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Updated tip with latest comments
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tony-co committed Feb 18, 2014
commit 625369ae6f2905a23ac21d2a295c433eb997554f
16 changes: 9 additions & 7 deletions book/installation.rst
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -268,13 +268,15 @@ If there are any issues, correct them now before moving on.
Note that using the ACL is recommended when you have access to them
on your server because changing the umask is not thread-safe.

**4. Use the same user for CLI and HTTP**

It is a common practice to use the same unix user for CLI and HTTP. It avoids
typing commands when setting up new projects. This is done by editing your
Apache configuration file ``httpd.conf`` and update the user and group values
from ``www-data`` to your CLI user. Obviously, this is only recommended in dev
environment.
**4. Use the same user for the CLI and the web server**

In development environments, it is a common practice to use the same unix
user for the CLI and the web server because it avoids any of these permissions
issues when setting up new projects. This is done by editing your Apache
configuration file ``httpd.conf`` and updating the User and Group values
from ``www-data`` to your CLI user. Obviously, this is only recommended in
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This can be done by editing your web server configuration (e.g. commonly httpd.conf for Apache) and setting its user to be the same as your CLI user (e.g. for Apache, update the User and Group values).

What do you guys think? I wanted to keep it short, but mention Apache as just an example

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This sounds good to me. Maybe one last thing that I'm sure @lyrixx will mention is that on some distributions the default conf file is named apache2.conf so should we mention both?

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ok for me ;) an yes for the apache2.conf

development environment as you do not want to give Apache full control over
your whole production system.
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I agree with @lyrixx that we should just avoid talking about production - so remove the last sentence. We already start with "In development environments", so I think we're good :).


When everything is fine, click on "Go to the Welcome page" to request your
first "real" Symfony2 webpage:
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