Hello
Im wondering if its possible to specify a file in the DocumentRoot?
For example:
VirtualHost *
ServerName www.otherdomain.tld
DocumentRoot /www/otherdomain/myfile.pdf
/VirtualHost
So if I have a pdf located here:
http://mysite.com/mypdf.pdf
and i want it accessible:
On Fri, Sep 02, 2005 at 12:58:31PM +0100, eoghan wrote:
| Hello
| Im wondering if its possible to specify a file in the DocumentRoot?
| For example:
| VirtualHost *
| ServerName www.otherdomain.tld
| DocumentRoot /www/otherdomain/myfile.pdf
| /VirtualHost
no, it's not allowed by apache. read
PROTECTED]
Von: eoghanGesendet: Fr 02.09.2005 13:58An: users@httpd.apache.orgBetreff: [EMAIL PROTECTED] virtualhost with file
Hello
Im wondering if its possible to specify a file in the DocumentRoot?
For example:
VirtualHost *
ServerName www.otherdomain.tld
DocumentRoot /www/otherdomain
Guenther, Christian wrote:
why not use a redirect to a file, in that case the pdf?
Will have to go this way, suggest it to the person asking, just wasnt
sure if php was installed or not.
Thanks for the replies.
Eoghan
-
Walldorf Germany
Tel.: +49.6227.837.267
Mobile: +49.173.2571.326
Fax: +49.6227.837.837
mailto: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
*Von:* eoghan
*Gesendet:* Fr 02.09.2005 13:58
*An:* users@httpd.apache.org
*Betreff:* [EMAIL PROTECTED
There are so many html2pdf converters out there Eoghan, there must be at
least one that can do
it the other way around :)
eoghan wrote:
Mads Rosendahl wrote:
That would be my preferred solution as well.
Or simply specify the file as default-document for the site/folder
with
Mads Rosendahl wrote:
There are so many html2pdf converters out there Eoghan, there must be at
least one that can do
it the other way around :)
heh :) im sure theres probably someone hacking it out with frontpage 3.0
as we speak!
eoghan