Moving pics to another drive (disk full) Moving pics to another drive (disk full)
 

News:

CPG Release 1.6.26
Correct PHP8.2 issues with user and language managers.
Additional fixes for PHP 8.2
Correct PHP8 error with SMF 2.0 bridge.
Correct IPTC supplimental category parsing.
Download and info HERE

Main Menu

Moving pics to another drive (disk full)

Started by Fishy0118, April 02, 2007, 06:37:15 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Fishy0118

Hello,

   I've recently noticed that the drive hosting my gallery + server (apache+mysql+php on winXP) is running out of space, and thus I like to move some of the existing albums to another drive. Do I just move those pics to the new drive and update the indexes in the database? or is there a more graceful way of doing it?  I wouldn't mind moving ALL of the albums to the new drive if that's the easier/safer way to go ... or maybe i should move the whole CPG installation as if moving to a new server? But how about the directory structures and such ... hmm   :-\

   Thanks!

;)

Stramm

you could move the entire albums folder to the new drive and create a symlink to it

Joachim Müller

Quote from: Fishy0118 on April 02, 2007, 06:37:15 PM
Hello,

   I've recently noticed that the drive hosting my gallery + server (apache+mysql+php on winXP)
No real symlink on WinXP. Not a server OS anyway. Note that we do not recommend self-hosting.

Fishy0118

Quote from: Stramm on April 02, 2007, 07:08:11 PM
you could move the entire albums folder to the new drive and create a symlink to it

Yeah ... i investigated the symlink option as well (experimented with Apache for some other stuff and it seems to work) ... but i haven't thought about moving the entire album and use symlink! Thanks for the suggestion  ;)

Fishy0118

Quote from: GauGau on April 02, 2007, 08:12:07 PM
Note that we do not recommend self-hosting.

Hello GauGau ... what's the reason behind this? I mean ... someone has to host the gallery ... and why it shouldn't be me?  Thanks  :P

Joachim Müller

Because maintaining a webserver that is available on the internet is a pro-job that requires 24/7 maintenance and a lot of work. Has been discussed in detail on other threads. We recommend web-hosting unless you're a professional, experienced webserver admin and you are willing to spend a lot of time maintaining it (checking logs, subscribing to various bug report newsletter, keeping your server up-to-date).