If you read your httpd.conf file you will find at some point there is a
line that includes the configuration data from the sites-enabled
directory. This idea is to be able to switch sites on and off by adding
and removing symbolic links from sites-enabled.

Make sure you *always* edit the files in sites-available! If you edit in
site-enabled, some editors will replace the original symbolic link in
sites-enabled with an updated copy of the file itself, and then you will
lose you configuration data if you decide to switch the site off
temporarily ...

The configuration commands are exactly the same for a configuration
sub-file: it's exactly as though they had appeared in the main
configuration file at the point of inclusion, so once you understand the
relationship between the sites-available and sites-enabled directories
and your main configuration file you should be good to go.

You *could* put the configuration commands in http.conf itself, but this
goes against the Debian/Ubuntu organization scheme, and so probably
wouldn't be helpful long-term.

The Django setup instructions aren't bad, but there are so many
different ways that Apache is organized that the authors couldn't hope
to cover them all.

regards
 Steve
>
> On Nov 9, 10:33 pm, "DULMANDAKH Sukhbaatar" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
>   
>> Please follow instructions 
>> onhttp://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/howto/deployment/modpython/to
>> setup django and mod_python.
>>
>> And it's interesting that how do you know that mod_python is working?
>>
>> --
>> Regards
>> Dulmandakh
>>     
> >
>
>   



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