[support] development and production environments
cooper Quintin
cooperq at cooperq.com
Wed Jan 28 10:48:57 UTC 2009
Well, now I am more confused than ever. I did as you said, I disabled
all the third party modules on the site (I made sure that it was still
not working first.) And then I started adding them back, one by one.
Well, I have added them all back now, and the site is still running, no
crashes at all. So by disabling and enabling all modules I fixed the
test site on my laptop. I don't understand at all how it would happen
that the test site is crashing my laptop, I disable all modules then
enable all modules again and everything works exactly as it should. Any
ideas on this?
Victor Kane wrote:
> Well, that certainly narrows it down.
>
> Since you have a backup, can you take advantage of that 2 minutes and
> disable the core statistics module if it is enabled, and all 3rd party
> modules? Because then you could start enabling them one by one to see
> where the problem might be.
>
> If you can't get in, what you can do is the following: assuming your
> modules are in ./sites/all/modules, then simply move them away, then
> your site will come up without them enabled.
>
> Then you can sort of add them in one by one, to see which one is
> causing the problem.
>
> Make sure php.ini has enough memory allocated, push it up to 64M to
> start if you have many modules, or even more:
>
> memory_limit = 64M
>
> Another tack is to use some kind of MySQL diagnostics to see what
> queries are killing you.
>
> The devel module would help but only if you can get the site to run!
>
> What happens when you disable all the modules and start adding them
> back one by one (how many are there?)
>
> Victor Kane
> http://awebfactory.com.ar
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