Does CSF & APF Work With FreeBSD 6.2 64Bit
Feb 4, 2008does CSF & APF work with FreeBSD 6.2 64-Bit?
View 5 Repliesdoes CSF & APF work with FreeBSD 6.2 64-Bit?
View 5 RepliesI have install FreeBSD and i use Nginx for run my website on this webserver.
All working good and the server running from 1/2month..
Today when i visits my site i have see Nginx Gateway Error 502..
and from shell i run top command and all processor are using 0% of cpu but use the normal ram..
all is stopped..
but i don't know why and how happen..
Any people have the same error?
I think i do create a monitor script and when appen just reboot the server (i have solve this problem rebooting the server each 502 error)
32 bit or 64bit for cent Os 5.3?
I am planning to purchase 2 vps for my friends, 1 vps which I am currently in touch is providing wide range, they gave option for 32bit or 64 bit, is there going to be change in the performance of the vps based on this selection
and which is better for the future causes, this vps might have an community forum, few blogs and some file upload site,
There's idea to move to 64bit, Current Software Specs are:-
CentOS 4.4
PHP 4.3
MySQL 5.0
Apache 2.0
No CPanel
Named
NFS
Web site mainly running on Apache, PHP, MySQL and NFS.
What do you think about stability of these softwares on 64bit processor.
Also which better AMD Opteron or Intel woodcrest ?
I have been trying to research this but I cant seem to find an answer.
The big question I am trying to figure out is the comparison in clock speed for different processor bits.
For example, a 32 bit Pentium 4 at 3.2ghz versus a 64 bit AMD Athlon 2.0 Ghz?
while setting up a server which will host VPS's. Currently I have CentOS 5.1 x64 as the host OS, and I'm playing around with Xen for VPS's. Would you recommend a 32bit VPS, or a 64bit VPS?
View 7 Replies View RelatedFor those of you who has 8GB RAM on their servers, are you running 64bit OS on the server? How good are those 64bit OS? Are they stable?
View 14 Replies View RelatedI wonder if there is a big advantage if I would go 64bit instead of 32bit. Now I mean standard webserver + mysql. And how about compatibility isses?
View 14 Replies View RelatedDoes anyone know of a VPS provider that can provide a CentOS 5 64bit OS?
View 12 Replies View RelatedAre these unheard of?
Are there any out there? Im looking at recompiling some custom server software into 64-bit ... (I am waiting on one library to be updated) .. to make use of the extra RAM allocations, and slight speed increase.
how i can migrate vmware 32bit to 64bit without delete any vps... ?
View 1 Replies View RelatedI tried installing CentOS 64bit using windows image and vnc that comes with HyperVM and it says (your cpu does not support long mode. use a 32 bit distribution), and if I try to install Windows Server 2008 I get blue screen with a stop and error.
View 5 Replies View RelatedI have changed the SSH port in sshd config, and restarted the server and sshd, but it still runs on port 22, and my firewall says its running but its not blocking anything either. I restarted iptables, and all that still nothing...
View 10 Replies View Relatedanyone have a cpanel server running centos 64bit or fedora ? i would appreciate a phpinfo. then you can remove it afterwards i need to debug something in 2 of my servers.
View 3 Replies View RelatedWitch OS 32bit or 64bit
I have a server with follow specifications:
Intel Celeron D/215/220
1.20+ GHz
1 Go DDR
Witch version of Centos is the best for this server. Centos 32bit or 64bit...
2 server configuration will look something like below. I heard that the 32bit kernel is better for the web server since I'll have cpanel on it. Anyone able to confirm this or should I just put 64bit on both of them?
Web Server
5420 2.5GHz (Dual QuadCore)
2x250GB SATA2 (RAID1)
2GB RAM
DB Server
5310 1.6GHz (Clovertown, DUAL processor)
2x73GB SAS (RAID1)
4GB RAM
I was Use Centos 64bit and when i install the openvz kernel and the openvzquota:
Quote:
yum -y install ovzkernel
yum -y install vzctrl vzquota vzpkg
I reebot my server and never boot up
I was planning to use a 8gb ram that's why i select 64bit.
I'm in the process of preparing to install CentOS 5 on my server, and was wondering whether most people recommend going with the 64bit version or sticking with 32bit. My server's CPU is 64-bit capable (Xeon 3060 at SoftLayer), and I have previously run CentOS 4.4 64bit on it, though I did have some struggles from time to time getting things to work (following setup guides that tend to assume 32bit more often than not).
I'll be running just a standard setup of PHP 5, MySQL 5, and Apache 2, powering several moderate-traffic sites that run on the Drupal CMS (e.g. about 7000-10000 visitors per day total, though hopefully more in the future of course). I don't plan on running a control panel other than Webmin, though I might get DirectAdmin or similar in the future to make hosting some friends/clients a bit simpler.
Will going with 64bit offer any worthwhile advantage with this setup?
I was surprised when hypervm brought in a 64bit guest os. Maybe it's me..but...is this a good idea? Maybe it works fine.. it just does not *seem* like it would.
