On 9/7/07, Steen Eugen Poulsen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Kevin O'Gorman skrev:
> > My 00_default_vhost.conf:
> > =============== start 00_default_vhost.conf ==========================
> > # If your host doesn't have a registered DNS name, enter its IP address
> > here.
> > #
> > #ServerName www.example.com:80 <http://www.example.com:80>
> > ServerName www.kosmanor.com:80 <http://www.kosmanor.com:80>
> >
> > #KOSMANOR changes
> > #Listen 80
> > Listen 64.166.164.49:80 <http://64.166.164.49:80>
> > Listen localhost:80
>
> Thats not a vhost configuration, so it's a bit confusing why your trying
> to use Gentoo's default vhost config file and making non vhost configs
> and I bet it isn't liking the missing:
>
> NameVirtualHost *:80 (You will have to check the apache2 doc for the
> VirtualIP version of NameVirtualHost)
>
> <VirtualHost *:80>
>
> If you want to make a non vhost configuration, then do so from the
> ground up, don't mix vhost and non vhost unless you want a mess.
>
> The reason you get :80 already bound, is because your configuration bind
> twice to the same IP. It's Apache itself that bind twice and bails on
> the second attempt.
>
> Not having used this configuration layout in years, I would guess
> ServerName is the one creating the listening socket, maybe because it's
> placed before Listen.


A workaround has been found (see below).

As may be obvious by now, I don't understand much about configuring apache.
I just used what dropped in when I installed Gentoo around 2003, and tried
to adapt as time and updates came along.  My needs are fairly simple: a
basic server on a single IP plus localhost, using the default port 80.
Static and CGI pages only, no secure applications.  Users (only me,
actually) have a page in public_html.  I intend to use mod_python
eventually, or write my own module, but that's for later.

I have not a clue how to build a configuration "from the ground up", and I'm
hoping to not have to learn.  Since it would be a singleton excercise, I
would just forget it anyway in the midst of many other things that claim my
attention.

Workaround:
In any event, making ServerName come after Listen, or commenting it out
completely, do not change the symptoms at all.  However, commenting out all
Listen lines does allow apache to start.  It seems you're right and apache
is colliding with itself, but I don't know why, as I don't see any other
Listen directives.  This is at best a stopgap because apache's now listening
promiscuously, which I do not like at all.

I'm hoping for more help, but my fallback is to save my config files,
unmerge apache completely, re-emerge it and see if the default configuration
can be made to work right.  That might turn out to be a lot of work, for
which read a lot of time.

-- 
Kevin O'Gorman, PhD

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