I am running SER from the command line as like so:
/usr/local/sbin/ser
However, I cannot control it via serctl due to the fact that when it runs via that command it is not creating a PID. Is this symtomatic of the way I am running it or is there something wrong with the code causing it not to write out a PID file. I have searched for ser.pid on my system and it is not there (was just making sure that serctl was not looking in the wrong spot for the PID file). Any suggestions??
Thanks,
Jason
This helped me a lot. On Jul 01, 2005 at 12:26, Juan juan@uwtcallback.com wrote:
Thanks, my friend. The killall worked. Ser is stopped. But after locate -u ./ I still cannot find ser.pid. So it is not there. How can I generate it or get it?
How do you start ser? If you start it directly (not via an init.d scrip) you must pass it -P pid_file to create the pid file.
Andrei
Juan
-----Original Message----- From: serusers-bounces@iptel.org [mailto:serusers-bounces@lists.iptel.org] On Behalf Of Jason Hoss Sent: Tuesday, July 12, 2005 12:56 PM To: SER Mail List Subject: [Serusers] SER not creating PID
I am running SER from the command line as like so:
/usr/local/sbin/ser
However, I cannot control it via serctl due to the fact that when it runs via that command it is not creating a PID. Is this symtomatic of the way I am running it or is there something wrong with the code causing it not to write out a PID file. I have searched for ser.pid on my system and it is not there (was just making sure that serctl was not looking in the wrong spot for the PID file). Any suggestions??
Thanks,
Jason
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That worked great. Thanks again for the help.
Jason
Jason Hoss wrote:
I am running SER from the command line as like so:
/usr/local/sbin/ser
However, I cannot control it via serctl due to the fact that when it runs via that command it is not creating a PID. Is this symtomatic of the way I am running it or is there something wrong with the code causing it not to write out a PID file. I have searched for ser.pid on my system and it is not there (was just making sure that serctl was not looking in the wrong spot for the PID file). Any suggestions??
Thanks,
Jason
Serusers mailing list serusers@lists.iptel.org http://lists.iptel.org/mailman/listinfo/serusers