My M1 got coffee so I bought a "new" 2013 Intel MacBook Pro, I used the Apple Migration Assistant, a good idea till I started having issues with some apps designed for Apple Silicon.
My homebrew httpd is using /etc/apache2/httpd.conf instead of /usr/local/etc/httpd/httpd.conf
How I know it ? By adding changes to /etc/apache2/httpd.conf and restarting sudo /usr/local/bin/apachectl restart
Anyone has experienced that behavior ?
When I hit localhost, it's working but when I hit on Terminal brew services list, I got an error:
I got it working by starting from the beginning after deleting from .zshrc file export PATH="/opt/homebrew/sbin:$PATH"
This was added from my previous installation and in some way i guess it was conflicting with new path export PATH="/usr/local/sbin:$PATH"
Have MAMP 6.3 on an updated macOS 11.2.1
The Configuration popup launches
Web server is working but that is it.
MySQL is not running although indicates Server is 5.7.32
Ports 80 and 30036 or 8888 makes no difference
http://localhost:8888/MAMP ... unable to connect
http://localhost:8888/MAMP/phpmyadmin.php ... unable to connect
Seems like I'm the only one for some reason as doesn't seem to anything I can find
Thanks
Try removing all log files inside of the MAMP/db/mysql directory and restart MAMP.
I'm also using the same MAMP and macOS version as you but it's working.
I'm desperate.. I updated to mac High Sierra 10.13.2 and my MySQL wouldn't start on my MAMP:
So I deleted the ib_logfileN:s, typed sudo killall mysqld in terminal and restarted MAMP(that usually works)
but it didn't. So in the end I had to uninstall MAMP and download it again - and it worked the first time, but when I restarted it, same problem. So I uninstalled MAMP - downloaded AMPPS - and the same problem appeared there. So uninstalled AMPPS and downloaded XAMPP, and the same problem appeared there:
.. Obviously there is something wrong with my MySQL Server that I cant figure out, i want to murder my computer. Any help or guideance would be greatly appreciated
In the end I had to uninstall mysql with homebrew, and reinstall it according to: https://coderwall.com/p/os6woq/uninstall-all-those-broken-versions-of-mysql-and-re-install-it-with-brew-on-mac-mavericks. It has worked after that.
I've had similar issue before but usually ends up popping up. I recently upgraded to MAMP Pro 4 and any time I open app the main window doesn't appear. The application appears to be open, but can't see it. Any idea what the issue is?
Go into Applications/MAMP PRO and run MAMP PRO Uninstaller
Download MAMP_MAMP_PRO_3.5.2 and run it then quit MAMP PRO
Download MAMP_MAMP_PRO_4.5 and run it
Than should fix all the issues
First quit MAMP PRO.
Go to your
~/Library/Application Support/appsolute/MAMP PRO/templates/
folder.
Rename your my.cnf.temp file. Restart MAMP PRO.
You will then need to remake any changes you had previously made for your my.cnf template via the File > Edit Template > MySQL when you open MAMP PRO again
See also https://appsolute.zendesk.com/home first Article.
I have been running MAMP Pro 3.05 successfully in Yosemite up to DP4 on a partition that was a clean install of Yosemite.
I now have run the installer for DP5 over my Mavericks install, and now that MAMP Pro install will not start Apache. It says to check the logs, but I don't see anything pertinent.
I'm assuming that since this is a pre-existing install, something in its config is wrong for Yosemite's Apache.
Any ideas?
MAMP Folks just posted the workaround
Workaround for the 10.10 Preview 5 bug: Rename the file “envvars” located in /Applications/MAMP/Library/bin into “_envvars”
Test Update: It works!
Works for Yosemite release too!
Just found workaround from MAMP on Twitter
Workaround for the 10.10 Preview 5 bug:
Rename the file “envvars” located in into “_envvars”
This works also for Mamp Pro 2.1.1 on Yosemite.
MAMP Folks just posted the workaround
Workaround for the 10.10 Preview 5 bug: Rename the file “envvars”
located in /Applications/MAMP/Library/bin into “_envvars”
Test Update: It works!
Apparently the MAMP folks are working on a work-around:
https://twitter.com/mamp_en/status/496655943506350081
Follow their account for updates.
MAMP Pro 3.0.7.3 should run fine on Yosemite, but after installing it on a brand new machine, I experienced the same problem.
In my case, the problem occurred because I had defined Additional Parameters for my virtual host that contained quotes. By default, Yosemite keyboard settings are set to convert straight quotes to smart quotes ("no-cache" became “no-cache”. Depending on font and font size, this may not be immediately obvious). This made Apache crash, even when the host was disabled.
To change this settings, go to System Preferences -> Keyboard. In the Text tab, uncheck Use smarts quotes and dashes.
Today, I upgraded to MAMP Pro 3.0.7.3 after I upgraded to OSX Yosemite 10.10 (official release) and I experienced this same problem. Apache could not start and it has an empty log file.
I tried this fix, but I noticed that the file is named "envvars_" not "envvars". I renamed it to envvars, restarted MAMP Pro and apache could not start and it had an empty log file. I also noticed that the envvars file had been renamed to envvars_ after I had renamed it.
I was running MAMP 3.0.5 on Mavericks. After upgrading Mavericks to El Capitan, I ran into the same issue. Mysql did start normally but Apache did not.
After renaming envvars to _envvars in the folder /Applications/MAMP/Library/bin such as suggested for Yosemite, I was able to start Apache as before.
So, this fix works for El Capitan as well!
I didn't get it working by changing envvar to _envvar but was able to resolve by changing the apache port from 8888 to 80 then noticed I was missing the mod_example.so. See how I resolved below:
Why won't Apache Server start in MAMP?
I tried that solution and others over and over and did not work until I realised I should be restarting completely MAMP, after doing so, this simple change from envvars to _envvars worked like a charm.
You can completely restart MAMP checking if there's any process going on, open the terminal:
ps -cvx | grep "mysql"
That will output a list of the processes that involves mysql at the time, with a PDI associated, so you only have to take that number and:
kill PDI
Where PDI is the number associated to the process, after that, if you write again the command ps -cvx | grep "mysql" the pointer should be empty.
Once done, only execute MAMP.
The approved answer didn't work for me because the _envvars file was already there. I had to download the latest version of MAMP and install it and it worked.
Sometimes, it's not always the envars files that's the culprit. If you've been editing the vhost file at /Applications/MAMP/conf/apache/extra/httpd-vhosts.conf, a syntax error could cause MAMP's apache to not start without a warning.
In that case, you can run the following command and see if any errors are encountered.
sudo apachectl stop
Try this::
Rename the file “envvars” located in /Applications/MAMP/Library/bin into “_envvars” only for OS X Yosemite.
I got MAMP v3.4 working.
I renamed "envars_" to "_envars" ... but that didn't work.
I had to also go into preferences, and hit the "Set Web & MySql ports to 80 & 3306" button!
Works!