In a recent question titled "Demo worked but configurator broke it, by CyborgNY, LoisC gave the advice:
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in your .cfg file move:
$db_debug = 0;
to the top of the file above # File and URL's so it will catch errors in the .cfg file.
--------------------------
I have been bashing my head for days, unable to get any debug messages except the infernal "Internal error ......" and knew the problem was in syntax somewhere. But where? "Wood" and "trees" are words that are appropriate when dealing with a 2,000 line html.pl file.
By moving that one little line in the cfg file, I got a message that told me exactly where my problem was (a missing ";" in the email part of the script!)
Is there any reason why that line should not reside permanently in that position, where it obviously does more good? And why wasn't it there, all along.
Wish I were a perl expert, too.
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David Olley
Anglo & Foreign International Limited,
http://www.firehelmets.co.uk
There are 10 types of people in the world: those who understand binary, and those who don't.
--------------------------
in your .cfg file move:
$db_debug = 0;
to the top of the file above # File and URL's so it will catch errors in the .cfg file.
--------------------------
I have been bashing my head for days, unable to get any debug messages except the infernal "Internal error ......" and knew the problem was in syntax somewhere. But where? "Wood" and "trees" are words that are appropriate when dealing with a 2,000 line html.pl file.
By moving that one little line in the cfg file, I got a message that told me exactly where my problem was (a missing ";" in the email part of the script!)
Is there any reason why that line should not reside permanently in that position, where it obviously does more good? And why wasn't it there, all along.
Wish I were a perl expert, too.
-------------
David Olley
Anglo & Foreign International Limited,
http://www.firehelmets.co.uk
There are 10 types of people in the world: those who understand binary, and those who don't.