Spent hours going in circles following every guide I can find on the net.
I want to have two sites running on a single apache instance, something like this - 192.168.2.8/site1 and 192.168.2.8/site2
I’ve been going round in circles, but at the moment I have two conf files in ‘sites-available (symlinked to sites-enabled)’ that look like this-
<VirtualHost *:2000> ServerAdmin [email protected] ServerName site1 ServerAlias site1 # Indexes + Directory Root. DirectoryIndex index.html DocumentRoot /home/user/site1/ # CGI Directory ScriptAlias /cgi-bin/ /home/user/site1/cgi-bin/ Options +ExecCGI # Logfiles ErrorLog /home/user/site1/logs/error.log CustomLog /home/user/site1/logs/access.log combined </VirtualHost>
and
<VirtualHost *:3000> ServerAdmin [email protected] ServerName site2 ServerAlias site2 # Indexes + Directory Root. DirectoryIndex index.html DocumentRoot /home/user/site2/ # CGI Directory ScriptAlias /cgi-bin/ /home/user/site2/cgi-bin/ Options +ExecCGI # Logfiles ErrorLog /home/user/site2/logs/error.log CustomLog /home/user/site2/logs/access.log combined </VirtualHost>
http.conf looks like this-
NameVirtualHost *:2000 NameVirtualHost *:3000
At the moment I’m getting this error-
[error] VirtualHost *:80 — mixing * ports and non-* ports with a NameVirtualHostaddress is not supported, proceeding with undefined results
Ports.conf looks like this – (although no guides have mentioned any need to edit this)
NameVirtualHost *:80 Listen 80 <IfModule mod_ssl.c> # If you add NameVirtualHost *:443 here, you will also have to change # the VirtualHost statement in /etc/apache2/sites-available/default-ssl # to <VirtualHost *:443> # Server Name Indication for SSL named virtual hosts is currently not # supported by MSIE on Windows XP. Listen 443 </IfModule> <IfModule mod_gnutls.c> Listen 443 </IfModule>
Can anyone give some simple instructions to get this running? Every guide I’ve found says to do it a different way, and each one leads to different errors. I'm obviously doing something wrong but have found no clear explanation of what that might be.
Just want one site accessible on port 2000 and the other accessible on port 3000 (or whatever, just picked those ports to test with).
I’m running Ubuntu server 12.04…
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Followed another 'guide'...
I've now set this up in sites-available:
<VirtualHost *:80> DocumentRoot "/home/user/site1/" ServerName 192.168.2.10/site1 </VirtualHost> <VirtualHost *:80> DocumentRoot "/home/user/site2/" ServerName 192.168.2.10/site2 </VirtualHost>
Have set this in apache2.conf:
ServerName site1 ServerName site2
Have added this to ports.conf:
Listen 192.168.2.10:80
==============
It now works, I put this in a conf file in site-enabled:
<VirtualHost *:81> DocumentRoot "/home/user/site1/" ServerName site1 </VirtualHost> <VirtualHost *:82> DocumentRoot "/home/user/site2/" ServerName site2 </VirtualHost>
I have this in ports.conf:
Listen *:80 Listen *:81 Listen *:82
I have this in apache2.conf:
ServerName site1 ServerName site2
I didn't find this in any guides I just got it working through an entire day of trial and error so I don't know if this is a good solution. But it's at least working how I want it to now.
By default XAMPP is setup to run at http://localhost and serve pages that are kept under C:/xampp/htdocs. In this situation, if you want to develop multiple websites, you will need to create a folder under C:/xampp/htdocs for each website and keep the website files thereunder.
Yes with Virtual Host you can have as many parallel programs as you want:
Open
/etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
Listen 81 Listen 82 Listen 83 <VirtualHost *:81> ServerAdmin [email protected] DocumentRoot /var/www/site1/html ServerName site1.com ErrorLog logs/site1-error_log CustomLog logs/site1-access_log common ScriptAlias /cgi-bin/ "/var/www/site1/cgi-bin/" </VirtualHost> <VirtualHost *:82> ServerAdmin [email protected] DocumentRoot /var/www/site2/html ServerName site2.com ErrorLog logs/site2-error_log CustomLog logs/site2-access_log common ScriptAlias /cgi-bin/ "/var/www/site2/cgi-bin/" </VirtualHost> <VirtualHost *:83> ServerAdmin [email protected] DocumentRoot /var/www/site3/html ServerName site3.com ErrorLog logs/site3-error_log CustomLog logs/site3-access_log common ScriptAlias /cgi-bin/ "/var/www/site3/cgi-bin/" </VirtualHost>
Restart apache
service httpd restart
You can now refer Site1 :
http://<ip-address>:81/ http://<ip-address>:81/cgi-bin/
Site2 :
http://<ip-address>:82/ http://<ip-address>:82/cgi-bin/
Site3 :
http://<ip-address>:83/ http://<ip-address>:83/cgi-bin/
If path is not hardcoded in any script then your websites should work seamlessly.
Your question is mixing a few different concepts. You started out saying you wanted to run sites on the same server using the same domain, but in different folders. That doesn't require any special setup. Once you get the single domain running, you just create folders under that docroot.
Based on the rest of your question, what you really want to do is run various sites on the same server with their own domain names.
The best documentation you'll find on the topic is the virtual host documentation in the apache manual.
There are two types of virtual hosts: name-based and IP-based. Name-based allows you to use a single IP address, while IP-based requires a different IP for each site. Based on your description above, you want to use name-based virtual hosts.
The initial error you were getting was due to the fact that you were using different ports than the NameVirtualHost
line. If you really want to have sites served from ports other than 80, you'll need to have a NameVirtualHost
entry for each port.
Assuming you're starting from scratch, this is much simpler than it may seem.
If you are using 2.3 or earlier, the first thing you need to do is tell Apache that you're going to use name-based virtual hosts.
NameVirtualHost *:80
If you are using 2.4 or later do not add a NameVirtualHost line. Version 2.4 of Apache deprecated the NameVirtualHost
directive, and it will be removed in a future version.
Now your vhost definitions:
<VirtualHost *:80> DocumentRoot "/home/user/site1/" ServerName site1 </VirtualHost> <VirtualHost *:80> DocumentRoot "/home/user/site2/" ServerName site2 </VirtualHost>
You can run as many sites as you want on the same port. The ServerName
being different is enough to tell Apache which vhost to use. Also, the ServerName
directive is always the domain/hostname and should never include a path.
If you decide to run sites on a port other than 80, you'll always have to include the port number in the URL when accessing the site. So instead of going to http://example.com you would have to go to http://example.com:81
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