wamp\apache\Apache{version#}\bin\php.ini to configure php on the wamp server.
Hope this helps anyone else who might one day tear their hair out over this.
John
I am using ubuntu and I have some html pages. I want to host a website from my PC at my home. How can I do this using apache2? I am new to Apache2 if any one knows how to do this, please let me know.
The easiest way to publish HTML files with apache is by putting them in /home/your-user-name-please-do-replace-me/public_html, making sure that your apache is installed and then start apache. How to make apache start after a reboot, see this forum post on Ubuntu Forums.
When you have apache up and running, find out your servers IP-address (http://whatismyipaddress.com/ is pretty handy for this) and then your files will be accessible from: http://you-ip-address-whatever/~your-user-name-please-do-replace-me
You could always use services like http://www.dyndns.com/ so that you don't have to use your IP-address all the time.
Once apache is installed you should find that you can place content in a directory silimar to /usr/www or /usr/share/www and apache will serve it. You may also need to start apache, I don't know the ubuntu command but on fedora 12 it is:
service httpd start