The specific errors would really help if you can get them. Do you
have another machine at home that you can use to hit the CF server as
an external user? Either that or you might just try going to your
public IP in your browser on the same machine--not sure that would be
an identical test, but if you did that it *should* be the same thing
as someone coming from the outside. Without specific error
information it's a bit hard to diagnose.
Matt
On Jun 7, 2005, at 9:59 PM, Gary L. Alford wrote:
I'm not certain of the specific errors. I am only relaying a
message from
my testing partners in the company. The system is running on a public
domain through my IIS on my local machine. Although it has not been
released to the public, it is available to the company partners for
testing
from remote locations. The actual tag reads:
<cfset thisPath = expandpath("../video")>
<cffile action="UPLOAD" filefield="Segment1"
destination="#thisPath#" nameconflict="MAKEUNIQUE">
Where the destination is controlled through a set variable. As stated
earlier, if I run the code locally, there are no problems. The
problems
only arise when the code is run from a remote location. Since I am
running
the system through an IIS connection, my local machine is the host.
The services I have allowed through my firewall are:
FTP Server
NNTP Server
POP3 Server
PPTP Server
SMTP Server
Web Server
DNS Server
I'm not sure if I have covered all my bases through my firewall.
That may
be where the problem lies, but I'm not familiar enough with setting
up and
administering a public server to be certain.
Thoughts?
________________________________
Gary L. Alford
Adjunct Professor, Dallas Baptist University
(817) 261-6238
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
________________________________
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf
Of Matthew Woodward
Sent: Tuesday, June 07, 2005 8:06 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: <cffile type="upload"...
Actually CFFILE doesn't use FTP; I'd have to verify this but I
believe if you use CFFILE it's just transferring the file via HTTP.
Are you sure the user CF is running as has access/permissions to the
directory where you're trying to save it? How are you specifying
the file
location? Also, I'm sure this is just a typo in the email, but
it's cffile
action="upload" as opposed to type="upload". Is this a shared hosting
account at a hosting provider? If so, some hosting companies disable
cffile.
If you can provide some additional details I'm sure collectively
we'll be
able to get to the bottom of it.
Matt
On Jun 7, 2005, at 7:59 PM, Gary L. Alford wrote:
Windows 2000 server
CF MX Server 6.1
Question: When I am running on my local machine, the <cffile
type="upload"... works great. However, when I'm running across my
public domain hosted on my IIS, I get errors and the files will not
upload. I have verified that my firewall allows ftp access.
Any ideas on what might be wrong? I heard something about needing to
specify port 80 somewhere in the code, but I can't verify this in the
CF help files.
_____
Gary L. Alford
Adjunct Professor, Dallas Baptist University
(817) 261-6238
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
_____
<winmail.dat>
--
Matthew Woodward
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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