A month ago, I'd suggested an edit, changing:
sudo a2enmod cgi; sudo /etc/init.d/apache2 restart
To
sudo a2enmod cgi; sudo service apache2 restart
My edit description was:
code formatting, replaced init.d call with the wrapper script service, which would make it more portable across versions
Note that the answer says it's on Ubuntu 14.04. On Ubuntu, for several versions now, the service
command has been a frontend for managing services, which in turn would call the correct init.d
script, Upstart command or systemctl
command as needed. Thus, it is safer to use across versions, and better than directly calling an init.d
script (see Why use the service command in linux?).
I am strongly tempted to suggest it again, but a unanimous rejection by three reviewers was a bit unexpected. Any thoughts on how I should go about this? Forget the edit altogether? Suggest again with a better description? Suggest just the code formatting, and forget service
?
Related:
service init.d
in a private window has askubuntu.com/q/2075 (from 2010) and stackoverflow.com/q/22509654 (from 2014) on the first page. Either of those posts will confirm what I wrote in the description, and they recommend usingservice
. What's left is to determine when Ubuntu 14.04 was released, and Googling "ubuntu 14.04 release date" shows me the information on a card. You could easily have verified what I said in 5 minutes.service
script exists.