RE: [CentOS] Can't get .htaccess to work SOLVED!

2008-04-22 Thread Pam Astor

 Date: Mon, 21 Apr 2008 14:12:20 +0530
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: centos@centos.org
 Subject: Re: [CentOS] Can't get .htaccess to work
 
 pls click below URL
 
 http://openwebmail.org/openwebmail/download/redhat/howto/htaccess/HOWTO.HTML
 

 Thank you
 Indunil Jayasooriya
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IT WORKS!  Thanks so much Indunil!  Been trying to get this to work for days,
worked on my Centos 5.1 box (by substituting in my correct directory paths)
Success finally!

Pam

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RE: [CentOS] Can't get .htaccess to work SOLVED!

2008-04-22 Thread Pam Astor



 Date: Mon, 21 Apr 2008 14:12:20 +0530
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: centos@centos.org
 Subject: Re: [CentOS] Can't get .htaccess to work
 
 pls click below URL
 
 http://openwebmail.org/openwebmail/download/redhat/howto/htaccess/HOWTO.HTML
 
 
 
 On Mon, Apr 21, 2008 at 2:01 PM, Kai Schaetzl [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   X-Rcpt-To: centos@centos.org
 
   Pam Astor wrote on Sun, 20 Apr 2008 20:03:16 -0400:
 
Options not allowed here
 
   Please, by now you should know what this means, even after obstinately
   neglecting to look in the documentation.
 
   Kai
 
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IT WORKS!  Thanks so much Indunil!  Been trying to get this to work for days,
worked on my Centos 5.1 box (by substituting in my correct directory paths)
Success finally!

Pam


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Re: [CentOS] Can't get .htaccess to work

2008-04-21 Thread Kai Schaetzl
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
X-Rcpt-To: centos@centos.org

Pam Astor wrote on Sun, 20 Apr 2008 20:03:16 -0400:

 Options not allowed here

Please, by now you should know what this means, even after obstinately 
neglecting to look in the documentation.

Kai

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Re: [CentOS] Can't get .htaccess to work

2008-04-21 Thread Indunil Jayasooriya
pls click below URL

http://openwebmail.org/openwebmail/download/redhat/howto/htaccess/HOWTO.HTML



On Mon, Apr 21, 2008 at 2:01 PM, Kai Schaetzl [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  X-Rcpt-To: centos@centos.org

  Pam Astor wrote on Sun, 20 Apr 2008 20:03:16 -0400:

   Options not allowed here

  Please, by now you should know what this means, even after obstinately
  neglecting to look in the documentation.

  Kai

  --
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  Get your web at Conactive Internet Services: http://www.conactive.com



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Re: [CentOS] Can't get .htaccess to work

2008-04-21 Thread Les Mikesell

Kai Schaetzl wrote:




Options not allowed here


Please, by now you should know what this means, even after obstinately 
neglecting to look in the documentation.




But oddly enough, the documentation does say that the Options directive 
is permitted in .htaccess context:

http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/mod/core.html#options

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Re: [CentOS] Can't get .htaccess to work

2008-04-21 Thread Kai Schaetzl
Les Mikesell wrote on Mon, 21 Apr 2008 07:39:24 -0500:

 But oddly enough, the documentation does say that the Options directive 
 is permitted in .htaccess context:

Yes, I was wondering about that myself, I think it is not correct. But 
None is not an Option, anyway. He/She should just remove that line.

Kai

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Re: [CentOS] Can't get .htaccess to work

2008-04-21 Thread Les Mikesell

Kai Schaetzl wrote:

Les Mikesell wrote on Mon, 21 Apr 2008 07:39:24 -0500:

But oddly enough, the documentation does say that the Options directive 
is permitted in .htaccess context:


Yes, I was wondering about that myself, I think it is not correct. But 
None is not an Option, anyway. He/She should just remove that line.


Again, oddly enough, the stock Centos http.conf contains in one place:
# Possible values for the Options directive are None, All,

and in another:
#
Directory /var/www/cgi-bin
AllowOverride None
Options None
Order allow,deny
Allow from all
/Directory

Isn't there an old joke that when the documentation and code differ they 
are probably both wrong?


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Re: [CentOS] Can't get .htaccess to work

2008-04-21 Thread Kai Schaetzl
Les Mikesell wrote on Mon, 21 Apr 2008 10:00:48 -0500:

 Isn't there an old joke that when the documentation and code differ they 
 are probably both wrong?

