apache httpd.conf setting for chinese domain - apache

I have a chinese domain to host. I setup the DNS part and working fine.
However, I cannot set it up in Apache. I did add the alias but still not working.
<VirtualHost 202.64.x.x:80>
ServerName aaaa.com:80
DocumentRoot /var/www/aaaa/
ServerAlias XN--aaaaaaaaaaaa.XN--aaaaaaa
Do I need to add the chinese domain name in Alias?
Any ideas?

A virtualhost setup would be like this, so no port 80 in the servername, plus a closing tag! You need to restart Apache after editing this. Use the proper vhost file to edit this, not the config file.
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName test.xn
ServerAdmin test#test.xn
DocumentRoot /var/www/test.xn
</VirtualHost>

Related

NamedVirtualHost in apache configuration

I have a unix system whose actual name is "ech-10.45.25.12"
i have installed apache server in it.
Now i need to configure it in such a way that the two applications running in the same machine in tomcat in two different ports should be accessed by the same domain.
ie., i have two applications running in the same machine under different port
http://ech-10.45.25.12:8080/issuetracker/
http://ech-10.45.25.12:8180/dashboard/
I would like to name this server(ech-10.45.25.12) as devjunior.mycompany.com
The following is the configuration i have made in httpd.conf
Listen 80
Listen 8080
Listen 8180
NameVirtualHost ech-10.45.25.12:80
NameVirtualHost ech-10.45.25.12:8080
NameVirtualHost ech-10.45.25.12:8180
<VirtualHost ech-10.45.25.12:80>
ServerName devjunior.mycompany.com
DocumentRoot /www/domain-80
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost ech-10.45.25.12:8080>
ServerName devjunior.mycompany.com
DocumentRoot /www/domain-8080
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost ech-10.45.25.12:8180>
ServerName devjunior.mycompany.com
DocumentRoot /www/domain-8080
</VirtualHost>
i know i am doing a major mistake
But i should be able to access the applications by using the following urls
http://devjunior.mycompany.com/issuetracker
http://devjunior.mycompany.com/dashboard
Should i create ANY directories under any folders any where in the system
Please tell that also.
You configured only the names. So you've configured Apache to listen for:
http://devjunior.mycompany.com:8080
http://devjunior.mycompany.com:8180
You can:
Configure 2 domains with namevirtualhost without using ports. this is the most elegant way of doing what you want
Configure a single domain that points to a single directory on the filesystem with 2 links for the diferrent applications. This works with php mostly or pure html pages. With more complex applications you could incur in a lot of headache..
Domain and port. Like you've done. But you can access only by http://devjunior.mycompany.com:8080/issuetracker and http://devjunior.mycompany.com:8180/dashboard
Solution 1
You can use different domains or subdomains (which are cookie friendly in an eventuality of single sign on).
Listen 80
NameVirtualHost ech-10.45.25.12:80
<VirtualHost ech-10.45.25.12:80>
ServerName devjunior.mycompany.com
DocumentRoot /www/domain-80
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost ech-10.45.25.12:80>
ServerName dashboard.devjunior.mycompany.com
DocumentRoot /www/domain-8080
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost ech-10.45.25.12:80>
ServerName issuetracker.devjunior.mycompany.com
DocumentRoot /www/domain-8180
</VirtualHost>
Solution 2 is left as an excercise for the reader... :P
Here is what i did to make it work.
Though the change of name in etc/hosts file did nothing in my intranet, so i used the actual name of the machine which is ech-10.45.25.12
NameVirtualHost ech-10.45.25.12:80
<VirtualHost ech-10.45.25.12:80>
ServerName ech-10.45.25.12
ProxyPreserveHost on
ProxyPass /issuetracker http://ech-10.45.25.12:8080/issuetracker
ProxyPass /dashboard http://ech-10.45.25.12:8180/dashboard
</VirtualHost>
Also dont forget to add the "proxyName" & "proxyPort" attribute to the tag in tomcat's server.xml

