On Sat, Feb 24, 2018 at 2:22 AM, mlrx <m...@18informatique.com> wrote:
> Le 23/02/2018 à 22:12, Kent West a écrit : > >> On Thu, Feb 22, 2018 at 4:38 PM, Kent West <we...@acu.edu> wrote: >> >> It seems I can serve index.html OR index.php, but not both at the same >>> time (depending on the URL entered into the web-browser's URL bar). >>> >> >> Surely I'm not the only person to ever want to do this? Surely this is not >> that difficult of a task? >> > > It is not. And yet, no one's been able to tell me how to do it. Nor does Google seem to have the answer (although the flaw may be in my google-fu, not in the actual lack of an answer). > Just need to learn more: set-up and monitor a server is not > a birth gift but it's possible by yourself (see below). > > Well, instead of becoming more of an expert than the experts I asked, I had hoped the experts I asked could tell me how to do it. I understand that setting up/monitoring a server is not a birth gift, and I hope I haven't left that impression. If so, I apologize. On the other hand, does running a mom&pop web-site require a full-time professional career commitment? > cp /etc/wordpress/config-sitename.org /etc/wordpress/ >> config-beta.sitename.orgIs it the real address in your system tree ? >> > > Depending your system, those public files should be > in /var/www/ or /srv/www or something like this. > /etc/ is reserved to all conf files. > This is the way Debian does it; as I understand it, this file *is* a conf file, and not a public file. No, "sitename" is not the real address. > But when I go any deeper than the front page, it redirects back to >> index.html, just like it did when I did the much simpler "index1.php" >> method earlier. Bummer. >> > > Commenting all rewrite rules is a good test, but it's probably better > to try this 1st: > Modify your WP conf here -> https://domain.tld/wp-admin/op > tions-general.php > { WordPress Address (URL), Site Address (URL) }¹ > Beside of it, it can need 24-48h to complete DNS propagation around > the world. > Ha! You're a genius! You're the expert with the answer! To sum up: I changed my DNS settings with my domain registrar to include "beta." at the front of my domain name, so that I can browse to either sitename.org or beta.sitename.org. I made a couple of config changes to the /etc/wordpress and /etc/apache2/sites-* dirs (documented earlier in this thread). I went to sitename.org/wp-admin/options-general.php and added "beta." to the Wordpress URL and the site URL fields. I added a link to index.html pointing to beta.sitename.org/index.php. Now I can browse to index.html, and then click on the link to go to the beta site. Thanks to you, and to all who responded! -- Kent West <")))>< Westing Peacefully - http://kentwest.blogspot.com