;-)

Kai

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RE: [CentOS] Can't get .htaccess to work

2008-04-20 Thread Pam Astor

 That you got a server error is good.   Here are the last two log file 
 entries for that httpd request:  you want to look in the *error* log if you 
 look for errors!I could not access the site,  which means exactly 
 what? ;-)
 
OK, starting from scratch this morning,
here is the .htaccess file I am using which is inside of the
/home/LinuxAccountName/www directory:
 
 
Directory /home/LinuxAccountName/wwwOptions NoneAuthName 
UserNameIUsedToCreatePasswordWithAuthType BasicAuthUserFile 
/home/LinuxAccountName/.htpasswdRequire valid-user/Directory
www above refers to the root or web directory - the lowest or first or base
directory that is web accessable.
And, this is the error I am getting from my httpd error log for this domain:
 
[Sun Apr 20 07:47:40 2008] [alert] [client 75.46.110.14] 
/home/LinuxAccountName/.htaccess: Directory not allowed here
 
When I point my web browser to the domain name that the above .htaccess is 
written for, I get the below error in my web browser:
 
Internal Server Error
The server encountered an internal error or misconfiguration and was unable to 
complete your request.
Please contact the server administrator, [EMAIL PROTECTED] and inform them of 
the time the error occurred, and anything you might have done that may have 
caused the error.
More information about this error may be available in the server error log.


Apache/2.2.3 (CentOS) Server at www.mydomain.com Port 80
+
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RE: [CentOS] Can't get .htaccess to work

2008-04-19 Thread Pam Astor

  The syntax for auth stuff changed between Apache 2.0 and 2.2 (which is
  used in CentOS 5). In particular, you'll need a AuthBasicProvider
  declaration:

  http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/mod/mod_auth_basic.html#authbasicprovider
 
 Thans Paul,
 That's new news to me :)
 
 For the OP, I believe it would be:
  Location /secure
 AuthType basic
 AuthName private area
 AuthBasicProvider file
 AuthDBMType file
 AuthDBMUserFile /home/mysite/.htpasswd
 Require valid-user
 /Location

Thanks,

OK I tried that and it still would not work, I am not prompted for
a username or password on the site I want to protect.

Do I also need to add a new entry in httpd.conf or load a new apache
module?

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Re: [CentOS] Can't get .htaccess to work

2008-04-19 Thread Jim Perrin
On Sat, Apr 19, 2008 at 6:37 AM, Pam Astor [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 OK I tried that and it still would not work, I am not prompted for
 a username or password on the site I want to protect.

 Do I also need to add a new entry in httpd.conf or load a new apache
 module?

Not by default, no.

There are several AllowOverrides statements in the default httpd.conf.
Which did you modify?

The one you wanted should be around line 327, looking like this:

Options Indexes FollowSymLinks

#
# AllowOverride controls what directives may be placed in .htaccess files.
# It can be All, None, or any combination of the keywords:
#   Options FileInfo AuthConfig Limit
#
AllowOverride None

#
# Controls who can get stuff from this server.
#
Order allow,deny
Allow from all

/Directory

Change the AllowOverride to AuthConfig, and that should be just about it.

You don't want to use the AuthDBMType unless you're using htdbm
instead of htpasswd to generate your password file lists.

You also need to make sure that apache has access to the area where
you're putting your .htaccess.

If you're stuffing this in your home directory like it looks above,
apache doesn't have permissions in here unless you've modified your
homedir to 711 from 700. Selinux can also cause some issues in here as
well if you have it enabled and haven't changed contexts.

Without fully seeing the config that you're using and some info about
the dir you're trying to restrict, it'll be a little harder to offer
more help.
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RE: [CentOS] Can't get .htaccess to work

2008-04-19 Thread Pam Astor

  Do I also need to add a new entry in httpd.conf or load a new apache
  module?
 
 Not by default, no.
 
 There are several AllowOverrides statements in the default httpd.conf.
 Which did you modify?
 
