Question #167336 on Graphite changed:
https://answers.launchpad.net/graphite/+question/167336

Cody Stevens posted a new comment:
I was having this problem as well and solved it by changing my apache
configuration.  I have posted it below, hope it helps you.


NameVirtualHost 10.49.0.45:443
NameVirtualHost 10.49.0.45:80

# You may need to manually edit this file to fit your needs.
# This configuration assumes the default installation prefix
# of /opt/graphite/, if you installed graphite somewhere else
# you will need to change all the occurances of /opt/graphite/
# in this file to your chosen install location.

LoadModule wsgi_module modules/mod_wsgi.so
WSGISocketPrefix /var/run


WSGIDaemonProcess graphite processes=5 threads=5 display-name='%{GROUP}' 
inactivity-timeout=120 python-path=/usr/local/lib/
WSGIProcessGroup graphite

<VirtualHost 10.49.0.45:80>
        ServerName graphch01.int.domain.com 
        DocumentRoot "/usr/local/webapp"

        # I've found that an equal number of processes & threads tends
        # to show the best performance for Graphite (ymmv).

        # You will need to create this file! There is a graphite.wsgi.example
        # file in this directory that you can safely use, just copy it to 
graphite.wgsi
        WSGIScriptAlias / /usr/local/conf/graphite.wsgi

        Alias /content/ /usr/local/webapp/content/
        <Location "/content/">
                SetHandler None
        </Location>

        # NOTE: In order for the django admin site media to work you
        # must change @DJANGO_ROOT@ to be the path to your django
        # installation, which is probably something like:
        # /usr/lib/python2.6/site-packages/django
        Alias /media/ 
"/usr/local/lib/python2.6/site-packages/django/contrib/admin/media/"
        <Location "/media/">
                SetHandler None
        </Location>

        # The graphite.wsgi file has to be accessible by apache. It won't
        # be visible to clients because of the DocumentRoot though.
        <Directory /usr/local/conf/>
                Order deny,allow
                Allow from all
        </Directory>

</VirtualHost>


<VirtualHost 10.49.0.45:443>
        SSLEngine On
        SSLCertificateFile /etc/pki/tls/certs/wildcard.crt
        SSLCertificateKeyFile /etc/pki/tls/private/wildcard.key
        ServerName graphite.domain.com 
        DocumentRoot "/usr/local/webapp"

        # I've found that an equal number of processes & threads tends
        # to show the best performance for Graphite (ymmv).
        #WSGIDaemonProcess graphite processes=5 threads=5 
display-name='%{GROUP}' inactivity-timeout=120 python-path=/usr/local/lib/
        #WSGIProcessGroup graphite

        # You will need to create this file! There is a graphite.wsgi.example
        # file in this directory that you can safely use, just copy it to 
graphite.wgsi
        WSGIScriptAlias / /usr/local/conf/graphite.wsgi

        Alias /content/ /usr/local/webapp/content/
        <Location "/content/">
                SetHandler None
        </Location>

        # NOTE: In order for the django admin site media to work you
        # must change @DJANGO_ROOT@ to be the path to your django
        # installation, which is probably something like:
        # /usr/lib/python2.6/site-packages/django
        Alias /media/ 
"/usr/local/lib/python2.6/site-packages/django/contrib/admin/media/"
        <Location "/media/">
                SetHandler None
        </Location>

        # The graphite.wsgi file has to be accessible by apache. It won't
        # be visible to clients because of the DocumentRoot though.
        <Directory /usr/local/conf/>
                Order deny,allow
                Allow from all
        </Directory>

</VirtualHost>


Of course, my company doesn't have anything installed in the default paths so 
you may not be able to just copy/paste.  The important things are to make the 
WSGIProcessDaemon and group available to both http and https so put them 
outside the Virtualhosts  Also, don't forget to remove the "SSLEngine On" and 
other SSL stuff from the virtualhost listening on port 80.  In our 
configuration the hosts communicate with an internal name so make an alias in 
your hosts file if you need so you have a ServerName that matches for port 80 
and one for 443.

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