On 3/3/06, Boyle Owen <Owen.Boyle@xxxxxxx> wrote: > You're doing the right thing - you must simply be editing the wrong config file (this is a likely problem if you have several installs and are not sure which one is running). > > If you do "ps -ef" you should see the full path to httpd (eg /usr/local/apache2/httpd). Then if you do: > > $ /full/path/to/httpd -V and look for SERVER_CONFIG_FILE it will tell you where its default config file is. > > Other tricks: > > - put a deliberate syntax error in the config and do a configtest: it should complain > - look for "-f" in the ps output (this is the flag to select a particular config file). > > Rgds, > Owen Boyle > Disclaimer: Any disclaimer attached to this message may be ignored. > Thanks. It appears that te full path is /usr/sbin/apache2 and the config file is /etc/apache2/apache2.conf I have googled nothing that showed a config file that is not called httpd.conf but as the executable is called apache2 and not httpd, then I guess it may follow that so is also called the config file. I installed via apt-get in Kubuntu, that may account or the unusual names. Thank you. Dotan Cohen http://dotancohen.com