Pete:
> 1. As it's a fresh install, check your firewall configuration. If you
> haven't specifically modified it you will have the default CentOS
> configuration which won't allow inbound to eth0:80.
Yes, this was it. I did not realize that was the default.
I took a look at iptables -L and that
On Fri, Apr 19, 2013 at 08:44:48AM -0500, Neil Aggarwal wrote:
> This is strange. I did a fresh install of CentOS 6.4 on a virtual
> server and then did a yum install httpd.
>
> The apache server responds to local requests but not requests
> over eth0. I checked the Listen directive in httpd.con
Kevin:
> Try /etc/rc.d/init.d/iptables stop and /etc/rc.d/init.d/ip6tables stop
> and looking at the iptables files in /etc/sysconfig.
Iptables is set to accept all packets:
# iptables -L
Chain INPUT (policy ACCEPT)
target prot opt source destination
ACCEPT all -- anywhe
Mauricio:
> My money is on selinux. Can you check it allows apache to listen
> to the outside world?
Selinux is diabled:
# sestatus
SELinux status: disabled
Any other ideas?
Thanks,
Neil
--
Neil Aggarwal, (972)834-1565, http://UnmeteredVPS.net/centos
Virtual private se
On Fri, Apr 19, 2013 at 9:44 AM, Neil Aggarwal wrote:
> Hello:
>
> This is strange. I did a fresh install of CentOS 6.4 on a virtual
> server and then did a yum install httpd.
>
> The apache server responds to local requests but not requests
> over eth0. I checked the Listen directive in httpd.c
On 4/19/2013 9:44 AM, Neil Aggarwal wrote:
This is strange. I did a fresh install of CentOS 6.4 on a virtual
server and then did a yum install httpd.
The apache server responds to local requests but not requests
over eth0. I checked the Listen directive in httpd.conf and
it is not restricted.
Hello:
This is strange. I did a fresh install of CentOS 6.4 on a virtual
server and then did a yum install httpd.
The apache server responds to local requests but not requests
over eth0. I checked the Listen directive in httpd.conf and
it is not restricted.
Did something change in the default