> (I have tried using suexec as it is installed with the Debian Apache > package, but when I tried to execute a script in a virtual host, not > using the www.domain.com/~username address, it did not execute the > script, saying it was not in the document root. Does anyone know what
the default document root is /var/www If you are setting up apache from scratch, I'd use the default as it avoids much hassle w/ suexec. If you want to use a different default docroot you need to recompile suexec For our approach see: http://csl.ltc.org/sys/project.d/suexec.d/install.txt ############ On Tue, 24 Jun 2003, Anand Atreya wrote: > Hi, > > I have just recently begun using Debian and am in the process of > migrating a FreeBSD 4.4 server over to it. This server had many > different users and allowed them to execute CGI and PHP scripts in their > public_html folder (or any folder under it) as their own user, not as > the user of the webserver, using mod_cgiwrap and mod_phpcgiwrap (from > Steven Haryanto). The site where this was located > (http://steven.haryan.to/mod_cgiwrap/mod_cgiwrap.html) no longer exists, > and in hindsight, it seems as if mod_cgiwrap was not a very secure > solution to begin with. > Does anybody have any recommendations on how to set up a virtual hosting Apache > server such that users can have CGI and PHP scripts execute as themselves, without > having to put #!/usr/bin/php at the top of php scripts, and that is completely > transparent to the user, also allowing them to place scripts anywhere in their > document root? > (I have tried using suexec as it is installed with the Debian Apache > package, but when I tried to execute a script in a virtual host, not > using the www.domain.com/~username address, it did not execute the > script, saying it was not in the document root. Does anyone know what > the default document root is for the Debian configuration of suexec?) > > Thanks a lot. > -- Anand Atreya > -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]