RE: Another Apache Question

2002-05-07 Thread Tilly, Lawrence
Thanx, Rich. I'll pass that suggestion on. -Original Message- From: Rich C [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Tuesday, May 07, 2002 6:50 AM To: GNHLUG Subject: Re: Another Apache Question Since you're running ssl, you need to configure "/etc/httpd/conf/ssl/mod_ssl.conf&q

Re: Another Apache Question

2002-05-07 Thread Rich C
ies seem to have one minute resolution.) Rich Cloutier President, C*O SYSTEM SUPPORT SERVICES www.sysupport.com - Original Message - From: "Tilly, Lawrence" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Tuesday, May 07, 2002 11:49 AM Subject: Another Apache Quest

Another Apache Question

2002-05-07 Thread Tilly, Lawrence
Well, the good news is that it looks like a few die-hard penguin banner wavers here have managed to get the Powers-That-Be to bring in some Linux boxes to evaluate as possible web servers alternatives. One more step toward world-domination... :-) The problem is that one of my friends, Mark, w

Re: linuxconf (was: apache question)

2001-02-13 Thread cdowns
Benjamin Scott wrote: > On Tue, 13 Feb 2001, Paul Lussier wrote: > > Does any real[1] sysadmin actually *use* linuxconf? > > No, real sysadmins have automated everything in Perl, so that they can just > spend the whole day playing xtank, of course. ;-) Example: > > # ... read mail mes

Re: linuxconf (was: apache question)

2001-02-13 Thread Benjamin Scott
On Tue, 13 Feb 2001, Paul Lussier wrote: > Does any real[1] sysadmin actually *use* linuxconf? No, real sysadmins have automated everything in Perl, so that they can just spend the whole day playing xtank, of course. ;-) Example: # ... read mail message body into $_ ... if (m

Re: linuxconf (was: apache question)

2001-02-13 Thread Paul Lussier
In a message dated: Tue, 13 Feb 2001 16:15:15 EST Benjamin Scott said: >> I personnally haven't found a situation where using linuxconf has been >> faster or more efficient than just editing the appropriate file. > > Difficult if one does not know what the appropriate file is. Or what to >edit.

Re: linuxconf (was: apache question)

2001-02-13 Thread Paul Lussier
In a message dated: Tue, 13 Feb 2001 14:08:51 EST Mark Komarinski said: >I've used it a few times. Mostly if I was sitting at some Windows >box and need to configure something. >On the same topic, I used SWAT (Samba Web Admin Tool) a lot too. Similar >in theory to linuxconf, but a lot easier to

Re: linuxconf (was: apache question)

2001-02-13 Thread Mark Komarinski
I've used it a few times. Mostly if I was sitting at some Windows box and need to configure something. On the same topic, I used SWAT (Samba Web Admin Tool) a lot too. Similar in theory to linuxconf, but a lot easier to work with than smb.conf. This doesn't mean I'm excommunicated from GNHLUG,

Re: linuxconf (was: apache question)

2001-02-13 Thread Paul Lussier
In a message dated: Tue, 13 Feb 2001 13:45:03 EST Benjamin Scott said: >On Mon, 12 Feb 2001, Rodent of Unusual Size wrote: >> The problem is almost certainly with linuxconf. > > I hear that a lot. In fact, I recommend this step: > > rpm --erase linuxconf > > While linuxconf is Neat In Th

linuxconf (was: apache question)

2001-02-13 Thread Benjamin Scott
On Mon, 12 Feb 2001, Rodent of Unusual Size wrote: > The problem is almost certainly with linuxconf. I hear that a lot. In fact, I recommend this step: rpm --erase linuxconf While linuxconf is Neat In Theory(TM), the versions distributed with Red Hat Linux are out-of-date or just p

Re: apache question

2001-02-12 Thread cdowns
Rodent of Unusual Size wrote: > cdowns wrote: > > > > apache-1.3.12-3 what is the problem on a redhat 6.2 installation where > > you cannot access the web page and get access denied ? is there > > something mispelled in httpd.conf or something ? > > The problem is almost certainly with linuxconf.

Re: apache question

2001-02-12 Thread Rodent of Unusual Size
cdowns wrote: > > apache-1.3.12-3 what is the problem on a redhat 6.2 installation where > you cannot access the web page and get access denied ? is there > something mispelled in httpd.conf or something ? The problem is almost certainly with linuxconf. Look in your httpd.conf file for a line l

Re: apache question

2001-02-12 Thread Peter Cavender
>apache-1.3.12-3 what is the problem on a redhat 6.2 installation where >you cannot access the web page and get access denied ? is there >something mispelled in httpd.conf or something ? > >thanks, chris You need to add a HostName to httpd.conf. It is comment out in the distro, and you will se

apache question

2001-02-12 Thread cdowns
apache-1.3.12-3 what is the problem on a redhat 6.2 installation where you cannot access the web page and get access denied ? is there something mispelled in httpd.conf or something ? thanks, chris ** To unsubscribe from this list, send ma

Another Apache question

2000-09-26 Thread Ed Lawson
For reasons that are not immediately relevant, I need to configure CGI on an Apache server so that I can reference Perl scripts which are located outside the Apache directories. Such as inside user directories or anywhere. Would making an alias script directive to "/" make all files ending in .pl

Re: Stupid Apache question..

2000-04-23 Thread Thomas Charron
igure it. - Original Message - From: Thomas Charron <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Sunday, April 23, 2000 10:45 AM Subject: Stupid Apache question.. > Guys, this is probrably a one liner fix,

Stupid Apache question..

2000-04-23 Thread Thomas Charron
Guys, this is probrably a one liner fix, but here's the scoop. I have an in house network with 5 computers hooked up, 1 Win98, 1 NT Workstation, 1 NT Server, 2 Linux. I recently began looking at porting some of the ASP WAP pages I've been working on for work to Apache and PHP. That's the

Re: Apache question

2000-02-14 Thread John Abreau
On Mon, 14 Feb 2000, Paul Lussier wrote: > I have a link that I want to restrict access to, so that when someone clicks > it, they must enter their username and password. I know there's something > about an htpasswd file somewhere, but I don't know how to use it. Options Indexes Incl

Re: Apache question

2000-02-14 Thread Rodent of Unusual Size
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > Wouldn't you also have to add the AllowOverride All line in > the directory config? No, since the directives in question are begin done in the server-wide config. AllowOverride indicates what directives are allowed in per-directory .htaccess files, which aren't bein

Re: Apache question

2000-02-14 Thread kenlussier
Wouldn't you also have to add the AllowOverride All line in the directory config? Kenny > > It's simple and yet it's not. I think Apache Week has at > least one article about it . > > The easiest path is something like the below. Replace "SR" > with the path to you

Re: Apache question

2000-02-14 Thread Rodent of Unusual Size
Paul Lussier wrote: > > I have a link that I want to restrict access to, so that when > someone clicks it, they must enter their username and password. > I know there's something about an htpasswd file somewhere, but > I don't know how to use it. It's simple and yet it's not. I think Apache Wee

Apache question

2000-02-14 Thread Paul Lussier
Hi all, I've recently packed up my office, and therefore don't have my Apache book handy for reference, so I'm hoping someone can either point me to some online docs or explain how to do what I need to do. I have a link that I want to restrict access to, so that when someone clicks it, they