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APACHECTL(8) apachectl APACHECTL(8)
NAME
apachectl - Apache HTTP Server Control Interface
SYNOPSIS
When acting in pass-through mode, apachectl can take all the arguments
available for the httpd binary.
apachectl [ httpd-argument ]
When acting in SysV init mode, apachectl takes simple, one-word
commands, defined below.
apachectl command
SUMMARY
apachectl is a front end to the Apache HyperText Transfer Protocol
(HTTP) server. It is designed to help the administrator control the
functioning of the Apache httpd daemon.
The apachectl script can operate in two modes. First, it can act as a
simple front-end to the httpd command that simply sets any necessary
environment variables and then invokes httpd, passing through any
command line arguments. Second, apachectl can act as a SysV init
script, taking simple one-word arguments like start, restart, and stop,
and translating them into appropriate signals to httpd.
If your Apache installation uses non-standard paths, you will need to
edit the apachectl script to set the appropriate paths to the httpd
binary. You can also specify any necessary httpd command line
arguments. See the comments in the script for details.
The apachectl script returns a 0 exit value on success, and >0 if an
error occurs. For more details, view the comments in the script.
OPTIONS
Only the SysV init-style options are defined here. Other arguments are
defined on the httpd manual page.
start Start the Apache httpd daemon. Gives an error if it is already
running. This is equivalent to apachectl -k start.
stop Stops the Apache httpd daemon. This is equivalent to apachectl
to apachectl -k restart.
fullstatus
Displays a full status report from mod_status. For this to work,
you need to have mod_status enabled on your server and a text-
based browser such as lynx available on your system. The URL
used to access the status report can be set by editing the
STATUSURL variable in the script.
status Displays a brief status report. Similar to the fullstatus
option, except that the list of requests currently being served
is omitted.
graceful
Gracefully restarts the Apache httpd daemon. If the daemon is
not running, it is started. This differs from a normal restart
in that currently open connections are not aborted. A side
effect is that old log files will not be closed immediately.
This means that if used in a log rotation script, a substantial
delay may be necessary to ensure that the old log files are
closed before processing them. This command automatically checks
the configuration files as in configtest before initiating the
restart to make sure Apache doesn't die. This is equivalent to
apachectl -k graceful.
graceful-stop
Gracefully stops the Apache httpd daemon. This differs from a
normal stop in that currently open connections are not aborted.
A side effect is that old log files will not be closed
immediately. This is equivalent to apachectl -k graceful-stop.
configtest
Run a configuration file syntax test. It parses the
configuration files and either reports Syntax Ok or detailed
information about the particular syntax error. This is
equivalent to apachectl -t.
The following option was available in earlier versions but has been
removed.
startssl
To start httpd with SSL support, you should edit your
configuration file to include the relevant directives and then
use the normal apachectl start.
Apache HTTP Server 2018-07-06 APACHECTL(8)