On Mon, Mar 9, 2009 at 16:59, George Larson <george.g.larson@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Am I imagining things? If not, how would I properly make them able to run > through a browser? You're not imagining things. In general, unless set up with SuExec privileges, Apache (which is probably the HTTP server you're using) will run as 'nobody,' 'apache,' 'www,' or 'daemon.' If you can't configure it to SuExec (check Google for some ideas on this.... you'll need root access), you could use the less-secure (this, not recommended) options of changing the file mode permissions to 0777 or change the file ownership (if you have the right permissions yourself) to be owned by the same user and/or group as which Apache runs. It may sound a little confusing at first glance, but it's really not. Just keep in mind that UNIX and Linux (Mac and similar OS'es fall in here, too) are simultaneous multi-user systems, meaning that many users (including virtual users that the system uses as aliases for individualized permissions) can be "logged in" and run processes concurrently. -- </Daniel P. Brown> daniel.brown@xxxxxxxxxxxx || danbrown@xxxxxxx http://www.parasane.net/ || http://www.pilotpig.net/ 50% Off All Shared Hosting Plans at PilotPig: Use Coupon DOW10000 -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php