My site has too much traffic, according to my hosting provider. Is
there any easy way to block all International (non-USA) IP addresses
via an .htaccess file?
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The official User-To-User support forum of the
I have been scratching my head over this for hours ...
I'm trying accomplish this:
If the UserAgent is not ABCD, and the request is for either /dir1/ or
/dir1-test/ then it should be rewritten to /dir1/info/
The idea is that only UAs of ABCD should get served the index file in
/dir1/ or
On 10/7/07, ASHOK KOPARDAY [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am not able to help you. Please post it in the group.
I did.
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The official User-To-User support forum of the Apache HTTP Server Project.
See
On 10/7/07, Shaun T. Erickson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have been scratching my head over this for hours ...
I'm trying accomplish this:
If the UserAgent is not ABCD, and the request is for either /dir1/ or
/dir1-test/ then it should be rewritten to /dir1/info/
The idea is that only UAs
On 11/6/06, Joshua Slive [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
But really, you should triple-check that you are editing the right
config file and that you got all occurrences of AddDefaultCharset,
because this problem has been reported here many times before, and
that has always been the cause.
Well, I
On 11/7/06, Boyle Owen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
This looks like you're stop/starting the wrong server (a reboot
obviously stop/starts everything).
I would guess you are editing the correct config file but restarting a
different server.
It turns out that I did comment it out in the right
I moved a user's site from an apache 1.3.27 server to and apache
2.0.52 server. Now all of his (many) pages display incorrectly. It
seems they all specify:
meta http-equiv=Content-Type content=text/html; charset=windows-1252
meta http-equiv=Content-Language content=en-us
meta name=GENERATOR
On 11/6/06, Joshua Slive [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Look through httpd.conf for the AddDefaultCharset directive.
Commenting it out will probably fix the problem.
I tried that and it had no effect. I notice that in httpd.conf, it
seems to have some knowledge of windows-1251, but not windows-1252
On 11/6/06, Joshua Slive [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Did you restart the server? I still give 90% odds that this is the problem.
Yes, I restarted it. :)
What does the server send in the HTTP response headers? The meta
stuff in the html headers is completely ignored if there is a charset