From: Debian PHP Maintainers Date: Sat, 2 May 2015 08:26:54 +0000 (+0200) Subject: php-fpm-man-section-and-cleanup X-Git-Tag: archive/raspbian/8.4.11-1+rpi1~38 X-Git-Url: https://dgit.raspbian.org/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=666a200cfcc24189d470b83a735f8c214143628c;p=php8.4.git php-fpm-man-section-and-cleanup Gbp-Pq: Name 0010-php-fpm-man-section-and-cleanup.patch --- diff --git a/sapi/fpm/php-fpm.8.in b/sapi/fpm/php-fpm.8.in index 941b911e..533d5a7b 100644 --- a/sapi/fpm/php-fpm.8.in +++ b/sapi/fpm/php-fpm.8.in @@ -141,22 +141,8 @@ The configuration file for the php-fpm daemon. .TP .B php.ini The standard php configuration file. -.SH EXAMPLES -For any unix systems which use init.d for their main process manager, you should use the init script provided to start and stop the php-fpm daemon. -.P -.PD 1 -.RS -sudo /etc/init.d/php-fpm start -.RE -.TP -For any unix systems which use systemd for their main process manager, you should use the unit file provided to start and stop the php-fpm daemon. -.P -.PD 1 -.RS -sudo systemctl start php-fpm.service -.RE -.TP -If your installation has no appropriate init script, launch php-fpm with no arguments. It will launch as a daemon (background process) by default. The file @php_fpm_localstatedir@/run/php-fpm.pid determines whether php-fpm is already up and running. Once started, php-fpm then responds to several POSIX signals: +.SH SIGNAL +Once started, php-fpm then responds to several POSIX signals: .P .PD 0 .RS @@ -170,10 +156,6 @@ If your installation has no appropriate init script, launch php-fpm with no argu .RE .PD 1 .P -.SH TIPS -The PHP-FPM CGI daemon will work well with most popular webservers, including Apache2, lighttpd and nginx. -.PD 1 -.P .SH SEE ALSO For a more or less complete description of PHP-FPM look here: .PD 0