Hi everyone. Okay here are a couple of my problems and hopefully you
guys can help me out.
Problem 1: i have 2 website that are being hosted on a webserver. The
webserver is running redhat 8x and running apache 1.3.20. To make it a
little clearer, lets say website A and website B. Both... (1 Reply)
I downloaded Apache 1.3.27.tar.gz into my SCO u/install directory.
However, to begin with, I couldn't untar the file using the " tar xvf apache-1.3.27.tar.gz" command, so I used winzip from a windows computer on our network. Winzip untarred the file and I transferred the files to the SCO... (2 Replies)
I posted a problem with the forum on 11/18/02. Unfortunately, I
have been out of town. Today is the first chance I've had to try
the suggestions that were made.
Here is the output from the ls -l configure* command:
-rw-r--r-- 1root sys 58230 May 21 2002 configure
When I type " sh... (2 Replies)
I have a Solaris 8 box and need to install Apache 2.0.55 on it. First thing I tried was compiling from source code. During the make phase, I got the following errors:
Then I tried downloading the binaries. I tried the one available from Apache's site and the one from sunfreeware.com, with... (3 Replies)
I've been working on a project to replace one of the my group's primary NIS servers. It also runs mysql and apache, as it is the host for the our team's hardware tracking database and website. Its running apache 1.3, and for some odd reason, I can't get apache to start on system boot. The... (1 Reply)
When I upload a file 32M or larger to fails.
I can see the file being uploaded into the /tmp directory but when it gets to ~32M it dissapears.
This is from phpinfo:
upload_max_filesize 100M 100MB
post_max_size 100M 100MB
enable_dl On On
I dont get an error in the log saying im... (9 Replies)
Hi,
I just installed Apache 2.0.54 and when I try and start httpd I get
mohit@mohit-desktop:/sw/pkg/apache/bin$ ./httpd -k start
httpd: Could not determine the server's fully qualified domain name, using 127.0.1.1 for ServerName
(13): make_sock: could not bind to address :80
no listening... (1 Reply)
I have a Solaris 10 box that has 2 Ethernet connections. One is 172.21.0.150, this is on the main internal LAN. The other is 172.16.0.50 this is the DMZ. I have Apache 2.0.59, I do not care which it Listens to but the main one for it is 172.16.0.50 (DMZ) which I have been explicit (Listen... (1 Reply)
I am attempting to add virtual hosts to an apache web server, which has this current configuration:
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerAdmin webmaster@localhost
DocumentRoot /var/www
<Directory />
Options FollowSymLinks
AllowOverride None
... (27 Replies)
Hi,
I'm new to developing modules for Apache. I understand the basics now and can develop something simple which allows a 'GET' request to happen, but what I want to do is actually 'POST' information to my site. I know the basic POST Request works and I can see that it is post by looking at... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: fishman2001
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSX
pythonw
PYTHON(1) BSD General Commands Manual PYTHON(1)NAME
python, pythonw -- an interpreted, interactive, object-oriented programming language
SYNOPSIS
python ...
pythonw ...
DESCRIPTION
To support multiple versions, the programs named python and pythonw now just select the real version of Python to run, depending on various
settings. (As of Python 2.5, python and pythonw are interchangeable; both execute Python in the context of an application bundle, which
means they have access to the Graphical User Interface; thus both can, when properly programmed, display windows, dialogs, etc.) The current
supported versions are 2.6 and 2.7, with the default being 2.6. Use
% man python2.6
% man python2.7
% man pythonw2.6
% man pythonw2.7
to see the man page for a specific version. Without a version specified,
% man pydoc
and the like, will show the man page for the (unmodified) default version of Python (2.6). To see the man page for a specific version, use,
for example,
% man pydoc2.7
CHANGING THE DEFAULT PYTHON
Using
% defaults write com.apple.versioner.python Version 2.7
will make version 2.7 the user default when running the both the python and pythonw commands (versioner is the internal name of the version-
selection software used).
To set a system-wide default, replace 'com.apple.versioner.python' with '/Library/Preferences/com.apple.versioner.python' (admin privileges
will be required).
The environment variable VERSIONER_PYTHON_VERSION can also be used to set the python and pythonw version:
% export VERSIONER_PYTHON_VERSION=2.7 # Bourne-like shells
or
% setenv VERSIONER_PYTHON_VERSION 2.7 # C-like shells
% python ...
This environment variable takes precedence over the preference file settings.
64-BIT SUPPORT
Versions 2.6 and 2.7 support 64-bit execution (which is on by default).
Like the version of Python, the python command can select between 32 and 64-bit execution (when both are available). Use:
% defaults write com.apple.versioner.python Prefer-32-Bit -bool yes
to make 32-bit execution the user default (using '/Library/Preferences/com.apple.versioner.python' will set the system-wide default). The
environment variable VERSIONER_PYTHON_PREFER_32_BIT can also be used (has precedence over the preference file):
% export VERSIONER_PYTHON_PREFER_32_BIT=yes # Bourne-like shells
or
% setenv VERSIONER_PYTHON_PREFER_32_BIT yes # C-like shells
Again, the preference setting and environmental variable applies to both python and pythonw.
USING A SPECIFIC VERSION
Rather than using the python command, one can use a specific version directly. For example, running python2.7 from the command line will run
the 2.7 version of Python, independent of what the default version of Python is.
One can use a specific version of Python on the #! line of a script, but that may have portability and future compatibility issues.
Note that the preference files and environment variable that apply to the python command, do not apply when running a specific version of
Python. In particular, running python2.6 will always default to 64-bit execution (unless one uses the arch(1) command to specifically select
a 32-bit architecture).
SEE ALSO python2.6(1), python2.7(1), pythonw2.6(1), pythonw2.7(1), arch(1)BSD Aug 10, 2008 BSD