I am installing the Wamp Server on another computer to run a mid-sized database and UI. I have been successful in blocking IIS and routing the server to Localhost:8080. But whenever I try to access on of my projects from the localhost homepage, in the www file; I get redirected to a Page not found error.
When I hover above the links the directory always comes up "http:// ProjectFolderNameHere /". when it's supposed to be "http:// LocalHost:8080 / ProjectFolderNameHere /". What can I do to get the links working properly?
My Machine runs on Windows 7 Home Edition 64-bits, and I already have Microsoft's IIS disabled.
How to create a Virtual Host in WampServer
WAMPServer 3 has made this process much easier!
You can do almost everything from a utility provided as part of WAMPServer.
Create a folder inside to contain your project.site. This can be under the C:\wamp\www\ directory or in a completely seperate folder like C:\websites.
Create a folder inside the location you have chosen EG C:\websites\project1\www or under the c:\wamp\www\project1\www
Now open localhost wampmanager->localhost and click on the link Add a Virtual Host under the TOOLS section on the homepage.
You will see a page like this:
Fill in the fields as specified by the instructions above each field
The Virtual Host config will have been created for you.
Now you must restart the DNS Cache. You can do this from the wampmanager menus like this right click wampmanager->Tools->Restart DNS. The DNS Cache will be restarted and then Apache will also be stopped and restarted. When the wampmanager icon goes green again all is completed.
Now you must create a simple index.php file or install your site into the folder you created above.
Assuming your VH was called project.dev You should see that name under the Your Virtual Hosts Section of the WAMPServer homepage.
You can launch the site from this menu, or just use the new Domain Name in the address bar EG project1.dev and the site shoudl launch.
Old WAMPServer 2.5 mechanism, or if you want to do it all manually
There has been a change of concept in WampServer 2.5 and above and there is a good reason for this change!
In WampServer it is now STRONGLY encouraged to create a Virtual Host for each of your projects, even if you hold them in a \wamp\www\subfolder structure.
Virtual Hosts Documentation
Virtual Host Examples
The WampServer home page ( \wamp\www\index.php ) now expects you to have created a Virtual Host for all your projects and will therefore work properly only if you do so.
History
In order to make life easier for beginners using WampServer to learn PHP Apache and MySQL it was suggested that you create subfolders under the \wamp\www\ folder.
wamp
|-- www
|-- Chapter1
|-- Chapter2
|-- etc
These subfolders would then show as links in the WampServer Homepage under a menu called 'Your Projects' and these links would contain a link to localhost/subfoldername.
Acceptable only for simple tutorials
This made life easy for the complete beginner, and was perfectly acceptable for example for those following tutorials to learn PHP coding.
However it was never intended for use when developing a real web site that you would later want to copy to your live hosted server.
In fact if you did use this mechanism it often caused problems as the live sites configuration would not match your development configuration.
The Problem for real website development.
The reason for this is of course that the default DocumentRoot setting for wamp is
DocumentRoot "c:/wamp/www/"
regardless of what your subfolder was called.
This ment that often used PHP code that queried the structure or your site received different information when running on your development WampServer to what it would receive when running on a live hosted server, where the DocumentRoot configuration points to the folder at the top of the website file hierarchy.
This kind of code exists in many frameworks and CMS's for example WordPress and Joomla etc.
For Example
Lets say we have a project called project1 held in wamp\www\project1 and run incorrectly as localhost/project1/index.php
This is what would be reported by some of the PHP command in question:
$_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'] = localhost
$_SERVER['SERVER_NAME'] = localhost
$_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT'] = c:/wamp/www
Now if we had correctly defined that site using a Virtual Host definition and ran it as http://project1 the results on the WAMPServer devlopment site will match those received when on a live hosted environment.
$_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'] = project1
$_SERVER['SERVER_NAME'] = project1
$_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT'] = c:/wamp/www/project1
Now this difference may seem trivial at first but if you were to use a framework like WordPress or one of the CMS's like Joomla for example, this can and does cause problems when you move your site to a live server.
How to create a Virtual Host in WampServer
Actually this should work basically the same for any wndows Apache server, with differences only in where you may find the Apache config files.
There are 3 steps to create your first Virtual Host in Apache, and only 2 if you already have one defined.
Create the Virtual Host definition(s)
Add your new domain name to the HOSTS file.
Uncomment the line in httpd.conf that includes the Virtual Hosts definition file.