 The one you wanted should be around line 327, looking like this:
 
 Options Indexes FollowSymLinks
 
 #
 # AllowOverride controls what directives may be placed in .htaccess files.
 # It can be All, None, or any combination of the keywords:
 #   Options FileInfo AuthConfig Limit
 #
 AllowOverride None
 
 #
 # Controls who can get stuff from this server.
 #
 Order allow,deny
 Allow from all
 
 /Directory
 
 Change the AllowOverride to AuthConfig, and that should be just about it.
 
 You don't want to use the AuthDBMType unless you're using htdbm
 instead of htpasswd to generate your password file lists.
 
 You also need to make sure that apache has access to the area where
 you're putting your .htaccess.
 
 If you're stuffing this in your home directory like it looks above,
 apache doesn't have permissions in here unless you've modified your
 homedir to 711 from 700. Selinux can also cause some issues in here as
 well if you have it enabled and haven't changed contexts.
 
 Without fully seeing the config that you're using and some info about
 the dir you're trying to restrict, it'll be a little harder to offer
 more help.

I reset AllowOverride  to AuthConfig and it's still not working.

OK the dir I am trying to password protect (named www) is the home or main or 
root directory of
www.mydomain.com - it is owned by apache  The permissions on www were set to 
755.  .htaccess is located
inside www and is also owned by apache.  .htpasswd is just below, or outside of 
www  and outside of web access
and is also owned by apache.

I do have selinux enabled I believe.

For my httpd.conf, I have one main configuration file in /etc/httpd/conf and 
for each virtual domain, I have individual
www.mydomain.com.conf files with associated virtual host tags inside, and 
located in /etc/httpd/conf.d directory.

I also tried placing the AllowOverride AuthConfig directive inside the 
individual conf.d virtual domain

files but then apache would not reload, so I took them out and reloaded again.

Are the individual conf.d files causing the problem?





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RE: [CentOS] Can't get .htaccess to work

2008-04-19 Thread Pam Astor






  Do I also need to add a new entry in httpd.conf or load a new apache
  module?
 
 Not by default, no.
 
 There are several AllowOverrides statements in the default httpd.conf.
 Which did you modify?
 
 The one you wanted should be around line 327, looking like this:
 
 Options Indexes FollowSymLinks
 
 #
 # AllowOverride controls what directives may be placed in .htaccess files.
 # It can be All, None, or any combination of the keywords:
 #   Options FileInfo AuthConfig Limit
 #
 AllowOverride None
 
 #
 # Controls who can get stuff from this server.
 #
 Order allow,deny
 Allow from all
 
 /Directory
 
 Change the AllowOverride to AuthConfig, and that should be just about it.
 
 You don't want to use the AuthDBMType unless you're using htdbm
 instead of htpasswd to generate your password file lists.
 
 You also need to make sure that apache has access to the area where
 you're putting your .htaccess.
 
 If you're stuffing this in your home directory like it looks above,
 apache doesn't have permissions in here unless you've modified your
 homedir to 711 from 700. Selinux can also cause some issues in here as
 well if you have it enabled and haven't changed contexts.
 
 Without fully seeing the config that you're using and some info about
 the dir you're trying to restrict, it'll be a little harder to offer
 more help.

I reset AllowOverride  to AuthConfig and it's still not working.

OK the dir I am trying to password protect (named www) is the home or main or 
root directory of
www.mydomain.com - it is owned by apache  The permissions on www were set to 
755.  .htaccess is located
inside www and is also owned by apache.  .htpasswd is just below, or outside 
of www  and outside of web access
and is also owned by apache.

I do have selinux enabled I believe.

For my httpd.conf, I have one main configuration file in /etc/httpd/conf and 
for each virtual domain, I have individual
www.mydomain.com.conf files with associated virtual host tags inside, and 
located in /etc/httpd/conf.d directory.

I also tried placing the AllowOverride AuthConfig directive inside the 
individual conf.d virtual domain

files but then apache would not reload, so I took them out and reloaded again.

Are the individual conf.d files causing the problem?

In addition to the above, I have tried all three of the two below contents 
inside of my
.htaccess file as suggested:

Location /secure
AuthType basic
AuthName private area
AuthBasicProvider file
AuthDBMUserFile /home/maindir/.htpasswd
Require valid-user
/Location

Location /secure

AuthType basic

AuthName private area

AuthBasicProvider file
Require valid-user

/Location

AuthUserFile /home/maindir/.htpasswd
AuthType Basic
AuthName My Secret Folder
Require valid-user





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Re: [CentOS] Can't get .htaccess to work

2008-04-19 Thread Jim Perrin
On Sat, Apr 19, 2008 at 8:56 AM, Pam Astor [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 For my httpd.conf, I have one main configuration file in /etc/httpd/conf
 and for each virtual domain, I have individual
 www.mydomain.com.conf files with associated virtual host tags inside, and
 located in /etc/httpd/conf.d directory.

