Blank page when trying to access phpmyadmin
I would like to access phpmyadmin. I have access it before but, now, I'm just getting a blank page and I really don't get why.
I've installed phpmyadmin using
sudo apt-get install phpmyadmin
I've run
sudo gedit /etc/apache2/apache2.conf
And there added:
#Include phpmyadmin:
include /etc/phpmyadmin/apache.conf
But I was getting a warning when I restart apache, telling me:
The Alias directive in /etc/phpmyadmin/apache.conf at line 3 will
probably never match because it overlaps an earlier Alias.
How can I solve this, so that I can see phpmyadmin interface again, when I do http://localhost/phpmyadmin instead of seeing a blank webpage?
Dump -
I've tried
apt-get remove phpmyadmin
and thenapt-get install phpmyadmin
- still the same blank page. :(/etc/phpmyadmin
- I've chmod o+w permissions to phpmyadmin folder and it's contents. - still the blank page...
apache2 phpmyadmin
|
show 5 more comments
I would like to access phpmyadmin. I have access it before but, now, I'm just getting a blank page and I really don't get why.
I've installed phpmyadmin using
sudo apt-get install phpmyadmin
I've run
sudo gedit /etc/apache2/apache2.conf
And there added:
#Include phpmyadmin:
include /etc/phpmyadmin/apache.conf
But I was getting a warning when I restart apache, telling me:
The Alias directive in /etc/phpmyadmin/apache.conf at line 3 will
probably never match because it overlaps an earlier Alias.
How can I solve this, so that I can see phpmyadmin interface again, when I do http://localhost/phpmyadmin instead of seeing a blank webpage?
Dump -
I've tried
apt-get remove phpmyadmin
and thenapt-get install phpmyadmin
- still the same blank page. :(/etc/phpmyadmin
- I've chmod o+w permissions to phpmyadmin folder and it's contents. - still the blank page...
apache2 phpmyadmin
Did you try it before you addedinclude /etc/phpmyadmin/apache.conf
? If not, can you try to remove that line and restart to try again?
– Kris Harper
Aug 26 '11 at 13:39
@root45 - Yes I've try it before without that line. And then with it, and now, I've remove that line. :(
– MEM
Aug 26 '11 at 13:49
I should have asked this above, but did removing that line get rid of the message "The Alias directive in /etc ... an earlier Alias" that you get when you restart? I think there may be two separate issues here.
– Kris Harper
Aug 26 '11 at 14:21
@root45 - Yes. Removing that line, removed the message.
– MEM
Aug 26 '11 at 15:02
1
@root45:ls -ld /etc/phpmyadmin
is the right way to get a single line of information on a folder.
– Lekensteyn
Aug 27 '11 at 8:47
|
show 5 more comments
I would like to access phpmyadmin. I have access it before but, now, I'm just getting a blank page and I really don't get why.
I've installed phpmyadmin using
sudo apt-get install phpmyadmin
I've run
sudo gedit /etc/apache2/apache2.conf
And there added:
#Include phpmyadmin:
include /etc/phpmyadmin/apache.conf
But I was getting a warning when I restart apache, telling me:
The Alias directive in /etc/phpmyadmin/apache.conf at line 3 will
probably never match because it overlaps an earlier Alias.
How can I solve this, so that I can see phpmyadmin interface again, when I do http://localhost/phpmyadmin instead of seeing a blank webpage?
Dump -
I've tried
apt-get remove phpmyadmin
and thenapt-get install phpmyadmin
- still the same blank page. :(/etc/phpmyadmin
- I've chmod o+w permissions to phpmyadmin folder and it's contents. - still the blank page...
apache2 phpmyadmin
I would like to access phpmyadmin. I have access it before but, now, I'm just getting a blank page and I really don't get why.
I've installed phpmyadmin using
sudo apt-get install phpmyadmin
I've run
sudo gedit /etc/apache2/apache2.conf
And there added:
#Include phpmyadmin:
include /etc/phpmyadmin/apache.conf
But I was getting a warning when I restart apache, telling me:
The Alias directive in /etc/phpmyadmin/apache.conf at line 3 will
probably never match because it overlaps an earlier Alias.
