13.08.2019 · Hi Bobby, I have tried everything you answered here but it’s not working for me. This is my nginx.conf file. events{ } http { # sendfile on; # upstream app_servers { # server 127.0.0.1:8543; # } server { listen 80; location / { # proxy_connect_timeout 500s; # proxy_send_timeout 500s; # proxy_read_timeout 500s; # send_timeout 500s; …
13.07.2019 · There's a small chance that this could be caused by sending a message that is too large to be received. If you are attaching or inserting large files or several files, try sending a simple text message as a trial. Our automated system analyzes replies to choose the one that's most likely to answer the question.
connect() failed (111: Connection refused) while connecting to upstream, client .... fastcgi://[::1]:9000 Rewrite your nginx config to use ip, not dns. For instance, 127.0.0.1 instead of localhost , or remove the ipv6 alias from /etc/hosts.
17.01.2020 · Enabling this feature will redirect outgoing SMTP connections to the local mail server. root, exim, and mailman are still allowed to make direct connections. That’s it. The issue should be resolved now.
24.08.2020 · The solution is to use the screen tool to run the server instead: screen java -Xmx1024M -Xms512M -jar server.jar nogui. You should update any systemd processes accordingly. You can find information on screen here. The server instance thus runs in the background, and you can access the console at any point with screen -r.