On Mon, 20 May 2013, Tony Baldwin wrote:
[snip]
and add the server (www-data) to their group, 775 stuff. I don't know if
it's the best practice,
[snip]
The www-data user and group should be left alone. They are there for
privilege separation of the web server by providing an unprivileged
On Mon, May 20, 2013 at 11:05:26AM +0300, Lars Nooden wrote:
On Mon, 20 May 2013, Tony Baldwin wrote:
[snip]
and add the server (www-data) to their group, 775 stuff. I don't know if
it's the best practice,
[snip]
The www-data user and group should be left alone. They are there for
On Wed, May 15, 2013 at 01:21:12PM +0200, Pol Hallen wrote:
Hi folks!
I installed apache2 web server on debian.
I need use this web server to host several domains (friends's domains)
I'm not sure how configure permission for each users.
ie:
user1 = mywebserver1 (has real domain)
Hi folks!
I installed apache2 web server on debian.
I need use this web server to host several domains (friends's domains)
I'm not sure how configure permission for each users.
ie:
user1 = mywebserver1 (has real domain)
user2 = mywebserver2 (has real domain)
user3 = mywebserver3 (has real
On Wed, 15 May 2013 13:21:12 +0200, Pol Hallen m...@fuckaround.org
wrote:
Hi folks!
Hi Pol,
I installed apache2 web server on debian.
[SNIP]
chmod 755 /var/www/mywebserver1?
Personally and just about permissions, I would be more strict, like
that:
chmod 750 /var/www/mywebserver{1..5}
On Wed, 15 May 2013, Jean-Marc wrote:
Personally and just about permissions, I would be more strict, like
that:
chmod 750 /var/www/mywebserver{1..5}
You have to leave read permissions for the web server to be able serve up
the web pages. That means 775 or 755 for directories and 664 or 644
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