How can I solve this, so that I can see phpmyadmin interface again, when I do http://localhost/phpmyadmin instead of seeing a blank webpage?
Dump -
I've tried
apt-get remove phpmyadmin
and thenapt-get install phpmyadmin
- still the same blank page. :(/etc/phpmyadmin
- I've chmod o+w permissions to phpmyadmin folder and it's contents. - still the blank page...
apache2 phpmyadmin
apache2 phpmyadmin
edited Aug 26 '11 at 21:10
Jorge Castro
36.7k106422617
36.7k106422617
asked Aug 26 '11 at 13:09
MEMMEM
4,591113141
4,591113141
Did you try it before you addedinclude /etc/phpmyadmin/apache.conf
? If not, can you try to remove that line and restart to try again?
– Kris Harper
Aug 26 '11 at 13:39
@root45 - Yes I've try it before without that line. And then with it, and now, I've remove that line. :(
– MEM
Aug 26 '11 at 13:49
I should have asked this above, but did removing that line get rid of the message "The Alias directive in /etc ... an earlier Alias" that you get when you restart? I think there may be two separate issues here.
– Kris Harper
Aug 26 '11 at 14:21
@root45 - Yes. Removing that line, removed the message.
– MEM
Aug 26 '11 at 15:02
1
@root45:ls -ld /etc/phpmyadmin
is the right way to get a single line of information on a folder.
– Lekensteyn
Aug 27 '11 at 8:47
|
show 5 more comments
Did you try it before you addedinclude /etc/phpmyadmin/apache.conf
? If not, can you try to remove that line and restart to try again?
– Kris Harper
Aug 26 '11 at 13:39
@root45 - Yes I've try it before without that line. And then with it, and now, I've remove that line. :(
– MEM
Aug 26 '11 at 13:49
I should have asked this above, but did removing that line get rid of the message "The Alias directive in /etc ... an earlier Alias" that you get when you restart? I think there may be two separate issues here.
– Kris Harper
Aug 26 '11 at 14:21
@root45 - Yes. Removing that line, removed the message.
– MEM
Aug 26 '11 at 15:02
1
@root45:ls -ld /etc/phpmyadmin
is the right way to get a single line of information on a folder.
– Lekensteyn
Aug 27 '11 at 8:47
Did you try it before you added
include /etc/phpmyadmin/apache.conf
? If not, can you try to remove that line and restart to try again?– Kris Harper
Aug 26 '11 at 13:39
Did you try it before you added
include /etc/phpmyadmin/apache.conf
? If not, can you try to remove that line and restart to try again?– Kris Harper
Aug 26 '11 at 13:39
@root45 - Yes I've try it before without that line. And then with it, and now, I've remove that line. :(
– MEM
Aug 26 '11 at 13:49
@root45 - Yes I've try it before without that line. And then with it, and now, I've remove that line. :(
– MEM
Aug 26 '11 at 13:49
I should have asked this above, but did removing that line get rid of the message "The Alias directive in /etc ... an earlier Alias" that you get when you restart? I think there may be two separate issues here.
– Kris Harper
Aug 26 '11 at 14:21
I should have asked this above, but did removing that line get rid of the message "The Alias directive in /etc ... an earlier Alias" that you get when you restart? I think there may be two separate issues here.
– Kris Harper
Aug 26 '11 at 14:21
@root45 - Yes. Removing that line, removed the message.
– MEM
Aug 26 '11 at 15:02
@root45 - Yes. Removing that line, removed the message.
– MEM
Aug 26 '11 at 15:02
1
1
@root45:
ls -ld /etc/phpmyadmin
is the right way to get a single line of information on a folder.– Lekensteyn
Aug 27 '11 at 8:47
@root45:
ls -ld /etc/phpmyadmin
is the right way to get a single line of information on a folder.– Lekensteyn
Aug 27 '11 at 8:47
|
show 5 more comments
7 Answers
7
active
oldest
votes
Try running
sudo dpkg-reconfigure phpmyadmin
To set up the phpmyadmin files, database connections and create the phpmyadmin databases
I cannot test this any longer. If someone find this answer an answer, please shared and I will mark it as a correct answer. cheers.
