Anybody know a guide to revert Snow Leopard Server from php 5.3.1 to 5.2.x

I need to build a membership database for where I work. I had it working fine on my personal mac, but wanted to host it on a dedicated computer, so last week I went out and bought a Snow Leopard server.
The biggest issue I've come across is that Snow Leopard ships with php 5.3.1 installed and the Drupal / Civicrm system I'm using will only accept php 5.3.0. and apparently php 5.2.x is a much more stable / less buggy build. So I've been trying to figure out how to remove the installed php and downgrade to a previous build.
I should also point out that while I can do fairly limited things in Terminal, I am by no means a pro. I
am looking for something like the entropy build, rather than trying to figure out how to configure the whole thing myself -- if that makes sense.
Message was edited by: Flakesobran

You really have two options here.
Your SonicWall Firewall has a built-in VPN server, so you could configure that, point your remote client to the SonicWall's address and you're set - the remote machine will be given an address in your internal (192.168.2.x) LAN and will be able to communicate with all the other machines on the LAN.
The other option is to configure the VPN server on your Mini, in which case you'll need to configure port forwarding on the SonicWall so that the VPN traffic (the UDP ports listed above) are passed through to the server.
The advantage of running on the Mac is that it's automatically tied into the directory system on your Mac, so any user in your Mac's directory will be able to establish a VPN connection. The downside is that it's a little more complex to setup due to the port forwarding requirements.
In either case, once the VPN connection is established your remote Mac will be able to communicate with any machine on the LAN (the Mini, other clients, printers, etc.). The only thing that won't work will be auto-discovery (e.g. Bonjour), so VPN-based servers won't appear in your Finder's sidebar, for example. To overcome this you'll need to make sure your LAN DNS is working properly or know the IP address of each machine on your LAN.

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