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Date:      Mon, 4 Apr 2005 10:35:55 -0700 (PDT)
From:      Doug White <dwhite@gumbysoft.com>
To:        Uzi Klein <uzi@bmby.com>
Cc:        freebsd-stable@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: apache+mod_ssl signal 4
Message-ID:  <20050404103341.H20646@carver.gumbysoft.com>
In-Reply-To: <4250DB47.5020008@bmby.com>
References:  <424D1FBD.3070207@bmby.com> <20050401185643.I94922@carver.gumbysoft.com> <20050402145930.G1503@carver.gumbysoft.com> <4250DB47.5020008@bmby.com>

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On Mon, 4 Apr 2005, Uzi Klein wrote:

> Chuck Swiger wrote:
>
> [.....]
> > Try using PHP from the ports and see whether that runs better.  If it
> > does, well, take a look at what the port changes, and you've probably
> > located the source of your current problems.
>
> I mananged to fix it.
> php was compiled with OpenSSL support.
> When I removed that, it works like charm.
> ( Still, i might want that future one day )
>
> BTW, PHP has no specific FreeBSD patches AFAIK, and it was working on
> 5.3-RELEASE before p-5.
>
> Looks more like a shared lib problem than a PHP bug to me, but then
> again, I'm no expert.

I've seen this if you have multiple OpenSSL versions installed and somehow
both libraries get linked in at once.  This commonly happens if you have
program X linked against openssl 0.9.6 and load shared library Y linked
against 0.9.7.

Use ldd to inspect your httpd and php modules and try to find the
offending openssl library. Perhaps you installed OpenSSL as a port at one
point?

--
Doug White                    |  FreeBSD: The Power to Serve
dwhite@gumbysoft.com          |  www.FreeBSD.org



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