I set up a host using ispconfig which does it this way. It solves a whole bunch of security and file permission problems that I'd been having with cms engines and such because it runs everything under the site owner rather than www-data. It really works pretty well. If you were running tomcat or mono, they're also done as a proxy. On December 27, 2017 11:15:22 AM EST, "@lbutlr" <kremels@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >Hi, I hate to repost, but I did not receive this message back from the >list, so I am unsure it got posted. So it's not a complete repeat, I've >added a little information. > >I have php working within Apache 2.4 by adding the Proxy method to the >virtual host, but am holding off on doing this for all the virtual >hosts if I can avoid it. > > DocumentRoot /usr/local/www/roundcube/ >ProxyPassMatch ^/(.*\.php)$ >fcgi://127.0.0.1:9000/usr/local/www/roundcube/$1 > >I suppose I could write a quick script to automate this. > >On 26 Dec 2017, at 15:31, @lbutlr <kremels@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> I'm reading a bunch of writre-ups on using php in apache 2.4 and >everything is coming down very much against using mod_php as I've been >doing for… well, ages. But the configuration at setup for using php-fpm >seems unnecessarily convoluted. >> >> As I understand it, you setup a proxy and then send php files via >that proxy, which means adjusting every vhost on the server. >> >> Is there a way to setup php-amp so that it basically works the way >mod-php did, in that all .php files are processed simply based on their >extension? > > >-- >PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) >To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php -- Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my brevity.