Step 1, Create the Virtual Host definition(s)
Edit the file called httpd-hosts.conf which for WampServer lives in
\wamp\bin\apache\apache2.4.9\conf\extra\httpd-vhosts.conf
(Apache version numbers may differ, engage brain before continuing)
If this is the first time you edit this file, remove the default example code, it is of no use.
I am assuming we want to create a definition for a site called project1 that lives in
\wamp\www\project1
Very important, first we must make sure that localhost still works so that is the first VHOST definition we will put in this file.
<VirtualHost *:80>
DocumentRoot "c:/wamp/www"
ServerName localhost
ServerAlias localhost
<Directory "c:/wamp/www">
Options Indexes FollowSymLinks
AllowOverride All
Require local
</Directory>
</VirtualHost>
Now we define our project: and this of course you do for each of your projects as you start a new one.
<VirtualHost *:80>
DocumentRoot "c:/wamp/www/project1"
ServerName project1
<Directory "c:/wamp/www/project1">
Options Indexes FollowSymLinks
AllowOverride All
Require local
</Directory>
</VirtualHost>
NOTE: That each Virtual Host as its own DocumentRoot defined. There are also many other parameters you can add to a Virtual Hosts definition, check the Apache documentation.
Small aside
The way virtual hosts work in Apache: The first definition in this file will also be the default site, so should the domain name used in the browser not match any actually defined virtually hosted domain, making localhost the first domain in the file will therefore make it the site that is loaded if a hack attempt just uses your IP Address.
So if we ensure that the Apache security for this domain is ALWAYS SET TO
Require local
any casual hack from an external address will receive an error and not get into your PC, but should you misspell a domain you will be shown the WampServer homepage, because you are on the same PC as WampServer and therfore local.
Step 2:
Add your new domain name to the HOSTS file.
Now we need to add the domain name that we have used in the Virtual Host definition to the HOSTS file so that windows knows where to find it. This is similiar to creating a DNS A record, but it is only visible in this case on this specific PC.
Edit C:\windows\system32\drivers\etc\hosts
The file has no extension and should remain that way. Watch out for notepad, as it may try and add a .txt extension if you have no better editor.
I suggest you download Notepad++, its free and a very good editor.
Also this is a protected file so you must edit it with administrator privileges, so launch you editor using the Run as Administrator menu option.
The hosts file should look like this when you have completed these edits
127.0.0.1 localhost
127.0.0.1 project1
::1 localhost
::1 project1
Note that you should have definitions in here for the IPV4 loopback address 127.0.0.1 and also the IPV6 loopback address ::1 as Apache is now IPV6 aware and the browser will use either IPV4 or IPV6 or both. I have no idea how it decides which to use, but it can use either if you have the IPV6 stack turned on, and most window OS's do as of XP SP3.
Now we must tell windows to refresh its domain name cache, so launch a command window again using the Run as Administrator menu option again, and do the following.
net stop dnscache
net start dnscache
This forces windows to clear its domain name cache and reload it, in reloading it will re-read the HOSTS file so now it knows about the domain project1.
Step 3: Uncomment the line in httpd.conf that includes the Virtual Hosts definition file.
Edit your httpd.conf, use the wampmanager.exe menus to make sure you edit the correct file.
Find this line in httpd.conf
# Virtual hosts
#Include conf/extra/httpd-vhosts.conf
And just remove the # to uncomment that line.
To activate this change in you running Apache we must now stop and restart the Apache service.
wampmanager.exe -> Apache -> Service -> Restart Service
Now if the WAMP icon in the system tray does not go GREEN again, it means you have probably done something wrong in the \wamp\bin\apache\apache2.4.9\conf\extra\httpd-hosts.conf file.
If so here is a useful mechanism to find out what is wrong. It uses a feature of the Apache exe (httpd.exe) to check its config files and report errors by filename and line numbers.
Launch a command window.
cd \wamp\bin\apache\apache2.4.9\bin
httpd -t
So fix the errors and retest again until you get the output
Syntax OK
Now there is one more thing.
There are actually 2 new menu items on the wampmanager menu system. One called 'My Projects' which is turned on by default.
And a second one, called 'My Virtual Hosts', which is not activated by default.
'My Projects' will list any sub directory of the \wamp\www directory and provide a link to launch the site in that sub directory.
