On January 3, 2015 at 9:09 PM, "Stormy" wrote:
>
>At 08:40 PM 1/3/2015 -0500, ghalvor...@hushmail.com wrote:
>[snip]
>>I'm not sure why these two behave differently (www.example.com vs
>>example.com) I always thought the extra four letters were
>something that
>>Apache knew how to deal with.
Okay, it occurred to me that I never at any point expected the file xmlprc.php
to load automatically. I would have guessed something like an index.php or
index.html to load instead. I reinstalled wordpress, but that seemed to make
no difference.
All that is in my DocumentRoot directory is a s
At 08:40 PM 1/3/2015 -0500, ghalvor...@hushmail.com wrote:
[snip]
I'm not sure why these two behave differently (www.example.com vs
example.com) I always thought the extra four letters were something that
Apache knew how to deal with. It's hard to guarantee that the user will
user type or omit
On January 3, 2015 at 7:36 PM, "Nick Kew" wrote:
>
>On Sat, 03 Jan 2015 12:19:38 -0500
>ghalvor...@hushmail.com wrote:
>
>> I'm making a guess here. Are you asking whether I assign Host:
>as being example.com or www.example.com? Here's the script from
>each. They are slightly different, but
On Sat, 03 Jan 2015 12:19:38 -0500
ghalvor...@hushmail.com wrote:
> I'm making a guess here. Are you asking whether I assign Host: as being
> example.com or www.example.com? Here's the script from each. They are
> slightly different, but the result is the same.
Not actually the same ...
>
Hi Frank,
Your second rule is mostly abusing mod_rewrite - you should use
FallbackResource instead, or just add a RewriteCond before the rule to
prevent loops in the per directory context.
OK thanks for that suggestion. I'll give FallbackResource a shot! I wasn't
actually the one to write these
I'm making a guess here. Are you asking whether I assign Host: as being
example.com or www.example.com? Here's the script from each. They are
slightly different, but the result is the same.
$ telnet www.example.com 80
Trying 104.236.xxx.yyy...
Connected to example.com.
Escape character is '^]
I'm not sure what you are asking. No, it doesn't work. That was the one I
demonstrated in telnet. I did not get my screen filled with HTML, instead I
got an error message.
I actually copied the conf file from a working website and only renamed the
ServerName and DocumentRoot, noting else. T
Your second rule is mostly abusing mod_rewrite - you should use
FallbackResource instead, or just add a RewriteCond before the rule to
prevent loops in the per directory context.
Frank
On Wed, Dec 31, 2014 at 1:45 PM, Tim Dunphy wrote:
> Hey all,
>
> OK so I have a website that's entering a re
I would like to thank the Apache team and all list members for their
supportand hope everyone enjoys an informative and productional 2015.
Keep up the good work!
BR, Jos Chrispijn
-- Vision is not seeing things as they are, but as they will be...
---
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