2009/7/6 Isaac Dover <isaacdover@xxxxxxxxx> > Hi Chantale, as Bastien mentioned, a preconfigured package might be the > best > way to go. Wikipedia has more information: > > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_LAMP_Packages > > What are you wanting to build in your interface? > > - Isaac > > On Mon, Jul 6, 2009 at 9:14 AM, Bastien Koert <phpster@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > Try xamp or one of the preconfigured packages > > > > bastien > > > > On Sunday, July 5, 2009, <schneider.chantale@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > Hello, > > > > > > My name ich Chantale, I am 15years old and in a german Lycee. I like to > > study Informatic in two years and now try to code my first applications. > I > > am new to php and like to code my own Intranet Web-Interface which should > > run on my FileServer at home. > > > > > > I have installed suPHP, but it seems to be not the thing I need, > because > > it works only on a VHost. > > > > > > What I need is, that a ${USER} can login and work on her/his ${HOME}. > > > > > > How can I archive this? > > > > > > Thank you > > > Chantale > > > > > > > Installing LAMP is not a good idea for productive servers. Always stick with the Packages of your distribution to get all upgrades. Activating a module isn't hard at all, so... there's not really a need for packages like "LAMP" on a unix-like OS. The point in not using such Packages like LAMP on a system which isn't productive is learning to set up a productive server. You decide. mod_auth_pam might be a way fo accomplish what you want. Just my two cent.