As I said earlier, it launches 'project1` and not 'localhost/project1' so to make the link work we must create a Virtual Host definition to make this link actually launch that site in your browser, without the Virtual Host definition it's likely to launch a web search for the site name as a keyword or just return a site not found condition.
The 'My Virtual Hosts' menu item is a little different. It searches the file that is used to define Virtual Hosts ( we will get to that in a minute ) and creates menu links for each ServerName parameter it finds and creates a menu item for each one.
This may seem a little confusing as once we create a Virtual Host definition for the sub directories of the \wamp\www folder some items will appear on both of the 'My Projects' menu and the 'My Virtual Hosts' menu's.
How do I turn this other 'My Virtual Hosts' menu on?
Make a backup of the \wamp\wampmanager.tpl file, just in case you make a mistake, its a very important file.
Edit the \wamp\wampmanager.tpl
Find this parameter ;WAMPPROJECTSUBMENU, its in the '[Menu.Left]' section.
Add this new parameter ;WAMPVHOSTSUBMENU either before or after the ;WAMPPROJECTSUBMENU parameter.
Save the file.
Now right click the wampmanager icon, and select 'Refresh'. If this does not add the menu, 'exit' and restart wampmanager.
Big Note
The new menu will only appear if you already have some Virtual Hosts defined! Otherwise you will see no difference until you define a VHOST.
Now if you take this to its logical extension
You can now move your web site code completely outside the \wamp\ folder structure simply by changing the DocumentRoot parameter in the VHOST definition. So for example you could do this:
Create a folder on the wamp disk or any other disk ( beware of network drive, they are a bit more complicated)
D:
MD websites
CD websites
MD example.com
CD example.com
MD www
You now copy your site code to, or start creating it in the \websites\example.com\www folder and define your VHOST like this:
<VirtualHost *:80>
DocumentRoot "d:/websites/example.com/www"
ServerName example.dev
ServerAlias www.example.dev
<Directory "d:/websites/example.com/www">
Options Indexes FollowSymLinks
AllowOverride All
Require all granted
</Directory>
php_flag display_errors Off
php_flag log_errors On
php_value max_upload_size 40M
php_value max_execution_time 60
php_value error_log "d:/wamp/logs/example_com_phperror.log"
</VirtualHost>
Then add this new development domain to the HOSTS file:
127.0.0.1 localhost
::1 localhost
127.0.0.1 project1
::1 project1
127.0.0.1 example.dev
::1 example.dev
NOTE: It is not a good idea to use a ServerName or ServerAlias that is the same as your live domain name, as if we had used example.com as the ServerName it would mean we could no longer get to the real live site from this PC as it would direct example.com to 127.0.0.1 i.e. this PC and not out onto the internet.
ALSO:
See that I have allowed this site to be accessed from the internet from within the VHOST definitions, this change will apply to only this site and no other. Very useful for allowing a client to view your changes for an hour or so without having to copy them to the live server.
This does mean that we have to edit this file manually to turn this access on and off rather than use the Put Online/Offline menu item on wampmanager.
Also I have added some modifications to the PHP config, again that will only apply to this one site.
Very useful when maintaining a site with specific requirement unlike all the other sites you maintain.
I guess we can assume from the parameters used that it has a long running page in it somewhere and it is very badly written and will not run with errors being displayed on the browser without making a horrible mess of the page. Believe me sites like this exist and people still want them maintained badly. But this mean we only have to change these parameters for this specific site and not globally to all Virtual sites running on WampServer.
I believe this is the best solution:
Open index.php in www folder and set
change line
30:$suppress_localhost = true;
to
$suppress_localhost = false;
This will ensure the project is prefixed with your local host IP/name
Open index.php in www folder and set
$suppress_localhost = false;
This will prepend http://localhost/ to your project links
In order to access project from the homepage you need to create a Virtual Host first.
Most easiest way to do this is to use Wamp's Add a Virtual Host Utility.
Just follow these steps:
Create a folder inside "C:\wamp\www\" directory and give it a name that you want to give to your site for eg. 'mysite'. So the path would be "C:\wamp\www\mysite".
Now open localhost's homepage in your browser, under Tools menu click on Add a Virtual Host link.
Enter the name of the virtual host, that name must be the name of the folder we created inside www directory i.e. 'mysite'.
Enter absolute path of the virtual host i.e. "C:\wamp\www\mysite\" without quotes and click the button below saying 'Start the creation of the VirtualHost'.