Okay. These are vhost configs only. You *can* set them globally in
httpd.conf, but they can be overwritten later, so it's best to do it
vhost by vhost.

 
 I also tried placing the AllowOverride AuthConfig directive inside the
 individual conf.d virtual domain
  files but then apache would not reload, so I took them out and reloaded
 again.

This depends on where within the vhost config you put them. Apache
should tell you exactly what line of the config the error is on, and
what exactly is wrong with it.


 Are the individual conf.d files causing the problem?

Only because they aren't formatted properly.


 Location /secure
 AuthType basic
 AuthName private area
 AuthBasicProvider file
 AuthDBMUserFile /home/maindir/.htpasswd
 Require valid-user
 /Location

This one is wrong because you're pointing a DBM statement to a flat
user file which isn't in dbm format.

 Location /secure
  AuthType basic
  AuthName private area
  AuthBasicProvider file
 Require valid-user
  /Location

This one sets the auth type outside everything else, and provides
multiple names.

 AuthUserFile /home/maindir/.htpasswd
 AuthType Basic
 AuthName My Secret Folder
 Require valid-user



Here's a statement that I know works, from my nagios setup at home,
altered for what you're looking to do.


Directory /change/this
   Options None
   AuthName Nagios Access
   AuthType Basic
   AuthUserFile /etc/httpd/htpasswd.users
   Require valid-user
/Directory


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RE: [CentOS] Can't get .htaccess to work

2008-04-19 Thread Pam Astor

  For my httpd.conf, I have one main configuration file in /etc/httpd/conf
  and for each virtual domain, I have individual
  www.mydomain.com.conf files with associated virtual host tags inside, and
  located in /etc/httpd/conf.d directory.
 
 Okay. These are vhost configs only. You *can* set them globally in
 httpd.conf, but they can be overwritten later, so it's best to do it
 vhost by vhost.

OK so do/set what vhost by vhost?  Place the  AllowOverride AuthConfig 
directive vhost by vhost?  If that's what yo u meant, I tried again inserting 
the 

Directory /
Options FollowSymLinks
AllowOverride AuthConfig
/Directory

and the 

Directory /
AllowOverride AuthConfig
/Directory

directives inside the individual vhost file and am still not getting a login 
prompt on the site.
However this time, apache did reload for both directives.
The reason why It did not reload last time, was because all I did earlier was
insert the  AllowOverride AuthConfig statement inside the vhost file, without 
the directory tags,
so at least there is some progress there ;)

  I also tried placing the AllowOverride AuthConfig directive inside the
  individual conf.d virtual domain
   files but then apache would not reload, so I took them out and reloaded
  again.
 
 This depends on where within the vhost config you put them. Apache
 should tell you exactly what line of the config the error is on, and
 what exactly is wrong with it.

I did not get indication from apache what line the syntax error 
was or what file either, all I got was:

Reloading httpd: not reloading due to configuration syntax error
   [FAILED]
But I guess that point is moot now since at least httpd is reloading.
I have however got line-syntax indications for other apache errors,
just don't know why I was not getting them for this error.

 
  Are the individual conf.d files causing the problem?
 
 Only because they aren't formatted properly.
 
 
  Location /secure
  AuthType basic
  AuthName private area
  AuthBasicProvider file
  AuthDBMUserFile /home/maindir/.htpasswd
  Require valid-user
  /Location
 
 This one is wrong because you're pointing a DBM statement to a flat
 user file which isn't in dbm format.
 
  Location /secure
   AuthType basic
   AuthName private area
   AuthBasicProvider file
  Require valid-user
   /Location
 
 This one sets the auth type outside everything else, and provides
 multiple names.
 
  AuthUserFile /home/maindir/.htpasswd
  AuthType Basic
  AuthName My Secret Folder
  Require valid-user
 
 
 
 Here's a statement that I know works, from my nagios setup at home,
 altered for what you're looking to do.
 
