Saturday, November 16, 2002, 12:11:47 AM, you wrote: TJ> I was able to change my static IP (thanks for the help in TJ> tracking down rc.conf)
TJ> Now that my FreeBSD 4.4-Stable server is at home an on my internal TJ> network, it is back up and running... somewhat. TJ> On my internal network, if I open my browser and go to 192.168.0.10, TJ> it pulls up my web page just fine. But if I go into httpd.conf and TJ> try to change the port that httpd normally listens on, I am having TJ> no luck. I have tried these things. TJ> I tried adding the line TJ> Listen 14 TJ> then I stopped and restarted httpd but when I try to now go to TJ> 192.168.0.10:14, no TJ> joy. So I tried TJ> Listen 1124 TJ> Thinking that maybe since I was running httpd as user 'nobody' TJ> that the port # was to low. Again, trying to get to TJ> 192.168.0.10:1124 gives me page can not be displayed. So I TJ> delete out the 'Listen' line and decide to change the default port. TJ> So I run down through httpd.conf until I find where it sets the port TJ> to 80 and change it to 14. Stop and restart httpd. No luck. TJ> Thinking it might be that 'nobody' user giving me trouble, I change TJ> the port to 1124, stop and restart it... still, going to TJ> 192.168.0.10:1124 doesn't bring up the page. TJ> You guys have any ideas? Hmmm, try going a little further down the httpd.conf file and look for the 'Port' setting. Something like: # # Port: The port to which the standalone server listens. For # ports < 1023, you will need httpd to be run as root initially. # Port 80 Good luck, Neill Robins [EMAIL PROTECTED] To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with "unsubscribe freebsd-questions" in the body of the message