Virtual Host created, now you just need to 'Restart DNS'. To do this right click the wamp server's tray menu icon, click on Tools > Restart DNS and let the tray menu icon become green again.
All set! Now just create 'index.php' page inside "C:\wamp\www\mysite\" directory. Add some code in 'index.php' file, like
<?php
echo "<h1>Hello World</h1>";
?>
Now you can access the projects from the localhost's homepage. Just click the project link and you'll see 'Hello World' printed on your screen.
You can follow all steps by #RiggsFolly thats is really good answer, If you do not want to create virtual host and want to use like previous localhost/example/ or something like that you can use answer by #Arunu
But if you still face problem please use this method,
Locate your wamp folder (Eg. c:/Wamp/) where you have installed
Goto Wamp/www/
Open index.php file
find this code $projectContents .= '<li>'.$file.'</li>';
modify it add localhost after http:// $projectContents .= '<li>'.$file.'</li>';
Restart wamp server
open localhost see the updated links
Hope you got your url like previous version of wamp server.
How To Fix The Broken Icon Links (blank.gif, text.gif, etc.)
Unfortunately as previously mentioned, simply adding a virtual host to your project doesn't fix the broken icon links.
The Problem:
WAMP/Apache does not change the directory reference for the icons to your respective installation directory. It is statically set to "c:/Apache24/icons" and 99.9% of users Apache installation does not reside here. Especially with WAMP.
The Fix:
Find your Apache icons directory! Typically it will be located here: "c:/wamp/bin/apache/apache2.4.9/icons". However your mileage may vary depending on your installation and if your Apache version is different, then your path will be different as well.\
Open up httpd-autoindex.conf in your favorite editor. This file can usually be found here: "C:\wamp\bin\apache\apache2.4.9\conf\extra\httpd-autoindex.conf". Again, if your Apache version is different, then so will this path.
Find this definition (usually located near the top of the file):
Alias /icons/ "c:/Apache24/icons/"
<Directory "c:/Apache24/icons">
Options Indexes MultiViews
AllowOverride None
Require all granted
</Directory>
Replace the "c:/Apache24/icons/" directories with your own. IMPORTANT You MUST have a trailing forward slash in the first directory reference. The second directory reference must have no trailing slash. Your results should look similar to this. Again, your directory may differ:
Alias /icons/ "c:/wamp/bin/apache/apache2.4.9/icons/"
<Directory "c:/wamp/bin/apache/apache2.4.9/icons">
Options Indexes MultiViews
AllowOverride None
Require all granted
</Directory>
Restart your Apache server and enjoy your cool icons!
$suppress_localhost = false;
This did the trick for me.
This works on Wamp 3+.
Go to wamp folder (wamp/ or wamp64/)
Open wampmanager.conf
Find urlAddLocalhost param and set it on: urlAddLocalhost = "on"
There should not be the need to tweak the index.php in www folder.
Re: Wampserver LocalHost links not working correctly
This is as of June 2014 with Wampserver2.5 (maybe they'll fix this in later builds).
Note: to use LocalHost:8080 instead of LocalHost just make the appropriate changes in the edits mentioned below.
There are 2 aspects of this issue -
The first is to be able to access items under "Your Projects" from the Wamp localhost homepage.
The second is to be able to correctly access items listed in the Wampserver Icon Taskbar's "My Projects" list.
To fix the first (to be able to access items under "Your Projects" from the Wamp localhost homepage) you will need to do the following...
There are 2 edits that you must make in the index.php file located in your wamp\www folder (usually C:\wamp\www)
1) on Line 30 change
$suppress_localhost = true;
to
$suppress_localhost = false;
2) on line 338 change
$projectContents .= '<li>'.$file.'</li>';
to
$projectContents .= '<li>'.$file.'</li>';
After you've made the above edits - if the Wampserver is running just refresh the local host page and the changes become immediately effective.
To fix the 2nd item (the Wampserver Icon Taskbar's "My Projects" list):
You need to edit C:\wamp\scripts\refresh.php
Locate line 651 and change the section of the line that reads
Parameters: "http://'.$projectContents[$i].'/"; Glyph: 5
to
Parameters: "http://localhost//'.$projectContents[$i].'/"; Glyph: 5
After you make these 2nd set of changes you may have to force Wampserver to refresh the "My Projects" list by toggling the Put Online/Offline option at the bottom of the Wamp Icon Tray App.
check wamp server icon is green or not if it is green then it is working if not then you have to follow these steps to do
a. all the programs should be closed before running the wamp because most of the cases some softwares like skype takes the same port (80) which is using by wamp.
b. you can change the port of skype : Tool-s->oprions->advanced->connection untick use port 80
restart the wamp it will work.
