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I just moved magento from local to server and Im getting the following error, I was just wondering if someone could help me solve this,

UID of script "/home/.../public_html/index.php" is smaller than min_uid

what I did was to make a database dump and transfer it to server,

create a backup of the all the magento files and transfer and expand to server,

change the core_config table in the database.

Thanks in advance.

6
  • Where is that error from? Syslog? SELinux?
    – hakre
    Commented Mar 14, 2012 at 22:19
  • sorry Im not sure what the question is but on the page it says suPHP 0.6.1, the error shows up when I go to the index.php page, magento-domain/index.php
    – akano1
    Commented Mar 14, 2012 at 22:21
  • The error shows up in the page with a "Warning:" in front and some file given and a line number where the error occured? Is it an error given by the PHP interpreter or by the webserver?
    – hakre
    Commented Mar 14, 2012 at 22:33
  • 1
    the error is given by the webserver, it's not a php error.
    – akano1
    Commented Mar 14, 2012 at 22:43
  • I'm searching in google and I found in one place that because the file is owned by root this error happens, if this is the case, what should I do? thanks
    – akano1
    Commented Mar 14, 2012 at 22:44

5 Answers 5

46

That looks like an suPHP issue to me.

Change the user and group of your script to the user running your webserver process. So if you're running an Apache with user www-data for example, change to:

chown www-data:www-data /home/.../public_html/index.php

Or change all your files at once by:

chown -R www-data:www-data /home/.../public_html/

If you're still running into this issue after changing user and group, then your suPHP is probably working with the default min_uid = 100, but the UID of www-data is below this 100.

To fix this you can change the min_uid in suPHP's config to match the UID of www-data:

vi /etc/suphp/suphp.conf

min_uid = <UID of www-data>
2
  • Don't forget to change min_gid in the same suphp.conf file as well. I had to fix that to make it work.
    – HZhang
    Commented Jul 12, 2015 at 5:44
  • For a file uploaded via WinSCP, we can't be lazy and chown on the folder. We should do it directly to the file. Check if chown already works by running command ls -lah Commented Feb 19, 2017 at 20:01
19

If your script is owned by root, you should change the ownership back to yourself:

chown -R user /home/user/public_html

This will change the owner of all of the files contained in /home/user/public_html and all subdirectories to user.

1
  • 1
    Hi, thanks for the reply, but I dont think that's the case because I still get the same problem.
    – akano1
    Commented Mar 14, 2012 at 23:27
6

I had same problem, and fixed it with logged in Ftp and uploaded files with cpanel account of this site. Not root or admin account. You must create or edit your files with this account.

1
  • thanks this solved my problem, makes sense, because if you login as the ftp user you are not root and suPHP is happy. Commented Apr 9, 2015 at 12:08
5

What I did to fix this problem:

chown -R user:user /home/dibs/public_html

and made the php files to chmod 700

1
  • changing the file ownership to the user using chown worked for me.
    – Neel
    Commented Feb 15, 2017 at 6:46
1

as far as i am getting just disable the suPHP mode in apache2, by typing this command on terminal : sudo a2dismod suphp

if you want to enable it again : sudo a2enmod suphp

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