top button
Flag Notify
    Connect to us
      Site Registration

Site Registration

Apache on RedHat

0 votes
372 views

I am setting up Apache on Redhat and have the following errors:

Starting httpd: httpd: Syntax error on line 59 of /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf: Cannot load
/etc/httpd/modules/mod_perl.so into server: /etc/httpd/modules/mod_perl.so: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
[FAILED]

I have the following 3 lines in the httpd.conf file

ServerRoot "/etc/httpd" - This was already their
LoadModule perl_module modules/mod_perl.so
PerlSwitches -w -T
PerlConfigRequire /var/www/html/bugzilla/mod_perl.pl

I am not sure what else I need to do fix this error.

posted Jun 3, 2013 by anonymous

Share this question
Facebook Share Button Twitter Share Button LinkedIn Share Button

1 Answer

0 votes

Search for mod_perl.so and adjust the path in your config or simply don't use it to get Bugzilla up and running. Ubuntu uses lines like the following:

LoadModule perl_module /usr/lib/apache2/modules/mod_perl.so

answer Jun 3, 2013 by anonymous
Similar Questions
+1 vote

Has any one used resizefs module with cloud-init on centos/redhat before? How to call it with #cloud-config user data, do I need to give it any parameters? I googled cloud-init, but it is pretty difficult to find a manual/book on this, and mostly they are Ubuntu based.

If possible, I'd like to use a same image/AMI to boot up instances(VMs) with different disk size setup, and let cloud-init to take care of increasing partition size, and file system re-sizing. Is it possible for centos/redhat?

0 votes

I get FAILED TO START LOAD KERNEL MODULES during the boot.

Everytime Kernel is updated VirtualBox modules fail I have to reboot into the new Kernel, run the following commands and then it starts working.

$ sudo akmods --force
$ sudo dracut -v -f
$ sudo grub2-mkconfig -o /boot/efi/EFI/fedora/grub.cfg

Then everything starts working again and the boot error goes away. My question is how can I automate this task.

0 votes

I recently migrated approximately 100 rhel 6 machines from NFS3 to NFS4 (server is rhel 6.6, clients are a mix from 6.3 to 6.6). Things went pretty smooth until several hours into the new configuration, then things started
running very slowly. Restarting the nfs server process clears the issue which seems to indicate the server is the problem.

The file system itself can do some very high io throughput, on the order of 1GB/sec sustained and the "th" values in /proc/net/rpc/nfsd never increase which indicates i/o's are completing on time with no thread starvation. The server itself is set for 384 threads. During the previous NFS3 config the thread count was much higher and had no problems.

I suspect file locking as the primary application in use ( an in house app) uses a lot of little startup scripts which call other scripts to set up the environment etc. Under normal circumstances this startup takes about 6 seconds. Over time that duration increases up to 30 and even 70 seconds in some cases.

I've scoured every reference to nfs4 performance degradation I could find but nothing seems to call out what we are experiencing. A few retrans exist in nfsstat but nothing that stands out. Generally, everything "look" OK but
clearly is not.

Oh, and this is all being run over 10G Ethernet. If memory serves, I believe the kernel is 2.6.2-504.8.1 on the server.

Any ideas about what else to check would be greatly appreciated.

0 votes

Wonder how's the relationship between the centos 6's main OS/ repository and redhat 6's repositories. Let's say, Redhat 6 seperate RPMs into a series of repos like:

redhat-6-server ##(base redhat 6 OS/)
redhat-6-server-optional
redhat-6-server-supplementary
redhat-6-server-rhev-agent
rhel-6-server-cf-tools
...

Does centos 6 merge all the redhat 6 repos into one big repository? or still leave out some minor/functional ones? If the second is true, then it will be great if we can find the repo mapping link between Redhat 6 and centos 6.

+2 votes

I am building gcc 4.8.1 in a Red Hat 6.4 64 bit machine. I am building gnat first and it is build as 32 bit i686 architecture. I used gnat-gpl-2013-i686-pc-linux-gnu-bin for gnat and it created a 32 bit gcc in the directory, I set the path to that so, gcc is now gcc 4.7.4 from /gnat/bin/gcc. When I checked that is 32 bit gcc.

I used this configuration

./gcc-4.8.1/configure --disable-multilib --disable-bootstrap
--disable-install-libiberty --with-system-zlib --enable-clocale=gnu
--enable-shared --enable-lto --enable-threads=posix --enable-__cxa_atexit
--enable-languages=c,c++,fortran,java,ada --prefix=/usr/local/ CFLAGS="-pipe
-march=native -mtune=native -g -O2" CXXFLAGS="-pipe -march=native
-mtune=native -g -O2"

I was able to build the compiler with this configuration and arch is x86_64.

when I tried to compile a file with -m32 option it didn't work and got the error message

crtbegin.o: could not read symbols: File in wrong format.
Collect2: kd returned 1 exit status
...