SECOND case
when you click on the project in loalhost it does not show the localhost infront of the project name and because of that it looks like wamp is not working then you have to one thing on only
. go to wamp index.php file and change $suppress_localhost = false; from $suppress_localhost = true; or try vice versa it will work
Navigate to your www directory (if you are using wamp server) htdocs (if on XAMPP). Open your admin.php and search on project contents/ or just go directly to line number 339 and change the link, inserting 'local host to the link .
That should work ,,
I find it's a lot easier (than accepted answer) to create a local subdomain by project and tell Apache to serve multiple sites by name.
For example, let's say you created a project under c:/wamp64/www/sites/mysite, to be able to access it at http://mysite.localhost you simply need to do the following:
1. Tell your machine to answer to different names
Add 127.0.0.1 mysite.localhost to C:\windows\system32\drivers\etc\hosts
2. Flush your DNS cache
Open a Command Prompt as administrator and type net stop dnscache, then net start dnscache.
3. Tell Apache where to look
Click on Wamp's icon in tray, go to Apache -> httpd.conf, and add this at the end:
# Tells Apache to identify which site by name
NameVirtualHost *:80
# Tells Apache to serve the default WAMP Server page to "localhost"
<VirtualHost 127.0.0.1>
ServerName localhost
DocumentRoot "C:/wamp/www"
</VirtualHost>
# Tells Apache to serve Client 1's pages to "client1.localhost"
# Duplicate and modify this block to add another client
<VirtualHost 127.0.0.1>
# The name to respond to
ServerName client1.localhost
# Folder where the files live
DocumentRoot "C:/wamp64/www/sites/mysite"
# A few helpful settings...
<Directory "C:/wamp64/www/sites/mysite">
allow from all
order allow,deny
# Enables .htaccess files for this site
AllowOverride All
</Directory>
# Apache will look for these two files, in this order, if no file is specified in the URL
DirectoryIndex index.html index.php
</VirtualHost>
(source)
4. Restart Apache
Click on Wamp's icon in tray, select "restart"
5. Define a base url
Go to your project folder, add <base href="http://mysite.localhost" /> to your <head> section to prevent /links to server root from being broken.
Personally, I inject this html code dynamically into my template using PHP (something like $site_root = (IS_LOCALHOST) ? '<base href="http://mysite.localhost" />' : null;) so I don't have to bother removing that once on production.
Hello you need to open the index.php from the wamp server and change $suppress_localhost = false; from $suppress_localhost = true; then your wamp will working fine
Related
I have linux server (Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server release 5.3 (Tikanga)) with apache installed. It is already used for browsing some documents. Now I would like to add a new Directory (with a html page), so whenever the directory is browsed it can display the html page.
But I am not sure of where all to edit the httpd.conf file
Existing httpd.conf:
When I hit the url "http://servername/eng" it displays list of folders.
Now, I want to add a website to this existing, so when user hit the url "http://servername/builds" it should display a html page in the browser.I have added my "index.html" page in location "/var/www/html/builds/"
For this I added the below code to httpd.conf file
Please let me know what all modifications are required in the conf file
You can do it in a few different ways.
Putting index.html in /build
This requires you to have this setting:
DirectoryIndex index.html
(it should be there by default on most platform.)
Also for this to work, rather than putting new <Directory>, you should put the build/ directory in the directory that holds your http://example.com/ files. For instance:
/var/www/example.com/public_html/eng/
/var/www/example.com/public_html/builds/
/var/www/example.com/public_html/builds/index.html
Storing build/ in folder completely unrelated to example.com, but still be able to reach it via example.com/builds
For this, you need to rewrite the URLs so that example.com/builds redirects the user to the final URL. This is most easily achieved through mod_rewrite. You enable mod_rewrite module in your Apache's configuration, make sure that example.com can have .htaccess files through ensuring proper AllowOverride entry in example.com's <Directory> configuration, create /var/www//example.com/public_html/.htaccess (or similar) file, and fill it RewriteEngine On and RewriteRules you need. More on mod_rewrite in the Internet and in the documentation.
