>
> Hi Krist,
>
> Is your webserver listening to port 8083?

No. Here are a few commands and results :
----
bash-3.2# openssl s_client -connect localhost:8083 -state -debug
connect: Connection refused
connect:errno=61
----
bash-3.2# openssl s_client -connect 66.110.138.56:8083 -state -debug
connect: Connection refused
connect:errno=61
----
A test on http://www.canyouseeme.org/ for many ports including 8083 gives me
the same result.
----
bash-3.2# nmap -sV 66.110.138.56
Starting Nmap 4.50 ( http://insecure.org ) at 2008-01-04 16:53 EST
Interesting ports on c66.110.138-56.clta.globetrotter.net (66.110.138.56):
Not shown: 1709 closed ports
PORT     STATE SERVICE      VERSION
88/tcp   open  kerberos-sec Mac OS X kerberos-sec
8080/tcp open  http         Apache httpd 2.2.6 ((Unix) mod_ssl/2.2.6
OpenSSL/0.9.7l DAV/2 PHP/5.2.5)
Service Info: OS: Mac OS X

Service detection performed. Please report any incorrect results at
http://insecure.org/nmap/submit/ .
Nmap done: 1 IP address (1 host up) scanned in 23.842 seconds

I must notice that I phoned my ISP about closed ports. They told me that
only a few ports were closed (to fight against spam) and that port 8083 was
opened on their side ...

Could you give us the output you get when you run "httpd -S" on the
> command line?

Here is what I get :

bash-3.2# httpd -S
VirtualHost configuration:
Syntax OK

Regards
Ben

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