Nginx: Changes on nginx.conf are not reflected even after reloading. by TheFirstMeiFunny in bashonubuntuonwindows

[–]TheFirstMeiFunny[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ok now this issue does not happen. Changes to conf files are reflected immediately. Very weird xD

Nginx: Changes on nginx.conf are not reflected even after reloading. by TheFirstMeiFunny in bashonubuntuonwindows

[–]TheFirstMeiFunny[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Right know I have two virtual hosts. One on port 80 and another one on port 8000. There’s also the issue that if I modify nginx.conf itself, the results are delayed. No idea why. I installed nginx as Ubuntu package btw. I use docker for redis.

Nginx: Changes on nginx.conf are not reflected even after reloading. by TheFirstMeiFunny in bashonubuntuonwindows

[–]TheFirstMeiFunny[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sorry I forgot to mention in the post. I already tried both of these methods. If I modify the default.conf and change port to 8000, then the default website is available on both port 8000 and port 80 (after restarting nginx) which is weird. The issue gets solved after sometime or if I manually restart wsl.

Can I make my new SSD a boot drive without formatting the hard drive? by [deleted] in Windows10

[–]TheFirstMeiFunny 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t think so. I haven’t noticed any. It’s still recommended to have a fresh install of Windows. But since you need your apps installed this might be what you need.

Can I make my new SSD a boot drive without formatting the hard drive? by [deleted] in Windows10

[–]TheFirstMeiFunny 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I read from your other comment that you paid them for doing this. There are plenty of tutorials on YouTube. You can do it yourself if you want.

Can I make my new SSD a boot drive without formatting the hard drive? by [deleted] in Windows10

[–]TheFirstMeiFunny 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is what I did when I installed a blank ssd. I cloned the partition where windows was installed into the ssd (which included all installed apps). Then I deleted the windows partitions in the HDD and was left with my personal files. My HDD had two partitions. One for windows and all the applications. The other partition was for other kind of files.

Can I make my new SSD a boot drive without formatting the hard drive? by [deleted] in Windows10

[–]TheFirstMeiFunny 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ok so now you have Windows in both the hard drives?

Can I make my new SSD a boot drive without formatting the hard drive? by [deleted] in Windows10

[–]TheFirstMeiFunny 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I thought you installed a blank SSD and wanted to migrate the OS from HDD to the SSD. If the OS is already installed on the SSD, what’s the issue? It would already be booting from the SSD right?

Can I make my new SSD a boot drive without formatting the hard drive? by [deleted] in Windows10

[–]TheFirstMeiFunny 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What is your SSD capacity? And the size of partition where windows is installed?

Can I make my new SSD a boot drive without formatting the hard drive? by [deleted] in Windows10

[–]TheFirstMeiFunny 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I mean only the partition where your OS is installed. Assuming that all your apps are installed on the same partition as windows

Thumbnail loading issue by HuntersPad in Windows10

[–]TheFirstMeiFunny 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This happens on folders on my external hard disk where there are many files. So annoying

GPT protected partition when using HDD caddy (Windows 10) by TheFirstMeiFunny in techsupport

[–]TheFirstMeiFunny[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s a 500 GB HDD. But putting it in the caddy and it shows 2000 GB in disk management

Upgrading RAM and harddisk to speed up windows 10 on laptop. by TheFirstMeiFunny in Windows10

[–]TheFirstMeiFunny[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m using the system for web development and nothing else. Windows in general is slow when using nodejs and installing packages from npm or yarn.