Completely separate virtual server, for example builds.example.com/
In this case, what you're looking for are virtual servers. These are not defined in httpd.conf or configuration itself, but usually have dedicated directory.
For example, to add builds.example.com that works for port 80, you'd need to create following entry:
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName builds.example.com
DocumentRoot /var/www/builds.example.com/public_html/
</VirtualHost>
Where to put this? Well, it depends on the platform. For Debian, you put this in a new file in /etc/apache2/sites-available/, e.g. /etc/apache2/sites-available/example.com, and symlink to it in /etc/apache2/sites-available (on Debian, you can do this easily with a2ensite <NAME_OF_FILE>. On your platform this procedure might be different, so look it up ("adding virtual servers on " would be a start). After adding virtual servers, you need to reload your Apache configuration.
Please let me know if this satisfies your question, if not, I'll edit the answer accordingly.
I'm trying to figure out how to have the website function after i point the DNS to the server.
by default, (after fresh install of apache, mysql, php) the main server directory is situated at var/www/html so if i upload test html file, via default server ip the html file will show.
i'm trying to setup a custom folder i.e var/www/examplewebsite.com/public_html and then the public_html would function as the go-to folder for when user goes to my website. Multiple websites on one IP (server) would be great too
i found some information from http://bit.ly/1kguprn but i do not see the NameVirtualHost and the paragraph under that.
I'm a newbie to the Centos/Linux environment, any help would be greatly appreciated :)
You have a nice tutorial here: https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-set-up-apache-virtual-hosts-on-centos-6
Basically, create a folder and an index for testing purposes:
sudo vi /var/www/example.com/public_html/index.html
add the Virtual directive in your apache config file (:
NameVirtualHost *:80
#
# NOTE: NameVirtualHost cannot be used without a port specifier
# (e.g. :80) if mod_ssl is being used, due to the nature of the
# SSL protocol.
#
#
# VirtualHost example:
# Almost any Apache directive may go into a VirtualHost container.
# The first VirtualHost section is used for requests without a known
# server name.
#
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerAdmin webmaster#example.com
DocumentRoot /var/www/example.com/public_html
ServerName www.example.com
ServerAlias example.com
ErrorLog /var/www/example.com/error.log
CustomLog /var/www/example.com/requests.log
</VirtualHost>
Restart apache:
sudo service httpd restart
Check this documentation for Centos 7. They have a nice initial tutorial.
https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/an-introduction-to-selinux-on-centos-7-part-2-files-and-processes
First, I will recommend to you that check if you have the httpd service installed and active.
sudo service httpd status
if non active
sudo service httpd start
once active
Check the if the ports 80 and 443 (https are active)
sudo netstat -tulnap | grep :80
sudo netstat -tulnap | grep :443
if they are active, test the server. http://yourserverip or https://yourserverip
By default it should go to the apache webserver page.
Once you can see the page. Try to create the initial index.html page in
/var/www/html
vi /var/www.html/index.html
click i for insert
copy the following html
Test
Test web page
In the tutorial, they will explain the rest of the configuration.
#Moderator The tutorial provide a good long material for the reader, I got punish for answer correctly by the moderator. I think the website are long enough to clarify the question and I think copy again the tutorial here is not proper answer.
Also check the next documentation for changes between Apache 2.2 and 2.4
https://linode.com/docs/security/upgrading/updating-virtual-host-settings-from-apache-2-2-to-apache-2-4/
If you have any problems, comment here.
I have, for example site1.com, site2.com, configured with their own virtual hosts in their own files in the apaches enabled and available folders, in their own physical folders on the server and with different .htaccess and they are working fine. Now I want all the other domains that are not separately configured (for example site3.com, site4.com ....) to have one same virtual host, same physical folder, and to execute the same /folder1/folder2/index.php file. So far, I've made some virtual hosts but all I get is "It's working", probably because everything is redirected from the default virtual host to the /var/www. But if I set the DocumentRoot directive in that file, the .htaccess for some reason is not working, and I said that for the defined sites are working OK. What the virtual host file should be called, what should be it's content?
You can define a VirtualHost container that has as many ServerAlias entries as you need.
Here's a very simplified example:
<VirtualHost *>
ServerName site3.com
ServerAlias site4.com
DocumentRoot /var/www/folder1/folder2
</VirtualHost>
If you've already tried creating vhost files, have you restarted apache?