 
 Directory /change/this
Options None
AuthName Nagios Access
AuthType Basic
AuthUserFile /etc/httpd/htpasswd.users
Require valid-user
 /Directory

OK, just to make sure I am doing this exactly correct, 
do I substitute Nagios Access to whatever login name I used when I 
created my .htpasswd file?

Also, for Directory /change/this, do I set this to the directory
where my .htpasswd file is located? Or is this the path to the dir I am trying 
to
protect?

Or, for AuthUserFile /etc/httpd/htpasswd.users, is this the path and 
filename
of the .htpasswd file? 








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Re: [CentOS] Can't get .htaccess to work

2008-04-19 Thread Kai Schaetzl
Jim Perrin wrote on Sat, 19 Apr 2008 10:16:54 -0400:

 Directory /change/this

Jim, you forget that he's using .htaccess, the above cannot work there. He 
has to leave that out.

Pam: if you can access the directory just fine this does *not* mean that 
you misconfigured your .htaccess file (although it looked like that as 
well), it means it is not getting used at all. An .htaccess file that is 
not allowed by server config or that contains wrong configuration throws a 
500 Internal Server Error. You have also been told a while back I think 
that you should look in the logs. Did you do that? I don't remember having 
seen any response from you about that.
Do the following: place a single fake command like this is a fake 
command in your .htaccess file and then access the directory. If you 
don't get a 500 error, the file is not getting used. Which means next step 
is to check your logs and your configuration why it's not getting used and 
also double-check that it's in the correct directory and you access the 
correct directory (as I don't know what content you have there this 
content may either be identifying it uniquely or not).

You should also read the Apache documentation at httpd.apache.org, it may 
help you find that probably tiny mistake that you make, but we can't tell 
you as we don't see all of the picture. You should also read up on how you 
can achieve the password protection without an .htaccess file. This file 
is completely unnecessary if you have access to the apache conf, anyway.


Kai

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RE: [CentOS] Can't get .htaccess to work

2008-04-19 Thread Pam Astor

 Jim, you forget that he's using .htaccess, the above cannot work there. He  
 has to leave that out.  Pam: if you can access the directory just fine this 
 does *not* mean that  you misconfigured your .htaccess file (although it 
 looked like that as  well), it means it is not getting used at all. An 
 .htaccess file that is  not allowed by server config or that contains wrong 
 configuration throws a  500 Internal Server Error. You have also been told a 
 while back I think  that you should look in the logs. Did you do that? I 
 don't remember having  seen any response from you about that. Do the 
 following: place a single fake command like this is a fake  command in 
 your .htaccess file and then access the directory. If you  don't get a 500 
 error, the file is not getting used. Which means next step  is to check your 
 logs and your configuration why it's not getting used and  also double-check 
 that it's in the correct directory and you access the  correct directory (as 
 I don't know what content you have there this  content may either be 
 identifying it uniquely or not).  You should also read the Apache 
 documentation at httpd.apache.org, it may  help you find that probably tiny 
 mistake that you make, but we can't tell  you as we don't see all of the 
 picture. You should also read up on how you  can achieve the password 
 protection without an .htaccess file. This file  is completely unnecessary 
 if you have access to the apache conf, anyway.
 
OK, I put the fake command in and now I'm getting an error via web page:
 
Internal Server Error
The server encountered an internal error or misconfiguration and was unable to 
complete your request.
 
Here are the last two log file entries for that httpd request:
 
 
12.34.567.89 - - [19/Apr/2008:13:46:23 -0400] GET / HTTP/1.1 500 
61612.34.567.89 - - [19/Apr/2008:13:47:12 -0400] GET / HTTP/1.1 200 20
I Changed the IP's.
I guess there were two seperate errors, the last error - even when I corrected 
and removed the fake
command and reloaded, I could not access the site, so the second error 
indicates the fake message removed
but all else being (supposedly) correct the same in the conf.d file.  Then I 
deleted .htaccess and .htpasswd and now I can
again access the site again.
 
