On Sat, Apr 14, 2012 at 1:14 PM, Trenatos <[email protected]> wrote:

> Anyway, last night I went and updated a file in a subfolder of a live
> site, when I went to use it, I got a 404 on the folder it's in.
>

What do the logs say? Sometimes when you see a 404 it actually means a file
permission issue. Or if it's index.cfm specifically but shows up when you
type it in manually then that's just an issue with that not being in the
welcome/index file list (though sounds like you have other issues going on
as well).


>
> So if I manually type in the url, add the subfolder, and a filename
> (.cfm) it gives me the file as if it was a textfile.
>

That sounds like a servlet mapping or a proxying issue. How you got there I
can't say but since you see the file spit out as plain text that typically
means Tomcat doesn't know it's supposed to hand off cfm processing to the
cfm servlet.

Since you're proxying are there any Apache or proxy settings that would
cause any issues? Without knowing a lot more about specifically what you
did to get in this situation as well as all your settings there's a ton of
possibilities.

Can you hit the file directly on the Tomcat port (i.e. bypass Apache and
any proxying you're doing entirely), and if so does that work? If it does,
then it's a proxying issue. If you still see plain text it's a servlet
mapping issue.

-- 
Matthew Woodward
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http://blog.mattwoodward.com
identi.ca / Twitter: @mpwoodward

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