Was this an upgrade or a fresh install?

Did it work before you locked it down?

-----Original Message-----
From: cfaussie@googlegroups.com [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Sean Bucklar
Sent: Monday, 29 October 2007 1:22 PM
To: cfaussie@googlegroups.com
Subject: [cfaussie] Re: File not found: /cfide/administrator/


I did wonder about that - but the files are where they're supposed to be,
and IIS has the correct directory paths.

The only things I can find in google are some references to people in the
past who've had a permissions error (they think) and an article that doesn't
apply.

I've hit this issue before, and fixed it by removing and recreating the .cfm
extension bindings - unfortunately no joy with that this time.

Barry Beattie wrote:
> has someone been playing around with your IIS mappings?
>
> it's like IIS just doesn't know where cfide is, possibly because it 
> may not be be in the webroot, or the default website is somewhere 
> outside it...
>
> gut feeling: IIS mapping issue...
>
> HTH
> barry.b
>
>
> On 10/29/07, Sean Bucklar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>   
>> I have a weird issue. I'm using ColdFusion Server Enterprise,
>> 7,0,1,116466 on Win2003 with IIS.
>>
>> When I try to browse to /cfide/administrator, I get a file not found
error:
>>
>>  File not found: /cfide/administrator/
>>
>> Resources:
>>
>>     * Check the ColdFusion documentation to verify that you are using 
>> the correct syntax.
>>     * Search the Knowledge Base to find a solution to your problem.
>>
>> Browser       Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US;
>> rv:1.8.1.8) Gecko/20071008 Firefox/2.0.0.8
>>
>> I've checked. The files are there.
>>
>> I can copy a very simple test file into the administrator directory 
>> and I get the same error, so I don't think it's a missing
include/component.
>> I've tried renaming the /cfide/administrator/application.cfm just to 
>> make sure that it wasn't something being called from there.
>>
>> If I copy the test file up to the /cfide directory - everything works
fine.
>>
>> The administrator directory is locked down to prevent anonymous 
>> browsing, and IP restricted. But I can authenticate fine with a user 
>> which has full administrator rights over the server. I've verified 
>> that the user is a member of the Administrators group, and the 
>> administrators group has full control over the full file system. I've 
>> tried also giving that user explicit full control over the test file 
>> and over the jrun_iis6.dll, and the jrun_iis6_wildcard.dll with no 
>> effect. The /cfide/administrator directory is NOT an application 
>> root, so it's taking it's extension bindings from it's parent 
>> directory - so if the bindings are correct /cfide (which I know they 
>> are, because my test script runs), they should therefore be right in 
>> /cfide/administrator as well. I've tried making the 
>> /cfide/administrator an application root and ensuring that the 
>> extension bindings are correct, but still the same error. I've tried 
>> enabling anonymous browsing and disabling IP restrictions - also with no
effect.
>>
>> I've recycled the relevant application pool, restarted the webservice 
>> and restarted the server at various points in trying to resolve the 
>> issue without success.
>>
>> The obvious question, what's changed on the server recently is 
>> unfortunately pretty broad in terms of content. In terms of system 
>> state and operating environment? Nothing relevant that I can find.
>>
>> I'm fairly sure that I'm missing something obvious. But I just can't 
>> find it. Any suggestions would be most appreciated.
>>
>>
>>     
>
> >
>
>   





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