Re: [users@httpd] Order of applicatoin of sites-enabled configs
On 08/07/2014 05:16 PM, M Busche wrote: Frank, I don't think you understood what I was trying to say. My complaint was that in the pre-packaged configuration made with the ubuntu distribution, the default vhost configuration is placed in a file prefixed with the string 000 which causes it to be loaded first. I renamed it to have a prefix 999, so that it was loaded (and processed) last. Note that 999 still comes before abc, so you might consider zzz instead of 999 in order to avoid the same surprise later. I think we are in complete agreement. My original query was to find out whether there was something I was confused about, or alternatively an explanation as to why-on-earth the people who put together the ubuntu distribution would set things up that way. The short answer is that Debian did this in order to make it easier to do stuff from the command line with the various utilities that they ship with their Apache httpd packages. The longer answer has to do with how good ideas mutate into complicated systems over the decades. -- Rich Bowen - rbo...@rcbowen.com - @rbowen http://apachecon.com/ - @apachecon
Re: [users@httpd] Order of applicatoin of sites-enabled configs
Frank, I don't think you understood what I was trying to say. My complaint was that in the pre-packaged configuration made with the ubuntu distribution, the default vhost configuration is placed in a file prefixed with the string 000 which causes it to be loaded first. I renamed it to have a prefix 999, so that it was loaded (and processed) last. I think we are in complete agreement. My original query was to find out whether there was something I was confused about, or alternatively an explanation as to why-on-earth the people who put together the ubuntu distribution would set things up that way. Matt On Thursday, August 7, 2014 3:40 AM, Francois Gingras francois.ging...@gmail.com wrote: Bad idea. Use the default vhost behaviour to define what vhost will be used for unknown hostnames not matching any ServerName / ServerAlias directive. The default *:80 vhost must be defined first. You can even use ServerName ip or ServerName random hostname in the default vhost. Frank On Wed, Aug 6, 2014 at 11:58 AM, M Busche spammymat...@yahoo.com.invalid wrote: Ooops! Somehow I missed the in alphabetical order the first time I read that. Thanks for making me read that again! After playing with this last night, it looks to me like Apache stops as soon as it finds a virtual host with a matching ServerName (or ServerAlias). In my case I have two VirtualHosts the first for my official website name (ServerName www.mattbusche.org) and the second (my default) has no ServerName entry, but uses a ServerAlias * to match everything else and includes a Redirect www.mattbusche.org to send all requests through such non-standard names back to the official name for my website, www.mattbusche.org. In that way requests to both mattbusche.org and 75.70.80.142 get directed back to www.mattbusche.org. But to get it to work, I had to rename the default config so it was named alphabetically AFTER my main config. For this reason I find the choice of numbering the default config with 000 strange, since you can't number anything before that, but (at least in my case and I would presume in most cases) you want a default to be chosen last. I was getting an infinite redirect until I renamed the default configuration 999-default.conf. Here are my actual working conf files: 100-www.mattbusche.org.conf: VirtualHost *:80 ServerName www.mattbusche.org ServerAdmin [my email address] DocumentRoot /var/www ErrorLog ${APACHE_LOG_DIR}/error.log CustomLog ${APACHE_LOG_DIR}/access.log combined /VirtualHost 999-default.conf: VirtualHost *:80 ServerAlias * Redirect permanent / http://www.mattbusche.org/ /VirtualHost This is what worked for me. Am I missing something? Or am I using the system in dark and twisted ways that would make good church-going apache experts faint? BTW, I haven't made this change on my live server yet -- this is all on my test environment -- so don't be befuddled if you don't see my live machine redirecting as I claim here. Thanks, Matt On Wednesday, August 6, 2014 5:08 AM, Eric Covener cove...@gmail.com wrote: On Wed, Aug 6, 2014 at 5:20 AM, M Busche spammymat...@yahoo.com.invalid wrote: Hi, I notice that the default virtual host configuration file name is 000-default.conf. I presume the convention of starting virtual host configuration file names with a three digit number governs the order in which the configurations are applied. Can someone point me to the apache docs web page that explains this? This is a layout determined by whoever packaged your server and created your default configuration. Check out their README. It just boils down to the Include directive: http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/mod/core.html#include - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@httpd.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@httpd.apache.org
[users@httpd] Order of applicatoin of sites-enabled configs
Hi, I notice that the default virtual host configuration file name is 000-default.conf. I presume the convention of starting virtual host configuration file names with a three digit number governs the order in which the configurations are applied. Can someone point me to the apache docs web page that explains this? Thanks, Matt - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@httpd.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@httpd.apache.org
Re: [users@httpd] Order of applicatoin of sites-enabled configs
On Wed, Aug 6, 2014 at 5:20 AM, M Busche spammymat...@yahoo.com.invalid wrote: Hi, I notice that the default virtual host configuration file name is 000-default.conf. I presume the convention of starting virtual host configuration file names with a three digit number governs the order in which the configurations are applied. Can someone point me to the apache docs web page that explains this? This is a layout determined by whoever packaged your server and created your default configuration. Check out their README. It just boils down to the Include directive: http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/mod/core.html#include - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@httpd.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@httpd.apache.org
