>
> I found something very interesting. I created a test HTML page containing
> solely text called testpage.html. I dropped this file in two locations.
> One in the Apache root directory (/srv/www/htdocs/) and the other in the
> ledgersmb directory (/user/local/ledgersmb/). I changed ownership of the
> file to wwwrun:www. I then ran the following tests:
>
> *Test 1:*
> *
> *
> *URL*: http://192.168.1.10/testpage.html
>
> *Results*: Page loaded almost instantaneously.
>
>
> *Test 2:*
>
> *URL*: http://192.168.1.10/ledgersmb/testpage.html
>
> *Results*: Page loaded in about 14 seconds
>
> It seems to be choking on page loads for files that reside in the
> ledgersmb directory. My ledgersmb-httpd.conf is located in my ledgersmb
> directory at /usr/local/ledgersmb. I had added my "Include
> /usr/local/ledgersmb/ledgersmb-httpd.conf" to the bottom of
> default-server.conf.
>
> Steven
>
I believe I have solved the issue. I am still testing just to make sure,
but it appears that my issue was in ledgersmb-httpd.conf. In the section
where by default you "Allow from localhost", I had changed to the following
adding two additional "Allow from" statements so that I could connect
remotely to Ledgersmb:
Order Deny, Allow
Allow from 127.0.0.1
Allow from localhost
Allow from 192.168.1
Deny from All
.
.
.
It appears that it was struggling with the multiple "Allow from"
statements. Based on Apache documentation I believe I should have been able
to do it this way, but I decided to change it to the following, using just
one "Allow from" statement and separating the addresses with spaces, and my
performance issue cleared up. This is what my modified version that works
looks like:
Order Deny, Allow
Allow from 192.168.1 localhost 127.0.0.1
Deny from All
--
Best Regards,
Steven Marshall
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
All the data continuously generated in your IT infrastructure
contains a definitive record of customers, application performance,
security threats, fraudulent activity, and more. Splunk takes this
data and makes sense of it. IT sense. And common sense.
http://p.sf.net/sfu/splunk-novd2d
_______________________________________________
Ledger-smb-users mailing list
Ledger-smb-users@lists.sourceforge.net
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/ledger-smb-users