Hosting two websites from the same webserver

On my webserver, I want to serve several websites just based on domain name.
For example, I want a webserver that will serve "mycoolsite.com" and "badstuff.org".
I pointed both sites at the same IP address. In httpd-vhosts, I made two entries:
<VirtualHost *:80>
DocumentRoot /www/mycoolsite
ServerName www.mycoolsite.com
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost *:80>
DocumentRoot /www/badstuff
ServerName www.badstuff.org
</VirtualHost>
But when I go to badstuff.org, I get served mycoolsite.com! Why is this happening?
Apache Doc
I also know that when I use MAMP, I have to adjust my "hosts" file too. Is this relevant?
Have you added the NameVirtualHost directive before the vhosts declaration ?
NameVirtualHost *:80
<VirtualHost *:80>
...
</VirtualHost>
You may want to check your configuration by command:
$/usr/local/apache2/bin/httpd -S
If everything is OK, try to check again by restarting the server.

httpd virtualhost - subdomains

I'm having some issue with setting/adding sub domains.. to my apache2(httpd)..
I have this in my httpd.conf
NameVirtualHost *:80
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerAdmin stitofte#homiecraft.pro
DocumentRoot /var/www/html/HomieCraft
ServerName www.homiecraft.pro
ServerAlias homiecraft.pro
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName stats.homiecraft.pro
ServerAlias www.stats.homiecraft.pro
ServerAdmin stitofte#homiecraft.pro
DocumentRoot /var/www/html/stats
</VirtualHost>
homiecraft.pro works just fine...
but stats.homiecraft.pro doesn't work at all.... I have made a DNS a record.. And made "stats" point to the listening address... But still it doesn't work...
Any help would be nice... I have had this setup before... But for some reason i can't get it to work this time...
In Apache2 the Virtual Hosts must be add in ../apache2/conf/httpd-vhosts.conf File instead of main configuration file i.e ../apache2/conf/httpd.conf
then reboot the apache2 servie i.e ../apache2/bin/apa[tab] -k restart.
Now It will work fine.
Normally the problem is in the Dns record, check the subdomain add at dns record and check the type, which is sets CNAME and the main domain the type is A.
And check too the ip direction the subdomain
Change the serverAlias at subdomains quit the www.

Apache Multiple Sub Domains With One IP Address

This has probably been asked but I can't find a straight answer, or the ones I found don't work.
I have one domain mydomain.com, resolving to an IP; let's call it 8.8.8.8. The DNS settings also point two subdomains to that IP address with an A record. These are dev.mydomain.com and staging.mydomain.com. Both have an A-record pointing to 8.8.8.8.
On the server (8.8.8.8) I have two virtual hosts files. These are as follows:
staging.mydomain.com.conf
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName staging.mydomain.com
DocumentRoot /var/www/html/mydomain.com/staging/
</VirtualHost>
And...
dev.mydomain.com.conf
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName dev.mydomain.com
DocumentRoot /var/www/html/mydomain.com/dev/
</VirtualHost>
The problem is:
Regardless of whether I visit http://staging.mydomain.com or http://dev.mydomain.com, I always land on staging.mydomain.com (Apache serves these files).
I have restarted Apache and even the server. If I change the order of the .conf files so that dev is first, I always see that. Any suggestions would be so appreciated. Thanks!
update
I find myself back at this problem again! If you know that your syntax is correct, you might have a bad symlink. Delete it and recreate again, restarting apache in-between. I just did this and it solved hours of head-scratching. On CentOS you can check your available vhosts with httpd -S
update 2
I've also found this issue to exist when the apache log files for the virtual host don't exist, or aren't writable.
Sounds like you need to add NameVirtualHost directive to your configuration.
NameVirtualHost *:80
Under some circumstances Apache may not be able to handle *:80 VirtualHosts correctly. In those cases you should map VirtualHosts directly on specific IPs.
NameVirtualHost 8.8.8.8:80
<VirtualHost 8.8.8.8:80>
ServerName staging.mydomain.com
ServerAlias stage.mydomain.com
DocumentRoot /var/www/html/mydomain.com/staging/
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost 8.8.8.8:80>
ServerName dev.mydomain.com
ServerAlias development.mydomain.com
DocumentRoot /var/www/html/mydomain.com/dev/
</VirtualHost>
You can also run apachectl -t -D DUMP_VHOSTS to see how Apache parses the VirtualHost configuration.
Update: As mentioned in the comments, usually you can just use NameVirtualHost *:80. So most of the time you can configure the virtual hosts as follows.
NameVirtualHost *:80
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName staging.mydomain.com
ServerAlias stage.mydomain.com
DocumentRoot /var/www/html/mydomain.com/staging/
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName dev.mydomain.com
ServerAlias development.mydomain.com
DocumentRoot /var/www/html/mydomain.com/dev/
</VirtualHost>

Apache Multiple VirtualDocumentRoot

Using Apache2 on a Linux system is there a way to have multiple VirtualDocumentRoot using mod_vhost_alias?
This is naming convention I am currently using and would like to continue to use:
host directory
127.0.0.1 domain domain.com
127.0.0.1 sub.domain domain.com_sub
Then in my vhosts section of the httpd.conf I have:
NameVirtualHost 127.0.0.1
<VirtualHost 127.0.0.1>
VirtualDocumentRoot /var/www/%0.0.com
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost 127.0.0.1>
VirtualDocumentRoot /var/www/%2.0.com_%1
</VirtualHost>
The problem with this is when I visit sub.domain the Apache error log shows that it is looking for /var/www/sub.domain.com rather than /var/www/domain.com_test which leads me to believe it only reads the first rule and then fails, but what I would like it to do is use any document root that satisfies either of the two VirtualDocumentRoot rules.
Apache typically will pick the first virtual host whose ServerName or ServerAlias matches the host name provided in the Host HTTP header. In your case, since you have no ServerName directives, Apache supposedly uses a reverse DNS lookup on the IP address to fake a server name, and presuming that the reverse DNS leads to domain.com, which doesn't match, Apache then defaults to the first virtual host. Sounds complicated, I know... the bottom line is, you should use ServerName and ServerAlias to make the configuration explicit. Try something more like this:
NameVirtualHost 127.0.0.1
<VirtualHost 127.0.0.1>
ServerName domain.com
ServerAlias www.domain.com
VirtualDocumentRoot /var/www/%0
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost 127.0.0.1>
ServerName sub.domain.com
ServerAlias *.domain.com
VirtualDocumentRoot /var/www/%2.%3_%1
</VirtualHost>
That should use /var/www/domain.com for http://domain.com and /var/www/www.domain.com for http://www.domain.com, both of which are served by the first vhost, and /var/www/sub.domain.com for http://sub.domain.com, /var/www/blah.domain.com for http://blah.domain.com, and so on.
You have to qualify the backreferences when you want to put a '.' in the file path. So you need to have it like this:
VirtualDocumentRoot /var/www/%2.0.%3_%1
Regarding the OP and the issue with "/var/www/html" being set:
The problem I had to this was using %1 instead of %2. Here's my working example:
ServerAlias www.*.org.au
UseCanonicalName Off
VirtualDocumentRoot /path/to/sites/%2/pub
Hope that helps someone!
I read the docs on "Directory Name Interpolation" in mod_vhost_alias docs.
I finally found a configuration that allows flexible subdomain creation.
See apache docs on mod_vhost_alias
If your root dev domain has 3 parts like dev.example.com you can use %-4+ as a placeholder for everything before the root domain. If it has 4 parts, use %-5+.
<VirtualHost *:80>
VirtualDocumentRoot "/var/www/%-4+/webroot"
ServerName www.dev.example.com
ServerAlias *.dev.example.com
php_admin_value auto_prepend_file /var/www/setdocroot.php
</VirtualHost>
This way you can create a directory named /var/www/sub.domain/webroot and access it with the url sub.domain.dev.example.com.
The line php_admin_value auto_prepend_file /var/www/setdocroot.php fixes the docroot on some systems like OSX 10.9+
Here is the content of setdocroot.php :
<?php
$_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT'] = str_replace($_SERVER['SCRIPT_NAME'], '', $_SERVER['SCRIPT_FILENAME']);
?>
What I am noticing with this configuration is that $_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT'] is pointing to /var/www/html and not to the vhost's doc root.
weird.
Update (2010-07-24):
I just wrote a blog post how to setup your http proof server
http://www.devcha.com/2010/07/how-to-setup-your-http-proof-server.html