View 9 Replies View Related/usr/bin/ld: /usr/local/imap-2004g/lib/libc-client.a(osdep.o): relocation R_X86_64_32 against `a local symbol' can not be used when making a shared object; recompile with -fPIC
/usr/local/imap-2004g/lib/libc-client.a: could not read symbols: Bad value
collect2: ld returned 1 exit status
make: *** [libphp5.la] Error 1
This happens in php recompile
When trying to install under 64bit
Many people have some problems with vmware server on some 64bit operation systems.
If your server's ram is more than 6GB, you have to have a 64bit OS but I have tried to install vmware server on a 64bit server, it seems to be crashing my vmware server every 5 min and I cant use it more until I reset this service.
CPU : Intel Xeon Nehalem 3440 2.53Ghz Quad Core w/ HyperThreading (8 virtual cores)
Ram : 4 GB DDR2
Os : CentOS 64bit
I have had an another server and i have solved this problem whit Debian. but on CentOS I usually have problem, and I cant use vmware server.
Have you any idea how i solve this problem on CentOS 64bit?
I'm trying to install Clamav on my Centos box (64bit version) but on the Make command I get the following error:
/usr/local/lib/libz.a(gzio.o): relocation R_X86_64_32 against `a local symbol' can not be used when making a shared object; recompile with -fPIC
/usr/local/lib/libz.a: could not read symbols: Bad value
collect2: ld returned 1 exit status
make[2]: *** [libclamav.la] Error 1
make[2]: Leaving directory `/root/clamav-0.88/libclamav'
make[1]: *** [all-recursive] Error 1
make[1]: Leaving directory `/root/clamav-0.88'
make: *** [all] Error 2
I'm guessing is something to do with X86_64 but I still can't find a solution to this.
I am pleased to report success with my first attempt of installing Cpanel on a 64bit vps running Fed4. In fact..this is the first time in known history I have tried anything this..uhhh.."risky"..and it work the very first time. Cpanel had no problems completely replacing the already pre-installed plesk.
Kudos to the Cpanel folks for that!
As cPanel is an integral part of server hosting and has the ability of compiling Apache 1.3.x with PHP4 (cgi) and PHP5 (dso) on your server OS.
Does anyone know or have baselines/benchmarks for which performs better generally for hosting: 32bit or 64bit RedHat 5 when cPanel 11 has compiled for the Apache and php mentioned above on either of these OS editions? (assume latest versions of apache/php4/5)
I was wondering if 32bit performed better or 64bit on a quad core Xeon. Don't forget PHP is compiled for prefork and not multi-threading for Apache 1.3.41 (which are considered legacy 32bit forked apps compiled against 64bit OS).
Or rephrased, could i be hampering performance by running it on a 64bit OS on a Xeon (X3210) or improving performance? I'd assume 64bit would offer better all round processing power, or is this a misconception.
I recently decided to get a server on RedHat Enterprise 5 X86_64 (64bit), when i wondered if 32bit version would have provided better performance and been the better options for compatibility.
whether if i will an increase in performance or security if I upgrade from 6.3 to 7.0?
View 12 Replies View RelatedHow do I check if SMP is on in FreeBSD? And if its off what do I need to do to turn it on?
View 8 Replies View RelatedI know someone probably asked this question... I am looking for a VPS provider that offers unmanaged VPSes with FreeBSD + Cpanel, 512RAM guaranteed, ~250-300GB bw, and 10-15GB hdd, for a price of $40-55/mo.
Can anyone recommend a good VPS provider that meets the above requirements?
Can anyone please suggest a good FreeBSD VPS hoster?
View 2 Replies View RelatedI haven't really messed with FreeBSD very much, but I'm picking up a FreeBSD server and needed to know of a good free firewall for it.
On my CentOS/Debian servers I use CSF and have had good luck with it, so I would like something like that if there is one out there.
I installed FreeBSD 6.3 with minimum packedges. (pkg.txt on attach)
Install Apache+PHP+MySQL
But then I load Drupal or Magento (CMS) browser say that:
Warning: include_once(includes/install.inc) [function.include-once]: failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /ftp/drupal.web/includes/database.inc on line 129
Warning: include_once() [function.include]: Failed opening 'includes/install.inc' for inclusion (include_path='/usr/local/share/phpmailer') in /ftp/drupal.web/includes/database.inc on line 129
Fatal error: Call to undefined function install_goto() in /ftp/drupal.web/includes/database.inc on line 130
I didn't udestand WHY?
In joomla and wordpress all work normla.
In attacment I send apache and php configs.
I am using FreeBSD with Cpanel.
df -h:
Filesystem Size Used Avail Capacity Mounted on
/dev/twed0s1a 496M 491M -35M 108% /
devfs 1.0K 1.0K 0B 100% /dev
/dev/twed0s1h 86G 67G 12G 85% /home
/dev/twed0s1d 248M 21M 207M 9% /tmp
/dev/twed0s1g 15G 6.9G 6.5G 51% /usr
/dev/twed0s1f 4.8G 3.6G 827M 82% /var
procfs 4.0K 4.0K 0B 100% /proc
This is creating Problem at Cpanel,How can i recover space from /dev/twed0s1a.