On Sat, 6 Apr 2002, Bill Crawford wrote:
> On Fri, 5 Apr 2002, Keith Morse wrote:
>
> > I did see this when reviewing the apache documentation. In this case the
> > scripts are part of a package called tsmon (terminal server monitor) so
> > re-writing or renaming the scripts is not an option.
On Fri, 5 Apr 2002, Keith Morse wrote:
> I did see this when reviewing the apache documentation. In this case the
> scripts are part of a package called tsmon (terminal server monitor) so
> re-writing or renaming the scripts is not an option.
In which case you need to turn on CGI handling for
On Sat, 6 Apr 2002, Bill Crawford wrote:
> Look for this part:
>
> #
> # AddHandler allows you to map certain file extensions to "handlers",
> # actions unrelated to filetype. These can be either built into the server
> # or added with the Action command (see below)
> #
>
On Fri, 5 Apr 2002, Keith Morse wrote:
> If I may ask a favour, how does one permit cgi scripts to work in user
> home directories. I've been reading the docs and links I can find on
> search engines and have not come across the magic incantations, waving of
> chicken's feet, and other items
On Sat, 6 Apr 2002, Bill Crawford wrote:
> On Fri, 5 Apr 2002, Greg Robertson wrote:
>
> > Im running Red hat 7.2 and I have apache set up for my main site. I am
> > trying to configure apache to give each user a publi_html folder and
> > Cgi-bin, that can be accessed by
> >
> > http://hostnam
On Fri, 5 Apr 2002, Greg Robertson wrote:
> Im running Red hat 7.2 and I have apache set up for my main site. I am
> trying to configure apache to give each user a publi_html folder and
> Cgi-bin, that can be accessed by
>
> http://hostname/~user/
>
> However I cant get it working anyone got a
Im running Red hat 7.2 and I have apache set up for my main site. I am
trying to configure apache to give each user a publi_html folder and
Cgi-bin, that can be accessed by
http://hostname/~user/
However I cant get it working anyone got any tips or suggestions on how to
make it work.
Greg Rob
At 11:10 AM 6/19/98 -0500, webmaster wrote:
>First of all, can you ping the IP of the webserver? If you can, the next
thing to
>do is to see if your httpd daemon is running. Do a
> ps -ax |grep httpd
>If httpd is currently running, you will see a list of httpd pids. The
smallest PID
>is
start
/usr/sbin/httpd
At 08:54 AM 6/19/98 -0700, you wrote:
>I loaded up the program did a basic configuration of the webserver,
>everything seemed fine but when I try to access the webserver I get a
>refuse connection.
>
>I am running 4.2, I turned disabled SSL does anyone have any ideas?
>
>R
> I loaded up the program did a basic configuration of the webserver,
> everything seemed fine but when I try to access the webserver I get a
> refuse connection.
First of all, can you ping the IP of the webserver? If you can, the next thing to
do is to see if your httpd daemon is running. Do a
I loaded up the program did a basic configuration of the webserver,
everything seemed fine but when I try to access the webserver I get a
refuse connection.
I am running 4.2, I turned disabled SSL does anyone have any ideas?
Ray
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