– MEM
Nov 11 '11 at 18:30
1
Not working on 15.04 problem still remained.
– Mohammad_Hosseini
May 18 '15 at 11:58
add a comment |
All the previous answers did not help me, but then I found the solution:
apt install php-gettext
this fixed phpmyadmin
white blank page issue.
2
After updating from 15.04 to 16.04, I needed to re-install MySQL 5.7 because the attempted upgrade from MySQL 5.6 failed. After the 5.7 installation, I got a blank page from phpMyAdmin also... spent a great amount of time searching for clues... and this single answer resolved my issue. Thanks.
– TheGeeko61
May 22 '16 at 16:08
This fix worked for me too, Thanks a lot
– Sukeshini
Jul 10 '16 at 6:22
add a comment |
This problem occurred to me because I modified the php.ini (/etc/php5/apache/php.ini) and introduced a wrong format. Specifically, I needed to upload a bigger file so I modified this line:
upload_max_filesize = 2M
with:
upload_max_filesize = 20
As you can see, I missed an M. After restarting apache (sudo service apache2 restart
), I was getting the blank page.
** In general, it might be that a mistake in the php.ini produces a silent (blank page) output in php. **
add a comment |
An old question I know, but I recently had the same problem. Accessing the phpmyadmin url produced a blank white page. The apache logs showed nothing wrong. All response headers were "200 OK".
The problem was simple, I had disabled javascript in the browser.
To fix in firefox, enter the url 'about:config', find the key named 'javascript.enabled' and toggle it true.
In chrome, navigate to Setting > Advanced Settings > Content Settings, scroll down to the Javascript header and toggle the 'Enable javascript' checkbox.
add a comment |
When i changed this inside the config.inc.php:
$cfg['UploadDir'] = '/tmp';
$cfg['SaveDir'] = '/tmp';
to:
$cfg['UploadDir'] = '';
$cfg['SaveDir'] = '';
and reloaded the page then it worked directly!
add a comment |
My problem was different: the page rendered white but, inspecting the HTML, I could see the login and password fields. The problem was in the space on the HDD:
No space left on device
Freeing some made phpMyAdmin work again.
add a comment |
I`m not sure if is the same in ubuntu, but for debian 7.0.0 i find a way and my problem was fixed with this :
apt-get install php5-json
I informed from this link :
https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=710861;msg=7
add a comment |
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7 Answers
7
active
oldest
votes
7 Answers
7
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Try running
sudo dpkg-reconfigure phpmyadmin
To set up the phpmyadmin files, database connections and create the phpmyadmin databases
I cannot test this any longer. If someone find this answer an answer, please shared and I will mark it as a correct answer. cheers.
– MEM
Nov 11 '11 at 18:30
1
Not working on 15.04 problem still remained.
– Mohammad_Hosseini
May 18 '15 at 11:58
add a comment |
Try running
sudo dpkg-reconfigure phpmyadmin
To set up the phpmyadmin files, database connections and create the phpmyadmin databases
I cannot test this any longer. If someone find this answer an answer, please shared and I will mark it as a correct answer. cheers.
– MEM
Nov 11 '11 at 18:30
1
Not working on 15.04 problem still remained.
– Mohammad_Hosseini
May 18 '15 at 11:58
add a comment |
Try running
sudo dpkg-reconfigure phpmyadmin
To set up the phpmyadmin files, database connections and create the phpmyadmin databases
Try running
sudo dpkg-reconfigure phpmyadmin
To set up the phpmyadmin files, database connections and create the phpmyadmin databases
answered Sep 13 '11 at 12:39
Ian PettittIan Pettitt
761
761
I cannot test this any longer. If someone find this answer an answer, please shared and I will mark it as a correct answer. cheers.