Re: [users@httpd] Order of applicatoin of sites-enabled configs
Ooops! Somehow I missed the in alphabetical order the first time I read that. Thanks for making me read that again! After playing with this last night, it looks to me like Apache stops as soon as it finds a virtual host with a matching ServerName (or ServerAlias). In my case I have two VirtualHosts the first for my official website name (ServerName www.mattbusche.org) and the second (my default) has no ServerName entry, but uses a ServerAlias * to match everything else and includes a Redirect www.mattbusche.org to send all requests through such non-standard names back to the official name for my website, www.mattbusche.org. In that way requests to both mattbusche.org and 75.70.80.142 get directed back to www.mattbusche.org. But to get it to work, I had to rename the default config so it was named alphabetically AFTER my main config. For this reason I find the choice of numbering the default config with 000 strange, since you can't number anything before that, but (at least in my case and I would presume in most cases) you want a default to be chosen last. I was getting an infinite redirect until I renamed the default configuration 999-default.conf. Here are my actual working conf files: 100-www.mattbusche.org.conf: VirtualHost *:80 ServerName www.mattbusche.org ServerAdmin [my email address] DocumentRoot /var/www ErrorLog ${APACHE_LOG_DIR}/error.log CustomLog ${APACHE_LOG_DIR}/access.log combined /VirtualHost 999-default.conf: VirtualHost *:80 ServerAlias * Redirect permanent / http://www.mattbusche.org/ /VirtualHost This is what worked for me. Am I missing something? Or am I using the system in dark and twisted ways that would make good church-going apache experts faint? BTW, I haven't made this change on my live server yet -- this is all on my test environment -- so don't be befuddled if you don't see my live machine redirecting as I claim here. Thanks, Matt On Wednesday, August 6, 2014 5:08 AM, Eric Covener cove...@gmail.com wrote: On Wed, Aug 6, 2014 at 5:20 AM, M Busche spammymat...@yahoo.com.invalid wrote: Hi, I notice that the default virtual host configuration file name is 000-default.conf. I presume the convention of starting virtual host configuration file names with a three digit number governs the order in which the configurations are applied. Can someone point me to the apache docs web page that explains this? This is a layout determined by whoever packaged your server and created your default configuration. Check out their README. It just boils down to the Include directive: http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/mod/core.html#include - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@httpd.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@httpd.apache.org
Re: [users@httpd] Order of applicatoin of sites-enabled configs
Bad idea. Use the default vhost behaviour to define what vhost will be used for unknown hostnames not matching any ServerName / ServerAlias directive. The default *:80 vhost must be defined first. You can even use ServerName ip or ServerName random hostname in the default vhost. Frank On Wed, Aug 6, 2014 at 11:58 AM, M Busche spammymat...@yahoo.com.invalid wrote: Ooops! Somehow I missed the in alphabetical order the first time I read that. Thanks for making me read that again! After playing with this last night, it looks to me like Apache stops as soon as it finds a virtual host with a matching ServerName (or ServerAlias). In my case I have two VirtualHosts the first for my official website name (ServerName www.mattbusche.org) and the second (my default) has no ServerName entry, but uses a ServerAlias * to match everything else and includes a Redirect www.mattbusche.org to send all requests through such non-standard names back to the official name for my website, www.mattbusche.org. In that way requests to both mattbusche.org and 75.70.80.142 get directed back to www.mattbusche.org. But to get it to work, I had to rename the default config so it was named alphabetically AFTER my main config. For this reason I find the choice of numbering the default config with 000 strange, since you can't number anything before that, but (at least in my case and I would presume in most cases) you want a default to be chosen last. I was getting an infinite redirect until I renamed the default configuration 999-default.conf. Here are my actual working conf files: 100-www.mattbusche.org.conf: VirtualHost *:80 ServerName www.mattbusche.org ServerAdmin [my email address] DocumentRoot /var/www ErrorLog ${APACHE_LOG_DIR}/error.log CustomLog ${APACHE_LOG_DIR}/access.log combined /VirtualHost 999-default.conf: VirtualHost *:80 ServerAlias * Redirect permanent / http://www.mattbusche.org/ /VirtualHost This is what worked for me. Am I missing something? Or am I using the system in dark and twisted ways that would make good church-going apache experts faint? BTW, I haven't made this change on my live server yet -- this is all on my test environment -- so don't be befuddled if you don't see my live machine redirecting as I claim here. Thanks, Matt On Wednesday, August 6, 2014 5:08 AM, Eric Covener cove...@gmail.com wrote: On Wed, Aug 6, 2014 at 5:20 AM, M Busche spammymat...@yahoo.com.invalid wrote: Hi, I notice that the default virtual host configuration file name is 000-default.conf. I presume the convention of starting virtual host configuration file names with a three digit number governs the order in which the configurations are applied. Can someone point me to the apache docs web page that explains this? This is a layout determined by whoever packaged your server and created your default configuration. Check out their README. It just boils down to the Include directive: http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/mod/core.html#include - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@httpd.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@httpd.apache.org