Hi!
I just got Ultra 5 computer an installed Solaris 8 on it. I'm trying to install Apache but I'm having some problems...
I tried to download a precompiled version of apache, but it seems as if I need a c compiler anyway.
When I try to run the configure command I get the following result:... (2 Replies)
Ok, this may be a simple question, but I am unable to find an answer. I am trying to install apache 2.2 on a Solaris 9 box (sparc). I downloaded it from sunfreeware, and under /usr/local/apache2/doc/apache2/INSTALL they describe the installing procedure as:
$ ./configure --prefix=PREFIX
... (4 Replies)
Please help... i'm new to this job and new to unix as well..... i'm trying to install apache 2.2.6 it's installed on one server... i need to install it on another server... my clue was to maybe use the fetch command... please help.....for example..... apache is on 69.50.132.14.... and it needs to... (1 Reply)
I've installed apache server following all the instructions witch accuracy, but i can't start the server.
I extraxt the files
Configure to /usr/local/apache
make
make install
But when I want to /usr/local/apache/bin/apachectl start
I can't
There are a lot of files in the bin folder... (3 Replies)
Hi i am using Fedora 8 and it comes with precompiled rpm distribution of php. I want to configure my Apache web server for php . Did i need to recompile php.... or it can be configured accordingly for apache...
Thanks for any sort of help (1 Reply)
I mam trying to install wget from the command line without user intervention. So I devised something as follows:
cd /usr/ports/ftp/wget
make -DWITHOUT_GNUTLS=yes -DWITHOUT_IPV6=no -DWITHOUT_NLS=no -DWITHOUT_OPENSSL=no
However, this will still get me into the screen where user input is required.... (4 Replies)
Hello all.
I am trying to compile Apache 2 (again!) and the configure script keeps telling me it does not recognize the options. Everything I am including is in the --help list.
For example: --enable-so. First I will put in the LD flags, then configure with the --enable-so option.
... (2 Replies)
How to make sure the input string is one of many options e.g centos-5.5-i386 windows-2003r2-x64 ?
The options are dynamic, so "case" condition check doesn't work.
I use grep -o -w , it doesn't work every time because - is valid word boundry
#word windows-2003 failed the check as expected... (4 Replies)
How can I know which all options were used while compiling a apache binary.
# /usr/local/apache/bin/httpd -v
Server version: Apache/2.2.17 (Unix)
Server built: Feb X 2XXX XX:29:08
Cpanel::Easy::Apache v3.2.0 rev5291 (1 Reply)
Hi,
I want shell script for installing apache. Please give explain to script. I am learning shell script now only. (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: raj1983
0 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
go-clean
GO-CLEAN(1) General Commands Manual GO-CLEAN(1)NAME
go - tool for managing Go source code
SYNOPSIS
go clean [-i] [-r] [-n] [-x] [ packages ]
DESCRIPTION
Clean removes object files from package source directories. The go command builds most objects in a temporary directory, so go clean is
mainly concerned with object files left by other tools or by manual invocations of go build.
Specifically, clean removes the following files from each of the source directories corresponding to the import paths:
_obj/ old object directory, left from Makefiles
_test/ old test directory, left from Makefiles
_testmain.go
old gotest file, left from Makefiles
test.out
old test log, left from Makefiles
build.out
old test log, left from Makefiles
*.[568ao]
object files, left from Makefiles
DIR(.exe)
from go build
DIR.test(.exe)
from go test -c
MAINFILE(.exe)
from go build MAINFILE.go
In the list, DIR represents the final path element of the directory, and MAINFILE is the base name of any Go source file in the directory
that is not included when building the package.
OPTIONS -i The -i flag causes clean to remove the corresponding installed archive or binary (what 'go install' would create).
-n The -n flag causes clean to print the remove commands it would execute, but not run them.
-r The -r flag causes clean to be applied recursively to all the dependencies of the packages named by the import paths.
-x The -x flag causes clean to print remove commands as it executes them.
For more about specifying packages, see go-packages(7).
AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Michael Stapelberg <stapelberg@debian.org>, for the Debian project (and may be used by others).
2012-05-13 GO-CLEAN(1)