I'm getting those generic segmentation faults on a Centos 5 htpd 2.2.3-11 webserver. So far, I've not been able to track down what might be close to causing this. I've read about mod_whatkilledus, but don't know if I can install this in any way on my server or if it's still even valid. Has anyone used this? How was it installed, if so? I don't really want to start messing with configuring httpd, so I'd like to keep this simple and RPM-based if at all possible. Thanks, Steve Campbell
From: Steve Campbell <campbell at cnpapers.com>> I'm getting those generic segmentation faults on a Centos 5 htpd > 2.2.3-11 webserver. So far, I've not been able to track down what might > be close to causing this. I've read about mod_whatkilledus, but don't > know if I can install this in any way on my server or if it's still even > valid. > Has anyone used this? How was it installed, if so? I don't really want > to start messing with configuring httpd, so I'd like to keep this simple > and RPM-based if at all possible.A bit related: http://www.cyberciti.biz/tips/configure-apache-web-server-for-core-dump.html But I guess you would need and apache compiled with debuging symbols... JD
On 07/28/2010 07:43 AM, Steve Campbell wrote:> I'm getting those generic segmentation faults on a Centos 5 htpd > 2.2.3-11 webserver. So far, I've not been able to track down what might > be close to causing this. I've read about mod_whatkilledus, but don't > know if I can install this in any way on my server or if it's still even > valid. > > Has anyone used this? How was it installed, if so? I don't really want > to start messing with configuring httpd, so I'd like to keep this simple > and RPM-based if at all possible. >If your Apache doesn't have any non-stock modules installed, I would look for a hardware fault first. Start with memtest86+. If you *do* have non-stock modules installed - look at them. I've run Apache for more than a decade and seg faults are very rare unless you have flaky hardware or are using unsupported modules. -- Benjamin Franz