rnmcd Posted January 30, 2008 Posted January 30, 2008 HI. I had a cron job set up (for dbsender.php) but I am now getting this email: <br /><b>Fatal error</b>: Allowed memory size of 33554432 bytes exhausted (tried to allocate 33533189 bytes) in <b>/home/username/dbsender/dbsender.php</b> on line <b>108</b><br /> I also noticed that my cron job is no longer in the Cron Jobs section of cPanel. There is a message on my cPanel > Cron Jobs page: /usr/bin/crontab permissions are wrong. Please set to 4755 Any idea what happened or how to remedy this? Thanks. Quote
TCH-Bruce Posted January 30, 2008 Posted January 30, 2008 Sounds like you ran out of space. Please open a ticket with the help desk and have one of the techs have a look. Quote
rnmcd Posted January 30, 2008 Author Posted January 30, 2008 Sounds like you ran out of space. Please open a ticket with the help desk and have one of the techs have a look. Ran out of space where? Is it something I can empty? Quote
TCH-Bruce Posted January 30, 2008 Posted January 30, 2008 dbsender makes backups of your database. If you aren't deleting them occasionally you will use up all your space eventually. Quote
rnmcd Posted January 30, 2008 Author Posted January 30, 2008 I thought I had it set up so that dbsender emailed me a copy of my database daily. Where would the copies that were saved on the server be? Quote
TCH-Thomas Posted January 30, 2008 Posted January 30, 2008 I had a look at the script and if not the part: $use_ftp = "no"; // Do you want this database backup uploaded to an ftp server? Fill out the next 4 lines$ftp_server = "localhost"; // FTP hostname $ftp_user_name = "ftp_username"; // FTP username $ftp_user_pass = "ftp_password"; // FTP password $ftp_path = "/"; // This is the path to upload on your ftp server! is filled out I don´t think that the script will save the backup on your server, but you could check if there are any emails/messages in your cpanelname@yourdomainname.ext through the webmail that are taking up this space. Quote
rnmcd Posted January 30, 2008 Author Posted January 30, 2008 I also noticed that my cron job is no longer in the Cron Jobs section of cPanel.There is a message on my cPanel > Cron Jobs page: /usr/bin/crontab permissions are wrong. Please set to 4755 How do I set permissions to 4755? Quote
TCH-Bruce Posted January 30, 2008 Posted January 30, 2008 Please open a ticket with the help desk and have the techs take a look. Quote
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