Hi,
lscache writes files out as:
<webserver-user>.<user-group>
e.g. nobody.myuser
Unfortunately on Plesk this falls apart as Plesk doesn't create a group per user, so you end up with:
apache.psacln
This is problematic as it means the files in the lscache directory don't count towards a users filesystem quota - which means they can easily exceed their Plesk quota and get suspended (unless you allow overuse) even though they are nowhere near their disk quota.
Is there any rational way to solve this?
TIA
Karl
lscache writes files out as:
<webserver-user>.<user-group>
e.g. nobody.myuser
Unfortunately on Plesk this falls apart as Plesk doesn't create a group per user, so you end up with:
apache.psacln
This is problematic as it means the files in the lscache directory don't count towards a users filesystem quota - which means they can easily exceed their Plesk quota and get suspended (unless you allow overuse) even though they are nowhere near their disk quota.
Is there any rational way to solve this?
TIA
Karl