Last edited by Raval; March 21st, 2007 at 03:24 AM.
Hi
I just installed XAMPP for my Edgy box using the intrusction above. But somehow when I try to start LAMPP, only Apache and ProFTPD seem to be able to start, MySQL just refuses to work (I looked at the XAMPP Control Panel and the button next to MySQL always read 'Execute' no matter how many time I click it)
Moreover, when I navigate to localhost, I got a 403 error.
Does anybody have an idea of what went wrong here?
This might be a silly question but I have just installed xampp but how do I get it to start every time I log in?
I can't just add /opt/lampp/lampp start to the startup programs because I need to have sudo infront of it to start it in a terminal.
Excellent howto.
I had problems with setting up the control panel. Fixed these by:
- manually creating the .local/share/applications directories.
- And then using the config file posted by erkki70.
Thanks
Wonderful HOWTO! I've just started my personal web site and have experimented with setting my own in-house test server on an old computer. I was having trouble when I ran across this HOWTO. Now I have a personal server on my main machine. After going through the "lampp security" and setting up proper passwords for everything, I may now start the heavy lifting on my site design. Thank you again!
I found the following on the apache friends website. Forgive the stupid question but could someone tell me how to do this with feisty?Code:After I rebooted my Linux box XAMPP stopped running! How can I fix this? Correct. That's normal Linux behaviour (which applies to any other Unix-like system. It's the admin's job to make sure a particular application is started at bootup. There is no real standard way to configure the boot process of a Linux system, but most of them should allow you to start XAMPP at boot time using the following steps. 1. First, find out your default runlevel. Simply type egrep :initdefault: /etc/inittab. You should no see a line containing a number between two colons. In most cases 3 or 5 (2 if you're using Debian). 2. Go into the directory which configures this runlevel. If for example your runlevel is 3, then you have to change into the /etc/rc.d/rc3.d directory. If your system didn't provide /etc/rc.d/rc3.d please try also /etc/init.d/rc3.d and /etc/rc3.d. 3. Now carry out the actual configuration by typing: ln -s /opt/lampp/lampp S99lampp ln -s /opt/lampp/lampp K01lampp Now XAMPP should start and stop automatically if you boot or shutdown your machine.
Joshua K
Ubuntu For Free Blog
Nice almost everything worked
except this...
That didnt work for me ;x[Desktop Entry]
Comment=Start/Stop XAMPP
Name=XAMPP Control Panel
Exec=gksudo "python /opt/lampp/share/xampp-control-panel/xampp-control-panel.py"
Icon[en_CA]=/usr/share/icons/Tango/scalable/devices/network-wired.svg
Encoding=UTF-8
Terminal=false
Name[en_CA]=XAMPP Control Panel
Comment[en_CA]=Start/Stop XAMPP
Type=Application
Icon=/usr/share/icons/Tango/scalable/devices/network-wired.svg
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