Where to put the vhost files depends on what distro you're using. If you're not familiar with where stuff goes on your distro, check http://wiki.apache.org/httpd/DistrosDefaultLayout.
I am trying to create some Apache rewrite rules that shall be able to route URI requests like e.g.
http://mydomain.com/articles/example to
http://mydomain.com/index.php?site=articles&page=example
What I've got so far is this:
RewriteRule ^/?([a-zA-Z_]+)/([a-zA-Z0-9_]+).html$ index.php?site=$1&page=$2 [L]
RewriteRule ^/?([a-zA-Z_]+)/([a-zA-Z0-9_]+)$ index.php?site=$1&page=$2 [L]
Since I am using relative file paths everywhere in my index.php, for style sheets, scripts, images and the like, I am facing the problem of incorrectly resolved absolute file paths.
For example when I am in the root, http://mydomain.com/ or http://mydomain.com/articles, all relative image paths resolve correctly - images/logo.jpg becomes http://mydomain.com/images/logo.jpg or htdocs/mydomain/images/logo.jpg respectively.
When I click one of my links on the site, e.g. http://mydomain.com/articles/example, Apache (or the Browser?) assumes all my images are located here http://mydomain.com/articles/images/ - it is pretty obvious that this path doesn't really exist.
So here are my questions:
1. Is it possible to solve this problem without changing all my relative file paths to absolute ones?
I could use root / for all my paths on my actual web server, because my domain is advantageously linked.
mydomain.com is linked to /html/mydomain on my web server - / resolves to mydomain.com/, but on my personal computer I am running XAMPP and / resolves to htdocs/ - it should however resolve to htdocs/mydomain/ simply because I hold several sites in htdocs
Absolute file paths are terrible when updating index.php to my web server, because I have to auto-systematically replace path declarations - not only in index.php, but style sheets and scripts as well.
2. Should I create a static DNS entry on my personal computer to adapt to my web server?
3. What is the most commonly used method?
Thank you in advance!
Sincerely, Sebastian
I figured it out by myself, by editing Windows' hosts file and the Apache's httpd-vhosts.conf file.
1. Adding a new static DNS entry to %SystemRoot%\system32\drivers\etc\hosts
127.0.0.1 www.mydomain.local
2. Appending a new virtual host entry to %ApacheInstallDir%\conf\extra\httpd-vhosts.conf
<Directory "E:\htdocs">
Order Deny,Allow
Allow from all
</Directory>
NameVirtualHost 127.0.0.1
<VirtualHost 127.0.0.1>
DocumentRoot "E:\htdocs"
ServerName localhost
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost 127.0.0.1>
DocumentRoot "E:\htdocs\mydomain"
ServerName www.mydomain.local
</VirtualHost>
Now http://www.mydomain.local leads to htdocs/mydomain directly
3. Changing all relative paths and links in my index.php by simply "rooting" them with a / in front of them, e.g. <img src="/images/logo.jpg" />
I also managed to set up a Site in Dreamweaver, so I am able to use the Design- and the Live-View correctly.
I'm a beginner running 1&1's default customer-self-manages Apache setup, which has Plesk pre-installed. The Plesk site is at https://example.com:8443/ (where example.com is my registered domain) and brings up a PHP-based login page. However, I'd like to additionally secure this app with an htaccess, HTTP-based authentication request (because I might not update Plesk in time should there be Plesk security bugs, and somehow feel better not having the PHP files lying around publicly, if PHP-protected). However, logging in via SSH as root and dropping .htaccess files into folders I figured were relevant -- like /usr/local/psa/admin/htdocs/, among others -- does not bring up the http authentication when requesting the page in a browser. What should I do?
PS: The same .htaccess file works well in other folders I want to secure (I also tried chmod 644). It basically contains this:
AuthType Basic
AuthName "John Doe Management Access"
AuthUserFile /johndoe/.htpasswd
require user johndoe_user
PPS: My .htaccess file seems to be there alright, as https://example:8443/.htaccess brings up a "no permission" page, whereas https://example.com:8443/.htfoo brings up a "not found" page. Perhaps htaccess files are just not correctly configured to be, well, htaccess files for the port and site in question?
We just had the same problem (although not with Plesk)
Turned out that the vhost configuration had the directive:
AllowOverride None
This meant that the .htaccess file was being completely ignored (even if we entered garbage into the file)
The fix was to set the directive to:
AllowOverride AuthConfig
Then all you need to do is restart your apache server