Valeri Galtsev wrote: > > On Thu, September 21, 2017 4:04 am, Nicolas Kovacs wrote: >> Hi, >> >> I'm hosting a few web apps like OwnCloud, Wordpress and Dolibarr on >> CentOS 7 that require a handful of changes to php.ini. I have to define >> some custom values for post_max_size, upload_max_filesize, etc. >> >> I don't know if I'm supposed to edit /etc/php.ini directly or if changes >> should be put in a configuration file stub in /etc/php.d. For example, I >> followed the recommendations of a fellow CentOS user and defined >> date.timezone by edit /etc/php.d/date.ini like this. >> >> [Date] >> ; Defines the default timezone used by the date functions >> ; http://php.net/date.timezone >> date.timezone = Europe/Paris >> >> Am I supposed to do something similar for other PHP variables? > > I for one do all changes I need (like timezone, memory, upload size, etc) > in /etc/php.ini or its equivalent (on FreeBSD it will be > /usr/local/etc/php.ini). Package managers are smart to not overwrite (or > delete when package is uninstalled) configuration files. I'm sure config > files in php.d are read after /etc/php.ini so they have "final word" on > what some variable will be. Making habit to put things there is good in > respect you will check/edit in place that will be overriding other places > like /etc/php.ini. As I am one sysadmin in the team, I prefer slight > convenience (or indulge my laziness) of doing it /etc/php.ini. So, it > basically can be just your own habit. Y'all should note the existence of yum-posttransaction-actions, which allows you to create scripts to be automagically run after a yum update. I, specifically, use it to keep apcupsd from either screaming and screaming, as happens with an extension, by just using sed -i to change /etc/apcupsd/appcontrol (which is *not* a configuration file, and so is overwritten) so that SHUTDOWN=/bin/false, rather than /sbin/shutdown mark _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos