This is why we moved the wsgihandler.py to the handlers subfolder, so that 
people can copy and edit it to accommodate the requirements of their own 
hosting provider.

On Tuesday, 17 September 2013 17:31:36 UTC-5, Epyt Otorp wrote:
>
>
> path = os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(__file__))
>>
>> into
>>
>> path = '/home/username/web2py/'
>>
>> This file does not like to be symlinked.
>>
>
> Thank you!   It seems to be working; I ran passenger by hand with no 
> errors, and hitting my domain in a browser gives the welcome (and of 
> course, I can read the documentation to know what to do next.)
>
> The Dreamhost wiki's only example explicitly shows doing a symlink.  The 
> set up for passenger there is that you have ~/username/yourdomain, where 
> you put the passenger_wsgi.py, and ~/username/yourdomain/public where... I 
> guess something's supposed to go?  But, if I understand web2py correctly, 
> everything I do will be under ~/username/web2py/applications, for however 
> many domains I set up?  Is there a more proper way of doing things than 
> symlinking the passenger_wsgi.py file? (ie, importing instead? copying the 
> wsgihandler and using absolute paths?)
>
> Whatever the case, no error, so, thank you again for your help.  Web2py 
> really looks like exactly what I want in a framework and I'm itching to 
> learn. ;-) 
>

-- 
Resources:
- http://web2py.com
- http://web2py.com/book (Documentation)
- http://github.com/web2py/web2py (Source code)
- https://code.google.com/p/web2py/issues/list (Report Issues)
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