if i crank it on... and direct my routers 80 port to it... the url www.nathanwainwright.com goes to the correct directory... but the url www.wormhole5.org goes to the location /library/webserver/documents... not /library/webserver/documents/wormhole5....

rather odd.

won't be able to meeet up with you, have a buisness meeting to night, thanks tho.

Shawn Grover wrote:
There are some other basic settings you are missing then.

You need to check to see if the server can receive traffic on port 80 from external addresses.
Somewhere in the Apache config files you can specify what IP addresses to receive traffic for (or am I think about Postfix again?)...

Maybe step back abit and find a tutorial on setting up Apache from scratch?  I might be able to help you with this later tonight or tomorrow night...  Talk to you at the meeting?

Shawn

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On
Behalf Of NATHAN WAINWRIGHT
Sent: Wednesday, August 04, 2004 1:50 PM
To: CLUG General
Subject: Re: RE: [clug-talk] [OSX] apache and forbidden error.


the * setting won't work at all... it only starting server pages after i changed the * to 127.0.0.1

Seems like macosx changed enough, and added other things, to make it more... fun... to set thing sup.

--
web: www.wormhole5.org
current: calgary, ab

----- Original Message -----
From: Shawn Grover <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Wednesday, August 4, 2004 11:45 am
Subject: RE: [clug-talk] [OSX] apache and forbidden error.

  
You should probably rely on host name resolution for the virtual 
hosts.  This means not specifying an IP address (using the *'s), 
and letting Apache match the requested server name to one of the 
Virtual Hosts server name.  This makes virtual hosts much easier 
to manage (IMO).

If you want to learn about virtual hosts in detail, I would 
recommend either the Apache web site (http://httpd.apache.org/docs-
2.0/vhosts/ if you are using Apache 2, or 
http://httpd.apache.org/docs/vhosts/index.html if you are using 
Apache 1.3.x), or an O'Reily book called "Apache The Definitive 
Guide" (ISBN: 0-596-00203-3).  Both resources cover the details 
you need.  That, and it's better to get the information from the 
source...
BTW, the info I gave you was based on my Apache 2.0.x 
installation.  So if you are using 1.3.x, then the info might not 
be accurate.

HTH

Shawn
    


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