– MEM
Nov 11 '11 at 18:30
1
Not working on 15.04 problem still remained.
– Mohammad_Hosseini
May 18 '15 at 11:58
add a comment |
I cannot test this any longer. If someone find this answer an answer, please shared and I will mark it as a correct answer. cheers.
– MEM
Nov 11 '11 at 18:30
1
Not working on 15.04 problem still remained.
– Mohammad_Hosseini
May 18 '15 at 11:58
I cannot test this any longer. If someone find this answer an answer, please shared and I will mark it as a correct answer. cheers.
– MEM
Nov 11 '11 at 18:30
I cannot test this any longer. If someone find this answer an answer, please shared and I will mark it as a correct answer. cheers.
– MEM
Nov 11 '11 at 18:30
1
1
Not working on 15.04 problem still remained.
– Mohammad_Hosseini
May 18 '15 at 11:58
Not working on 15.04 problem still remained.
– Mohammad_Hosseini
May 18 '15 at 11:58
add a comment |
All the previous answers did not help me, but then I found the solution:
apt install php-gettext
this fixed phpmyadmin
white blank page issue.
2
After updating from 15.04 to 16.04, I needed to re-install MySQL 5.7 because the attempted upgrade from MySQL 5.6 failed. After the 5.7 installation, I got a blank page from phpMyAdmin also... spent a great amount of time searching for clues... and this single answer resolved my issue. Thanks.
– TheGeeko61
May 22 '16 at 16:08
This fix worked for me too, Thanks a lot
– Sukeshini
Jul 10 '16 at 6:22
add a comment |
All the previous answers did not help me, but then I found the solution:
apt install php-gettext
this fixed phpmyadmin
white blank page issue.
2
After updating from 15.04 to 16.04, I needed to re-install MySQL 5.7 because the attempted upgrade from MySQL 5.6 failed. After the 5.7 installation, I got a blank page from phpMyAdmin also... spent a great amount of time searching for clues... and this single answer resolved my issue. Thanks.
– TheGeeko61
May 22 '16 at 16:08
This fix worked for me too, Thanks a lot
– Sukeshini
Jul 10 '16 at 6:22
add a comment |
All the previous answers did not help me, but then I found the solution:
apt install php-gettext
this fixed phpmyadmin
white blank page issue.
All the previous answers did not help me, but then I found the solution:
apt install php-gettext
this fixed phpmyadmin
white blank page issue.
edited Apr 24 '16 at 21:16
Karl Richter
2,44483569
2,44483569
answered Apr 23 '16 at 4:32
RomanRoman
18112
18112
2
After updating from 15.04 to 16.04, I needed to re-install MySQL 5.7 because the attempted upgrade from MySQL 5.6 failed. After the 5.7 installation, I got a blank page from phpMyAdmin also... spent a great amount of time searching for clues... and this single answer resolved my issue. Thanks.
– TheGeeko61
May 22 '16 at 16:08
This fix worked for me too, Thanks a lot
– Sukeshini
Jul 10 '16 at 6:22
add a comment |
2
After updating from 15.04 to 16.04, I needed to re-install MySQL 5.7 because the attempted upgrade from MySQL 5.6 failed. After the 5.7 installation, I got a blank page from phpMyAdmin also... spent a great amount of time searching for clues... and this single answer resolved my issue. Thanks.
– TheGeeko61
May 22 '16 at 16:08
This fix worked for me too, Thanks a lot
– Sukeshini
Jul 10 '16 at 6:22
2
2
After updating from 15.04 to 16.04, I needed to re-install MySQL 5.7 because the attempted upgrade from MySQL 5.6 failed. After the 5.7 installation, I got a blank page from phpMyAdmin also... spent a great amount of time searching for clues... and this single answer resolved my issue. Thanks.
– TheGeeko61
May 22 '16 at 16:08
After updating from 15.04 to 16.04, I needed to re-install MySQL 5.7 because the attempted upgrade from MySQL 5.6 failed. After the 5.7 installation, I got a blank page from phpMyAdmin also... spent a great amount of time searching for clues... and this single answer resolved my issue. Thanks.
