We just recently setup a new dedicated for a customer which is running Centos 5 with WHM/cPanel as per his request.
About a week after the initial setup, he contacts us saying there is a problem with the "Service Status" page in WHM where it isn't showing the services, only the server & memory load.
To cut a long story short, he has it setup to monitor the services under "Service Manager" and I've checked that the services are indeed running but they still aren't listed.
After searching around I found a forum post with the exact same issue, so I did as the post instructed and it worked.
About another week passes and I find out he has contacted us again about the same problem, after looking into in a little more I seem to think it's happening every time cPanel updates itself.
Does anyone have any ideas on what might be going on and how I can go about fixing this properly? For the time being I'm just running the 'fix' in the forum post I found, but that only works until cPanel updates again.
The 'fix' I'm using at the moment can be found here.
Server is running Centos 5, WHM 11 cPanel 11 (RELEASE).
Is there a way to change the web services (from Windows) from SYSTEM to an Admin account? (Cos i need to use PHP's system() to run a process on the system but it only takes in user: ADMIN and not SYSTEM
I have tried changing the following processes: IIS Admin World Wide Web Publishing Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP)
but i still get a dependency error. Please advise.
When looking at the above page (and I've been told this reflects the usage of the entire server I'm on, not just my vps) everything looks fine except the Memory Usage. It's up at about 75%
In Cpanel, If i click on Apache Status it tells me aload of website that have been visited recently, under the vhost column. It shows this but sometimes under those it shows aload of (unavailable). Why is this. Is this normal?
cpsrvd up Server Load 3.94 (4 cpus) Memory Used 18.5 % Swap Used 0 % Disk /dev/md1 (/) 24 % Disk /dev/md2 (/tmp) 3 % Disk /dev/md3 (/home) 97 % Disk /dev/md4 (/usr) 40 % Disk /dev/md5 (/var) 75 % Disk /dev/md0 (/boot) 30 %
Server load and Disk /dev/md3 (/home) are showing red dots.
to understand this page on cPanel. I can imagine that red dots are not a good thing while the green ones are, but I don't know what it all means or if I should be complaining about this to my host...
The cPanel on my dedicated server which I recently purchased from siterollout.com is giving me lotsa trouble. I never even touched cPanel settings, its been like that ever since I purchased it.
I have a new dedicated server (my first one) with CentOS and Cpanel, and after a restart I can't access any web or ftp service... wasn't it supposed to autostart whith the system boot?
Another dumb problem I'd like to ask about: I've changed the ssh port for security puroposes, and now I can't acces ssh neither though the old port or he new one... could this be a firewall issue? How can I solve it now without ssh? :-/
Cpanel installed on Centos 5.2 on a dedicated server.
This morning, I received multiple emails about services being restarted. About 20 minutes apart, with nothing that I coudl see going on with the server, I had multiple services fail and restart.
How do I trouble shoot this to see if there is a problem?
At 6:21 The following services failed: httpd lfd httpd cpsrvd lfd and I received emailed messages similar to these (obviously the port and service name were didfferent in each email). cpsrvd failed @ Sat Nov 15 06:21:29 2008. A restart was attempted automagically. Failure Reason: Unable to connect to port 2086 Then, at 6:42 The following services failed: cpsrvd cpsrvd httpd lfd httpd lfd and I received emailed messages similar to these (obviously the port and service name were didfferent in each email). cpsrvd failed @ Sat Nov 15 06:21:29 2008. A restart was attempted automagically.