On 03/12/10 15:59, Brent Davidson wrote:
Can anyone out there tell me if is workable or not to install
Apache(most current version) on a Windows Web server? I am trying to
pick up the pieces of a not-so-clean website installation.
snip
It is workable to install Apache on Windows, but if you
Just thought I'd let you folks know that this was resolved (I took the
question to the FreeBSD mailing list because I believed it to be a
problem with the OS, turns out it was and it wasn't).
--
Yours In Christ,
PIT
Emails are not formal business letters, whatever businesses may want.
On 02/19/10 09:11, Eric Covener wrote:
On Fri, Feb 19, 2010 at 10:10 AM, Programmer In Training
p...@joseph-a-nagy-jr.us wrote:
Just thought I'd let you folks know that this was resolved (I took the
question to the FreeBSD mailing list because I believed it to be a
problem with the OS, turns
On 02/13/10 05:16, Daniel Reinhardt wrote:
Here is my httpd-userdir.conf file:
snip
The above works just fine.
Yeah, that is exactly the same as mine.
I went ahead and recompiled Apache, letting mod_userdir be a shared
module to be loaded, thinking that might be at issue. It wasn't and
nothing
On 02/13/10 14:30, Daniel Reinhardt wrote:
Change the indicated line to reflect /home/$user/
I have used FreeBSD, and there is no symlink to APache to /usr/home. In
fact, I do not think that /usr/home even exists unless you create it.
The only UNix OS I have used where /home is any other
I am using the non-ports version of Apache. I downloaded 2.2.14 from
http://httpd.apache.org/download.cgi#apache22 just a little while ago. I
compiled, installed, got it running with minimal fuss. The issue is with
my user directories (e.g. $HOME/public_html ). I uncommented the line to
include
On 1/28/2010 8:46 PM, LuKreme wrote:
On 28-Jan-2010, at 13:08, Matthew Smith wrote:
I have modified the windows 7 machine host file to the following:
192.168.1.2 mysite_com
Is that the correct format for the hosts file in Windos? I seem to recall the
Windows host file was 'different'
On 1/28/2010 1:15 PM, Matthew Smith wrote:
In the past I just had one machine. I ran apache on it. I modified the
hosts file to point aliases to the local box.
127.0.0.1 mysite_com So in my browser, I could type in: mysite_com
(underscore instead of dot) and bring up the site. Now I have a
On 1/28/2010 2:08 PM, Matthew Smith wrote:
I understand that. I should have made myself more clear.
I have modified the windows 7 machine host file to the following:
192.168.1.2 mysite_com
Only requests from the Windows 7 machine will resolve mysite_com to
192.168.1.2
Any other machine on
On 1/28/2010 2:29 PM, Matthew Smith wrote:
I understand that. I am only trying to access the server from the
windows 7 machine.
Sorry, it sounded like you were trying to access from another machine.
To clarify:
server, 192.168.1.2, running apache
Windows 7 machine, hosts file modified
On 1/12/2010 12:09 AM, Vincent Jong wrote:
assuming you're on 2.2, look into IndexOptions, IndexStyleSheet,
AddIconByEncoding, AddIcon, AddIconByType, AddDescription
snip
Yeah, sorry about that. I've got the latest Apache installed.
I saw those in the manual when I was digging through it to
I've been out of the loop for a VERY long time (since around 1.3.12) so
please forgive me my ignorance.
In 1.3.12 I used to know how to get the directory index to look like this:
http://www.boycottamerica.us/relevant-files/
and not like the current default look (a bulleted list of directories
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