Bluehost where is d.conf




















As for varnish cache : "since you are on the shared server you cannot clear the varnish cache. I manually installed a 3. The "cloud" service. Seemed fine back then using a customized BCU theme. I returned to it this week, only to find very slow, intermittent performance, and no image upload. All jpgs and pngs's attempted to upload returned a broken image link in preview and course. I am also running 2. Been up since early As panicking and frustration will provide, I began check and setting every iteration of admin settings, caches of all varieties, database structure, table integrity, permissions, CPanel settings, theme, config.

I am now running 3. Latest of fourth or fifth various manual installs. Pretty much default. Performance seems better to load site, but not totally sure on that. Sometimes fine, sometimes slower. Usually, first load in AM is terrible. Thinking Bluehost maybe. Right away, no images load. Same issues. I did this several times from the folder with the first image, and thinking something magically repaired, I moved on to the logos, etc in another folder.

Those images would not load. The files with. JPG and. PNG files DO! Dan, after several attempts, upgrades and manual installations i didn't manage to fix the problem. I am using your solution with uppercase extension which works.

The broken images might have something to do with how you installed your moodle. I haveMoodle 3. No problem with images. Usually with shared hosting environments, people tend to install moodle using script installer mojo market place, softaculus and when these are upgraded to higher version, issues come along like images not showing up, this possibly could be due to the reason that script installers may slightly strip down the packages and when they are overridden by the packages download from the moodle site, it starts acting weird.

I imported courses from other moodle site, images are again broken both in back end and front end. As i have mentioned before and in the title too i am talking about shared hosting not business cloud.

Shared hosting does not offer cache control see image. Anyway, i followed the solution provided by Dan Rosenthal above, I capitalized image extensions eg. This is excellent for managing your system processes, resources and ensure everything is working fine and your server isn't bogged down. It's used to show currently running processes and their PID. A process ID is a unique number that identifies a process, with that you can kill or terminate a running program on your server see kill command.

Each line represents one process, with a process being loosely defined as a running instance of a program. Often you will find you need to use different commands on the same line. We can install CSF on request. This is done as root through the command line. These can be found here. Testing appears at the top, as in the screenshot below, and can be set to OFF. After installation and activation, it is strongly recommended to disable cPHulk, as its operation can potentially conflict with CSF.

By default, the initial configuration will open up a standard set of ports, as used by cPanel and associated services. Support IP addresses can also be whitelisted to help avoid potential future issues.

This offers detailed information for each section about its purpose and potential settings.



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