– TheGeeko61
May 22 '16 at 16:08
This fix worked for me too, Thanks a lot
– Sukeshini
Jul 10 '16 at 6:22
This fix worked for me too, Thanks a lot
– Sukeshini
Jul 10 '16 at 6:22
add a comment |
This problem occurred to me because I modified the php.ini (/etc/php5/apache/php.ini) and introduced a wrong format. Specifically, I needed to upload a bigger file so I modified this line:
upload_max_filesize = 2M
with:
upload_max_filesize = 20
As you can see, I missed an M. After restarting apache (sudo service apache2 restart
), I was getting the blank page.
** In general, it might be that a mistake in the php.ini produces a silent (blank page) output in php. **
add a comment |
This problem occurred to me because I modified the php.ini (/etc/php5/apache/php.ini) and introduced a wrong format. Specifically, I needed to upload a bigger file so I modified this line:
upload_max_filesize = 2M
with:
upload_max_filesize = 20
As you can see, I missed an M. After restarting apache (sudo service apache2 restart
), I was getting the blank page.
** In general, it might be that a mistake in the php.ini produces a silent (blank page) output in php. **
add a comment |
This problem occurred to me because I modified the php.ini (/etc/php5/apache/php.ini) and introduced a wrong format. Specifically, I needed to upload a bigger file so I modified this line:
upload_max_filesize = 2M
with:
upload_max_filesize = 20
As you can see, I missed an M. After restarting apache (sudo service apache2 restart
), I was getting the blank page.
** In general, it might be that a mistake in the php.ini produces a silent (blank page) output in php. **
This problem occurred to me because I modified the php.ini (/etc/php5/apache/php.ini) and introduced a wrong format. Specifically, I needed to upload a bigger file so I modified this line:
upload_max_filesize = 2M
with:
upload_max_filesize = 20
As you can see, I missed an M. After restarting apache (sudo service apache2 restart
), I was getting the blank page.
** In general, it might be that a mistake in the php.ini produces a silent (blank page) output in php. **
answered Dec 28 '13 at 4:44
toto_ticototo_tico
231138
231138
add a comment |
add a comment |
An old question I know, but I recently had the same problem. Accessing the phpmyadmin url produced a blank white page. The apache logs showed nothing wrong. All response headers were "200 OK".
The problem was simple, I had disabled javascript in the browser.
To fix in firefox, enter the url 'about:config', find the key named 'javascript.enabled' and toggle it true.
In chrome, navigate to Setting > Advanced Settings > Content Settings, scroll down to the Javascript header and toggle the 'Enable javascript' checkbox.
add a comment |
An old question I know, but I recently had the same problem. Accessing the phpmyadmin url produced a blank white page. The apache logs showed nothing wrong. All response headers were "200 OK".
The problem was simple, I had disabled javascript in the browser.
To fix in firefox, enter the url 'about:config', find the key named 'javascript.enabled' and toggle it true.
In chrome, navigate to Setting > Advanced Settings > Content Settings, scroll down to the Javascript header and toggle the 'Enable javascript' checkbox.
add a comment |
An old question I know, but I recently had the same problem. Accessing the phpmyadmin url produced a blank white page. The apache logs showed nothing wrong. All response headers were "200 OK".
The problem was simple, I had disabled javascript in the browser.
To fix in firefox, enter the url 'about:config', find the key named 'javascript.enabled' and toggle it true.
In chrome, navigate to Setting > Advanced Settings > Content Settings, scroll down to the Javascript header and toggle the 'Enable javascript' checkbox.
An old question I know, but I recently had the same problem. Accessing the phpmyadmin url produced a blank white page. The apache logs showed nothing wrong. All response headers were "200 OK".
The problem was simple, I had disabled javascript in the browser.
To fix in firefox, enter the url 'about:config', find the key named 'javascript.enabled' and toggle it true.
