Michael Olds wrote: <snip> > >From what I have read also, what I have should be working. > >Could I use: Script Alias /www.firstuser.com/cgi-bin/ >"/www/usr/public_html/cgi-local" > Script Alias /www.seconduser.com/cgi-bin/ >"/www/usr2/public_html/cgi-local" > >I guess what I don't understand is what this means. I hear this as Apache >has a thing called /cgi-bin/ that allows scripts to be executed. If user one >wants to execute scripts, he needs to have a directory of his pretend to be >that directory, so I would say that the fake name was >"/www/usr/public_html/cgi-local" and the real name was /cgi-bin/ and if I >were the little appache sitting in there sorting messages, I would be able >to recognize: This call for executing a script coming in as >"/www/usr/public_html/cgi-local" is ok because here it says x = cgi-bin, and >the same for the other. > >What it looks like is actually happening is that user 1s fake cgi directory >has become the one real cgi-directory....i.e. the sorter sees cgi-bin and >throws it to #1 without any thought about the rest of the address. I would >write it: ScriptAlias /www/usr/public_html/cgi-local/ "cgi-bin" >etc. I can't seem to get my mind to turn it around.
Some of this stuff can be hard to grok. Think of the alias as a nickname for the directory your scripts are living in. So if you do this: ScriptAlias /fred/ /usr/local/lib/cgi-bin/ #(Fred is just another name for the directory) <Directory /usr/local/lib/cgi-bin/> ... ... Options ExecCGI </Directory> it means that when you call /fred/somescript.pl (http://domain1.com/fred/somescript.pl) Apache goes to /usr/local/lib/cgi-bin/ and runs somescript.pl. Of course domain2 can call a fred script, too. You can make a ScriptAlias for each virtual host, like fred to refer to domain1, ethel for domain2, and lucy for domain3. Each domain/CGIDirectory needs a unique nickname (alias). I have all CGI scripts in a single directory, so I haven't tried putting the ScriptAlias within the virtual host directive. .htacces directives can also be used. Check the Apache documentation: http://httpd.apache.org/docs/howto/cgi.html#configuringapachetopermitcgi For a good overview of Apache see ch. 36: http://rute.sourceforge.net/ or, you may already have it installed on your machine. I'm beginning to think that Apache configuration is a lot like PERL; there's always another way to do it :) -- gt [EMAIL PROTECTED] If someone tells you--- "I have a sense of humor, but that's not funny." ---they don't. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]