Bad Situation, Jk2 is dead.
The development of jk2 is stopped. Some features from jk2 are ported back
to mod_jk.
regards Dietmar
Praveen Alavilli [EMAIL PROTECTED] am 12.04.2006 21:22:41
Bitte antworten an users@httpd.apache.org
An: users@httpd.apache.org
Kopie:
Thema: [EMAIL
When I putthe
file "index.htm" in my DocumentRoot (/var/www/html) it displays in my
browser.
When I put that file
in "/var/www/html/website" and add the following to
httpd.conf:
NameVirtualHost
*:80
Virtualhost
*:80
Documentroot
/var/www/html/website
ServerName www.website.org
I made some tests just to confirm what I already knew, but was not able to
reproduce the behaviour you describe.
Could you manage to reproduce the problem with a minimal configuration (one or
two VH only and just the strict minimum set of directives) and post it ?
-ascs
-Original Message-
From: Mark Van Crombrugge [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Donnerstag, 13. April 2006 12:20
To: users@httpd.apache.org
Subject: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Documentroot does not redirect...
When I put the file index.htm in my DocumentRoot
(/var/www/html) it displays in
Hi all.
I have an issue
which, I am sure someone out there has encountered in the past.
I have a website,
whose authors have written some of the URLs in a format which contains
characters which are not well liked by my log analysis tools (Deepmetrix
Livestats).
I would like to
Boyle Owen wrote:
From: Mark Van Crombrugge [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Documentroot /var/www/html/website
First, spell the directive correctly... ie, DocumentRoot.
FWIW - the directive itself is case-insensitive, as are -most- arguments
other than path/resource names.
Here is my HTTPD.CONF file, the VirtualHost is at the bottom.
(www.testsite.org)
I have compared it to a httpd.conf file on another server that runs fine and
neither me nor my colleague can see any differences...
Thanks in advance for your assistance.
Mark
-
###
This is not a _minimal_ configuration.
-ascs
-Original Message-
From: Mark Van Crombrugge [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, April 13, 2006 4:25 PM
To: users@httpd.apache.org
Subject: RE: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Documentroot does not redirect...
Here is my HTTPD.CONF file, the
Here is my HTTPD.CONF file, the VirtualHost is at the bottom.
(www.testsite.org)
I have compared it to a httpd.conf file on another server that runs fine and
neither me nor my colleague can see any differences...
Well, I don't see anything wrong with it offhand, although I am not
used
Don't know if you tried this or not but did you clear your browser
cache, maybe its just loading a cached copy.
Mark Van Crombrugge wrote:
Here is my HTTPD.CONF file, the VirtualHost is at the bottom.
(www.testsite.org)
I have compared it to a httpd.conf file on another server that runs fine
You would not by any chance have the directive
KeepAlive Off
in your configuration ?
-ascs
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, April 12, 2006 12:05 PM
To: users@httpd.apache.org
Subject: [EMAIL PROTECTED] HTTP response Header from
The following may qualify as a minimum configuration... Have not tested it,
though. I assumed you were using worker MPM.
In the config below, I believe the virtual host VirtualHost * can explain
your problem. See it has DocumentRoot /var/www/html ??? I believe you meant
this virtual host
If I'm reading this right, you could change VirtualHost * to VirtualHost *:80 and then have two separate VirtualHost containers , one listening for http and one for https (second one being VirtualHost *:443), with the exact same Redirect. Using mod_rewrite may be a more elegant solution, though.
I'm testing SSL
(mod_ssl) on Apache 2.0.55 Win32.Some consultants that conducted a
security analysis suggested using ports other than the default 443 port for SSL.
Is it possible to configure Apache to use a port other than 443 for SSL and have
the URL stay the same, that is, be able to use
Suggest you get new consultants. ;)On 4/13/06, Schultz, Gary - COMM [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
I'm testing SSL
(mod_ssl) on Apache 2.0.55 Win32.Some consultants that conducted a
security analysis suggested using ports other than the default 443 port for SSL.
Is it possible to configure
CustomLog |/bin/sed 's/;variable/?variable' | /usr/sbin/rotatelogs
/etc/httpd/logs/mysite.%Y-%m-%d-%H_%M_%S 5M combined
- Instead of writing to a sed pipe, parsing the logfile before sending it
to Livestats is much better IMO.
- Does this command run fine from the command line? I.e. does 'echo
On 4/13/06, Schultz, Gary - COMM [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm testing SSL (mod_ssl) on Apache 2.0.55 Win32. Some consultants that
conducted a security analysis suggested using ports other than the default
443 port for SSL. Is it possible to configure Apache to use a port other
than 443 for
If I'm reading this right, you could change VirtualHost * to
VirtualHost *:80 and then have two separate VirtualHost containers
, one listening for http and one for https (second one being
VirtualHost *:443), ith the exact same Redirect. Using mod_rewrite
may be a more elegant solution,
Gary,
In general, the client, normally a web browser, knows that https is done over port 443. So most browsers will go to port
443 automatically when the URL begins with https. There is really no way to 'trick' the browser from the server-side. I
assume that the idea of moving the HTTPS
The first thing is there is no obvious advantage of using a different port for SSL, usually people tend to run standard services on non-standard ports mainly to decieve/hide your Services (SSH, etc)from external network scans.
As an example some people tend to run their SSH on a different port
and most http/s proxies would block outbound ssl connections to ports other
than 443. so if you ran your public secure webserver on a port other than
443 most people wouldnt be able to access it, unless u do the port
forwarding mapping suggested by Kishore, which is the same thing anyway.
I'm trying to get a config worked out using VirtualDocumentRoot and for
the life of me can't remember what I did to get this working on a
previous server. My basic setup is as follows:
VirtualHost 1.2.3.4:80
VirtualDocumentRoot /usr/local/apache/sites/%-2.0.%-1/%-3+/htdocs
VirtualScriptAlias
Yes, that should work. But if you're using name-based virtual hosting, it would be best to put an actual IP in there (VirtualHost xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx:80) rather than wildcards.Cheers,Victor
On 4/13/06, Stuart, Ed [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
If I'm reading this right, you could change VirtualHost *
Hi,
I am using apache 2.2 on windows 2k3. I stop and start the service using the
windows apache monitor utility. I have noticed that every time I stop the
apache service, all the rotatelog.exe 's are orphaned. In just a couple of
restarts, I could have 50 or more orphaned. they do not
We are encountering a problem with IE 6.0 SP1 where it seems to have
problems with compressed data being served from the IBM HTTP Server
2.0.47 (Apache). Using the mod_deflate option to compress static and
dynamic data on the run.
The problem is that the client side will hang and do nothing,
I will be out of the office April 17-21. I will return to the office on 4/24. I
will be checking email periodically, but if you need immediate assistance,
please call Rogelio at 244-2326 or Jo Ana at 244-2153.
Cheryl
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