In chrome, navigate to Setting > Advanced Settings > Content Settings, scroll down to the Javascript header and toggle the 'Enable javascript' checkbox.
answered Feb 27 '15 at 16:15
TwiftyTwifty
17010
17010
add a comment |
add a comment |
When i changed this inside the config.inc.php:
$cfg['UploadDir'] = '/tmp';
$cfg['SaveDir'] = '/tmp';
to:
$cfg['UploadDir'] = '';
$cfg['SaveDir'] = '';
and reloaded the page then it worked directly!
add a comment |
When i changed this inside the config.inc.php:
$cfg['UploadDir'] = '/tmp';
$cfg['SaveDir'] = '/tmp';
to:
$cfg['UploadDir'] = '';
$cfg['SaveDir'] = '';
and reloaded the page then it worked directly!
add a comment |
When i changed this inside the config.inc.php:
$cfg['UploadDir'] = '/tmp';
$cfg['SaveDir'] = '/tmp';
to:
$cfg['UploadDir'] = '';
$cfg['SaveDir'] = '';
and reloaded the page then it worked directly!
When i changed this inside the config.inc.php:
$cfg['UploadDir'] = '/tmp';
$cfg['SaveDir'] = '/tmp';
to:
$cfg['UploadDir'] = '';
$cfg['SaveDir'] = '';
and reloaded the page then it worked directly!
answered Aug 24 '17 at 12:16
Tim B.Tim B.
4913
4913
add a comment |
add a comment |
My problem was different: the page rendered white but, inspecting the HTML, I could see the login and password fields. The problem was in the space on the HDD:
No space left on device
Freeing some made phpMyAdmin work again.
add a comment |
My problem was different: the page rendered white but, inspecting the HTML, I could see the login and password fields. The problem was in the space on the HDD:
No space left on device
Freeing some made phpMyAdmin work again.
add a comment |
My problem was different: the page rendered white but, inspecting the HTML, I could see the login and password fields. The problem was in the space on the HDD:
No space left on device
Freeing some made phpMyAdmin work again.
My problem was different: the page rendered white but, inspecting the HTML, I could see the login and password fields. The problem was in the space on the HDD:
No space left on device
Freeing some made phpMyAdmin work again.
answered Feb 19 '17 at 9:31
PaoloPaolo
991
991
add a comment |
add a comment |
I`m not sure if is the same in ubuntu, but for debian 7.0.0 i find a way and my problem was fixed with this :
apt-get install php5-json
I informed from this link :
https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=710861;msg=7
add a comment |
I`m not sure if is the same in ubuntu, but for debian 7.0.0 i find a way and my problem was fixed with this :
apt-get install php5-json
I informed from this link :
https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=710861;msg=7
add a comment |
I`m not sure if is the same in ubuntu, but for debian 7.0.0 i find a way and my problem was fixed with this :
apt-get install php5-json
I informed from this link :
https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=710861;msg=7
I`m not sure if is the same in ubuntu, but for debian 7.0.0 i find a way and my problem was fixed with this :
apt-get install php5-json
I informed from this link :
https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=710861;msg=7
answered Jan 17 at 20:09
NoNameNoName
1
1
add a comment |
add a comment |
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Did you try it before you added
include /etc/phpmyadmin/apache.conf
? If not, can you try to remove that line and restart to try again?– Kris Harper
Aug 26 '11 at 13:39
@root45 - Yes I've try it before without that line. And then with it, and now, I've remove that line. :(
– MEM
Aug 26 '11 at 13:49
I should have asked this above, but did removing that line get rid of the message "The Alias directive in /etc ... an earlier Alias" that you get when you restart? I think there may be two separate issues here.
– Kris Harper
Aug 26 '11 at 14:21
@root45 - Yes. Removing that line, removed the message.
– MEM
Aug 26 '11 at 15:02
1
@root45:
ls -ld /etc/phpmyadmin
is the right way to get a single line of information on a folder.– Lekensteyn
Aug 27 '11 at 8:47