Control Web Panel
WebPanel => CentOS 7 Problems => Topic started by: rdy4ever on April 11, 2019, 09:21:20 AM
-
Hi. I'm running CWP7pro (CWPpro version: 0.9.8.796). I have enabled (many times - I might add) the "Hide all processes if not owned by the user" feature (permanent). But every day, this feature enters in "[STATUS: DISABLED TEMPORARY and ACTIVE PERMANENT]" automatically. For example, I enable it, it says "[STATUS: ACTIVE PERMANENT]", but then, I reboot the server and again it's temporarly disabled.
Is this a known bug or it's just me? How can I fix this?
Thanks
-
Hi, try to contact with the CWP developers http://centos-webpanel.com/contact
I guess you have some OS issue.
-
hello,
after reboot, its appear on all servers even on demo cwp
Regards
-
Hi, what do you mean? Try to reactivate it.
-
I did I mean I'm doing it manually.
when I reboot the server I have to activate it manually every time.
You can try it on Cwp demo on any version, just enter and activate it, than reboot and watch the results...
Regards
-
This is not an isolated case, though doesn't happen on all my installations.
Example environments:
CPU Model: QEMU Virtual CPU version 2.5+
CPU Details: 2 Core (2000 MHz)
Distro Name: CentOS Linux release 7.6.1810 (Core)
Kernel Version: 3.10.0-957.12.2.el7.x86_64
Platform: x86_64 [kvm]
CPU Model: QEMU Virtual CPU version 2.5+
CPU Details: 1 Core (3392 MHz)
Distro Name: CentOS Linux release 7.6.1810 (Core)
Kernel Version: 3.10.0-957.12.2.el7.x86_64
Platform: x86_64 [kvm]
In both cases there is only one (user/admin) account created and it reverts to Temporary Disabled.
-
You can't activate/deactivate anything and have it forever in the demo ;)
I did I mean I'm doing it manually.
when I reboot the server I have to activate it manually every time.
You can try it on Cwp demo on any version, just enter and activate it, than reboot and watch the results...
Regards
-
You can't activate/deactivate anything and have it forever in the demo ;)
I'm sure that was just citing an example. ::) My two examples are on active running VPSes.