Well, in fact I've a new problem.
info.php file works, so php works.
But when I'm trying to access to my install.php file for wordpress
installation I've "File not found." and in /var/log/nginx/error.log I
have: "*1 FastCGI sent in stderr: "Primary script unknown" while reading
response header from upstream, client: 89.2.128.79, server:
blog.koshie.fr, request: "GET /wp-admin/install.php HTTP/1.1", upstream:
"fastcgi://unix:/var/run/php5-fpm.sock:", host: "blog.koshie.fr""
An idea? I've googled a little and some peoples talk about
/etc/nginx/fastcgi_params's SCRIPT_FILE_NAME parameters. But I don't
understand what value to put into.
PS : Sorry for the noise of my last e-mail.
Cordially, Koshie
Le Sat, 02 Mar 2013 20:00:47 +0100, GASPARD kévin <list-reader@koshie.fr>
a écrit:
> I've removed all "127.0.0.1:9000" lines by "fastcgi_pass
> unix:/var/run/php5-fpm.sock;" and everything works now :-).
>
> Thanks for your help !
>
> Le Thu, 21 Feb 2013 14:50:41 +0100, Francis Daly <francis@daoine.org> a
> écrit:
>
>> On Thu, Feb 21, 2013 at 10:26:22AM +0100, GASPARD Kévin wrote:
>>
>> Hi there,
>>
>>> >So: what is the hostname in the url that you try to get, when you see
>>> >the 502 error?
>>>
>>> Trying to install a Wordpress, used a info.php page here:
>>> http://blog.koshie.fr/wp-admin/info.php
>>
>> Ok - so the one server{} block that is used is either the one that has
>> server_name blog.koshie.fr, or is the default one.
>>
>>> As you can see, there is a 502 Bad Gateway error.
>>
>> Yes, and that error log shows that:
>>
>>> 2013/02/21 10:21:22 [error] 1097#0: *5 connect() failed (111:
>>> Connection
>>> refused) while connecting to upstream, client: 46.218.152.242, server:
>>> koshie.fr, request: "GET /wordpress/info.php HTTP/1.1", upstream:
>>> "fastcgi://127.0.0.1:9000", host: "blog.koshie.fr"
>>
>> it is using the server "koshie.fr", not the server
>> "blog.koshie.fr". Presumably the server "koshie.fr" is the default,
>> and the server "blog.koshie.fr" does not exist.
>>
>> So the configuration that is running, is *not* the configuration that
>> you are showing here.
>>
>>> Logically, this is the vhost configuration file for
>>> http://blog.koshie.fr/wp-admin/info.php:
>>
>> But based on your later mail, this configuration file does not exist.
>>
>> If you want to get this configured correctly, your best bet is probably
>> to simplify the configuration significantly.
>>
>> Leave /etc/nginx/nginx.conf as it is.
>>
>> Let /etc/nginx/conf.d have exactly one file in it, this one.
>>
>> Then run your test and see if it works or fails.
>>
>>> >Maybe it is simplest if you rename the conf.d directory, then create
>>> >a new conf.d directory with just one vhost file. Then reload nginx and
>>> >re-do your test of a php request and see what it says.
>>>
>>> So, above you've the configuration file related to this log error:
>>
>> No.
>>
>> That configuration file does not result in this error.
>>
>>> >If it still fails, then you have a simpler test case to work from.
>>>
>>> What is this test case please?
>>
>> Your test case is:
>>
>> * you run "curl -i http://blog.koshie.fr/wordpress/info.php"
>> * you expect to see some useful content
>> * you actually see a 502 error.
>>
>> Then do whatever it takes to get the expected output.
>>
>> I think that one part of the problem is that you have only half-changed
>> from an old system to a new system.
>>
>> You new system has nothing listening on 127.0.0.1:9000, so any
>> configuration that mentions that ip:port is broken. It should be
>> removed,
>> or replaced with the unix socket.
>>
>> And your new system does not actually include all of the files that you
>> want it to.
>>
>> When your nginx starts, it reads exactly one configuration file:
>> /etc/nginx/nginx.conf.
>>
>> That file then uses "include" to read some other files. Those other
>> files do not seem to be the ones you want, for some reason.
>>
>> I suggest: stop nginx. Make sure it is stopped, and not running, and
>> has nothing listening on port 80 or port 443. Then look at the files
>> in /etc/nginx/conf.d, and make sure that they are exactly the ones that
>> you want. Then start nginx, access the info.php url, and see if it
>> works.
>>
>> Good luck,
>>
>> f
>
>
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