Can you keep the replies on-list?
Multiviews is just the simplest approach, and there is no such thing as
"everyone does X". It depends.
You can certainly solve a problem in the most convoluted way possible, but
it doesn't mean that it's the correct way.
On Mon, Oct 16, 2023 at 5:22 PM Tatsuki M
Hello.
Frank Gingras wrote on 2023/10/17 02:22:
> That's just multiviews.
For that matter, do everyone else do multiviews?
What if we simply name the file b, and then do the following?
SetHandler php-script
# If it works via CGI as well.
SetHandler cgi-script
Regards.
That's just multiviews.
On Mon, Oct 16, 2023 at 12:49 PM bruce wrote:
> Hi Frank.
>
> Thanks for the reply.
>
> Not converting.
>
> But I've seen example open source demo/apps
> where the app/url
>http://www.foo.com/a
>http://www.foo.com/b
> are valid...
>
> and when I inspect the dir,
Hi Frank.
Thanks for the reply.
Not converting.
But I've seen example open source demo/apps
where the app/url
http://www.foo.com/a
http://www.foo.com/b
are valid...
and when I inspect the dir, I get
a.php - b.php...
So I'm assuming that there's something happening in the httpd.conf
You should use multviews, so that if you request /a, it will expand to
a.php.
Converting a.php to b.php makes no sense; why would you request another
script in that case?
You should also look at the FallbackResource directive, and use pathinfo to
handle URI parameters, instead of the query string
running apache2
old copy of centos
trying to understand how to test a few things.
I can have
http://www.abc.com/a.php
a.php can fire off a page to "b.php"
I'm trying to figure out what to do in the httpd.conf file to
"ignore/hide" the .php
so the displayed url would be
http://www.abc.com/b
Those two URLs point to the same vhost. You can either create directories
in the DocumentRoot for that vhost accordingly, or use simple Alias
directives.
Further, the config file where you defined your vhost isn't really
important.
On Tue, Aug 21, 2018 at 9:25 AM Mahmood Naderan
wrote:
> Hi,
>
Hi,
It is possible to have http://sub.somewhere/portal1 and
https://sub.somewhere/portal2
For that, I have to define a document root in 000-default.conf and an entry for
portal1 and then define an entry for portal2 in default-ssl.conf.
Is that a valid configuration? Or I have to define all direct
- "Lava Saleem" wrote:
> Hi,
> I'm a new user for apache and I have simple questions first one is : I
> have already downloaded apache tomcat and now I need to set apache
> httpd as a proxy I have a httpd in my /etc linux box ( centos 2.6.18
That's interesting, because we haven't yet releas
Hi,
I'm a new user for apache and I have simple questions first one is : I have
already downloaded apache tomcat and now I need to set apache httpd as a
proxy I have a httpd in my /etc linux box ( centos 2.6.18 and the apache
tomcat is 7.0.4 ) but I don't see apache directory beside the apache tomc
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