Re: help with Debian [How to upload a website to a debian web server]
Cuthbert Smith Consulting wrote: Thank you, I have tried contacting my host, but have not had much luck which was why I went to Debian/Apache. I will keep trying, thanks for your information. Cuthbert Smith Consulting Partnership Inc. 400, 14727 - 87 Avenue Edmonton, AB T5R 4E5 Tel: (780) 484-3232 Fax: (780) 489-8925 e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] This communication is intended for the sole use of the recipient to which it was addressed and may contain confidential, personal or privileged information. Please contact the sender immediately if you are not the intended recipient of this information and do not copy, distribute or take action relying on it. Any communication received in error, or subsequent reply, should be deleted or destroyed. Thank you. Here's the bottom line. Your provider should have provided you with information, understandable to non-techie people, on how to upload your website content on their server. If they didn't, they damn well ought to have done. As someone else mentioned the most common / simplest mechanism is for them to give you the address of an FTP (File Transfer Protocol) server somewhere on the net that you send your files to. The more sophisticated providers will wrap that up in some sort of website so you essentially go to the site, log in, click links to upload your HTML etc files, wait a short while and hey presto your website is deployed. Less sophisticated ones just give you an address, a login and a password but will probably give you more help if you ask / pay for it. If your provider has done none of the above despite your asking specifically for help with this problem, you should consider switching providers as that quite frankly is crap. The fact that your provider allows the default Debian / Apache page to display if you don't upload content, and doesn't instead replace that with their own page saying how great they are and what a great deal their subscribers get by using them, tends to place them in the non-sophisticated category in my mind -- but I could be wrong. In any event they ought to be willing to help non-technical customers get their site up and running. Apologies if I seem to have got unnecessarily fired up about this one, but seeing non-technical people lost in the techie wilderness and getting no help raises my hackles like nothing else, and some of the people in this forum, while all trying to be helpful I'm sure, have been guilty of making the same assumptions as your provider seems to have made -- viz that you are technically skilled at maintaining a web site. Anyway focus your energies on your provider, don't take no (or silence) for an answer, and ultimately consider switching providers if you don't get the help you deserve. (Please don't ask me to recommend a provider -- I'm afraid I don't know) Good luck Mark -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: help with Debian [How to upload a website to a debian web server]
Cuthbert Smith Consulting wrote: Thank you, I have tried contacting my host, but have not had much luck which was why I went to Debian/Apache. I will keep trying, thanks for your information. Basically your host is using Debian/Apache on the host server, and since you have yet to upload any content, Debian's default page is displayed. The host provider should have provided you with an ftp address (probably), allowing you to ftp up your web content. There are any number of ftp programs that would get you in (Windows even has a [very poor] ftp client built in). Basically you just connect to that address, and copy up the files, and then you should be able to see your content from a web browser. -- Kent -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: help with Debian [How to upload a website to a debian web server]
On Fri, 10 Feb 2006, Cuthbert Smith Consulting wrote: > Thank you, I have tried contacting my host, but have not had much luck > which was why I went to Debian/Apache. I will keep trying, thanks for > your information. Glad to help, but could you please not send your emails as XML? When you do that, it runs all your paragraphs together and makes the message difficult tor ead. -Dennis Carr -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: help with Debian [How to upload a website to a debian web server]
Thank you, I have tried contacting my host, but have not had much luck which was why I went to Debian/Apache. I will keep trying, thanks for your information. Cuthbert Smith Consulting Partnership Inc. 400, 14727 - 87 Avenue Edmonton, AB T5R 4E5 Tel: (780) 484-3232 Fax: (780) 489-8925 e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] This communication is intended for the sole use of the recipient to which it was addressed and may contain confidential, personal or privileged information. Please contact the sender immediately if you are not the intended recipient of this information and do not copy, distribute or take action relying on it. Any communication received in error, or subsequent reply, should be deleted or destroyed. Thank you.
Re: help with Debian [How to upload a website to a debian web server]
On Fri, Feb 10, 2006 at 10:10:52AM -0700, Cuthbert Smith Consulting wrote: > So, when I type in the domain name, it opens up to this Debian/Apache page > "Welcome to your new home in cyberspace". > > I am not a computer programmer, but feel fairly confident in my computer > skills, I have created my website using FrontPage. I need to know how to > now upload my website to our webpage. The process is as follows: 1) Contact the administrator that setup your web server. Ask him/her to provide you with: a) username b) password c) protocol to upload files with and recommendation on software to use: i) ftp ii) scp (ex: winscp http://winscp.net/eng/download.php ) iii) ... d) server location ( of course "cuthbertsmith.com" would work). e) directory to upload your files to after you connect to your server. 2) Download the recommended software to communicate with your web server. 3) Use that software to connect to your webserver, entering in your username/password 4) browse to the directory to upload your files to. 5) upload your files, (overwriting the default index.html page that you see now) Todd. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]