 
 
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Re: [CentOS] Can't get .htaccess to work

2008-04-19 Thread Les Mikesell

Pam Astor wrote:

The syntax for auth stuff changed between Apache 2.0 and 2.2 (which is
used in CentOS 5). In particular, you'll need a AuthBasicProvider
declaration:
  
http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/mod/mod_auth_basic.html#authbasicprovider

Thans Paul,
That's new news to me :)

For the OP, I believe it would be:
 Location /secure
AuthType basic
AuthName private area
AuthBasicProvider file
AuthDBMType file
AuthDBMUserFile /home/mysite/.htpasswd
Require valid-user
/Location


Thanks,

OK I tried that and it still would not work, I am not prompted for
a username or password on the site I want to protect.

Do I also need to add a new entry in httpd.conf or load a new apache
module?


Are you sure your Location entry matched the URL path you use to reach 
it, not the path to the directory?  You do need to restart httpd after 
putting this into httpd.conf.


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Re: [CentOS] Can't get .htaccess to work

2008-04-19 Thread Jim Perrin
On Sat, Apr 19, 2008 at 12:31 PM, Kai Schaetzl [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Jim Perrin wrote on Sat, 19 Apr 2008 10:16:54 -0400:

   Directory /change/this

  Jim, you forget that he's using .htaccess, the above cannot work there. He
  has to leave that out.


I didn't really forget, I was thinking more of having it included
directly in the vhost config inside conf.d/ since I consider .htaccess
bad anyway. however I really didn't make that clear at all, as I was
mixing info.

Good catch, and thanks for trying to keep my ramblings sane :-P


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Re: [CentOS] Can't get .htaccess to work

2008-04-19 Thread Kai Schaetzl
Pam Astor wrote on Sat, 19 Apr 2008 13:54:17 -0400:

That you got a server error is good.

 Here are the last two log file entries for that httpd request:

you want to look in the *error* log if you look for errors!

  I could not access the site,

which means exactly what? ;-)

Kai

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Re: [CentOS] Can't get .htaccess to work

2008-04-18 Thread Morten Nilsen

Pam Astor wrote:

When I reload, apache will not reload.

What am I doing wrong?


I suspect your only fault is not checking the logs..
Right after you issue service httpd start,
go look at /var/log/messages and /var/log/httpd/*

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Re: [CentOS] Can't get .htaccess to work

2008-04-18 Thread Paul Heinlein

On Fri, 18 Apr 2008, Pam Astor wrote:



Hi,

I'm trying to password protect one of my web accessable
directories and I can't get .htaccess to work in a Centos 5.1 box
Here's what I did

I created an .htaccess file with the contents:

AuthName Restricted Area
AuthType Basic
AuthUserFile /home/mysite/.htpasswd
AuthGroupFile /dev/null
require valid-user

and I uploaded it to the dir I want to protect.  Then I created my password
outside of my web dir with the command: htpasswd -c .htpasswd pam
then followed password prompts, created my password.

So then I go to the site, and am not seeing any password required box,
I can see site without a login.

So then I figured it's not turned on in apache, and went to httpd.conf and 
changed
AllowOverride None to AllowOverride AuthConfig

When I reload, apache will not reload.

What am I doing wrong?


The syntax for auth stuff changed between Apache 2.0 and 2.2 (which is 
used in CentOS 5). In particular, you'll need a AuthBasicProvider 
declaration:


  http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/mod/mod_auth_basic.html#authbasicprovider

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RE: [CentOS] Can't get .htaccess to work

2008-04-18 Thread Pam Astor

 The syntax for auth stuff changed between Apache 2.0 and 2.2 (which is 
 used in CentOS 5). In particular, you'll need a AuthBasicProvider 
 declaration:
 
http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/mod/mod_auth_basic.html#authbasicprovider

Hi,

Thanks much,
I read the URL, it is a bit too cryptic for me, can you or someone point me to 
a bit clearer step by step for setting this up correctly?
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Re: [CentOS] Can't get .htaccess to work

2008-04-18 Thread Fajar Priyanto
On Saturday 19 April 2008 03:35:52 Paul Heinlein wrote:
 The syntax for auth stuff changed between Apache 2.0 and 2.2 (which is
 used in CentOS 5). In particular, you'll need a AuthBasicProvider
 declaration:
   
 http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/mod/mod_auth_basic.html#authbasicprovider

Thans Paul,
That's new news to me :)

For the OP, I believe it would be:
 Location /secure
AuthType basic
AuthName private area
AuthBasicProvider file
AuthDBMType file
AuthDBMUserFile /home/mysite/.htpasswd
Require valid-user
/Location

CMIIW,
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