we change the name of one our directory on our host, we have some file on this directory and some website linked to this files. now how can redirect all address to new address?
for example our old address is:
[url]
now this file located on:
[url]
Not sure where this thread so go, so posted it here! Cause bunnies do not fear mods somedays.
Anyways....
So i wanted to setup say a dns bunny.somedomainihaveisuppose.dom to say my ip say xxx.xxx.xx.xx . , how can you do that in cpanel say or say in whm panel, and is there any script maybe like say no-ip.com guys use, that can do a change mannually whenver you want to your ip?
Why am i not using other 3rd part services, cause a. they charge you to keep your dns name else it expires after few days or something if changes are not made...
So any solution or howto for setting up on your hosting account a dynamic dns kinda service?
I have what seems to be a simple redirect question. I have a dedicated server and a few static IP addresses, but I want to make it so if someone were to type in my IP address in their browser, Apache will redirect them to the domain name. (Typing in [url]
What happens now is that if you were to type in my server's IP address, it will show you the FIRST VirtualHost container that's listed in httpd.conf. This is not so bad since I've placed my main company site at the start of the list, but I'd rather redirect the IP into the domain name I use.
I read somewhere that you can place Mod RewriteRules directly in the VirtualHost container rather than using .htaccess, but the few "rules" that I tried didn't seem to do anything. And yes, I restarted Apache each time I edited httpd.conf.
Is there an easy way to do this?
ALSO, is there a way to redirect the name server address too? If you type in [url]into the browser, it acts the same way. I would ultimately like to redirect both the nameservers and the IP address(es) to the domain name.
I have set up an Apache web server that has ssl enabled. If I go to https://myserver.com I get the 'it works!' page and the certificate is valid and trusted. If I go to https://myserver.com/myapp that also works (it's an Oracle weblogic deployed java app that I'm fronting with Apache).
I would like to configure Apache so that when a user goes to simply https://myserver.com it automatically directs them to https://myserver.com/myapp rather than showing the 'It works!' page. I have read some documentation and experimented with setting a redirect via the https.conf file and even the ssl.conf file but nothing seems to work. I either get a 404 or simply the 'It works! page.
My customer has an external facing Apache server that is acting as a reverse proxy to two internal applications. They have:
- external addresses for each app which resolve to different ip addresses, so app1.their_domain.com and app2.their_domain.com resolve to 77.3.170.10 and 77.3.170.11 respectively. - the Apache server has two network interfaces with ip addresses 192.168.10.10 and 192.168.10.11 - the external ip addresses resolve to the above internal addresses - the firewall between the Apache server and the internal app servers is configured to allow traffic from 192.168.10.10 to reach app_server1, and traffic from 192.168.10.11 to reach app_server2, both using port 7777.
I have configured a virtual host in httpd.conf for each ip, i.e.
This works fine in that the external address are being routed to the correct application, however the firewall is blocking requests to the second app as it appears the requests are coming from the Apache servers 'primary' ip address 192.168.10.10 instead of 192.168.10.11.
Is it possible to send requests using the ip address from the relevant VirtualHost?
I want to redirect a website to a particular URL so that the address bar shows the same URL and not the destination URL. I know it is possible via URL masking, however, I want it in such a way that whenever somebody clicks on any link in the website, the address bar should still show the original URL. To put it in simple words, Suppose I want to redirect [url] to [url]. Now if there is a link named contact/index.htm and somebody clicks on it the address bar should display [url]and not redirect to [url]
How can it be possible using URL Rewrite method in .htaccess file?
- I can't access the webserver - I'll try to restart httpd, and I'll get
Starting httpd: (98)Address already in use: make_sock: could not bind to address [::]:443
To fix this, I run
[root@www1 ~]# lsof -i tcp:443 COMMAND PID USER FD TYPE DEVICE SIZE NODE NAME perl 11307 apache 4u IPv6 476943447 TCP *:https (LISTEN)
There is always leftover process that is causing the restart to fail. Once i force kill the process, I am able to restart httpd properly.
Now it is ok if this just occurs once in a while, but this problem keeps repeating itself almost everyday at 4am server time (cron time?). What can I do to permanently fix this?
Search engines may think serviciionline.net and www. serviciionline.net are two different sites.
You should set up a permanent redirect (technically called a "301 redirect") between these sites. Once you do that, you will get full search engine credit for your work on these sites. For example, serviciionline.net seems to have 3,058 inbound links whereas www. serviciionline.net has 32 inbound links. By correctly configuring a permanent 301 redirect, the search rankings might improve as all inbound links are correctly counted for the website.
How can I do that redirection? I have cPanel Pro in my hosting, and as far as I can see, with or without www, I land in the same place
I am one of those TP customers that got affected by the DC outage.
to redirect my website to a temporary status page for my members... I have successfully redirected www.domain.com but I need to also redirect the main part of the site www.domain.com/forums < is there any possible way of doing this without having access to my server? I am using Namecheap as domain registrar.
Also - will doing a redirect like this cause an kind of SEO problems? I want my visitors to be able to enter something short like that instead of the long address.
what is 301 redirect? i heard that when as a website publisher, you should redirect your mydomain.com to www.mydomain.com everytime as the domain with www. in front of it bears more value... Is that true?
Btw, there was a time that i submitted two sitemaps to google, once for the domain without the www. and the seond with the www. I eventually took down the one with www.
So, as you may expect, there's only results showing up when i type site:mydomain.com and only 1 result for site:www.mydomian.com... i was thinking, mayb i should have juz list two sitemaps for the same site... any benefits/harm of doing that? does that increase PR or anything?
I have a web application built with PHP which uses the MVC design pattern.
The application forwards all requests through index.php.
I am using IIRF (similar to mod_rewrite - IIS6 has no native rewrite module) to rewrite all requests through the index.php file and this is successful.
My application has several "modules" which I wish to be accessible via different URLs. For example the following is how I wish to set up my URLs: ...
is it possible to register a domain name and just use it to re-direct to another domain without paying for hosting etc? for example if i want a standard url to point to a free [url] blog? how would i go about doing this?
The thing is that we have a dedicated server at our company hosting several domains, and right now you can access them both with the www prefix or without it, but there is no redirection in case you access without it, and this has negative impact with SEO related stuff.
I have the rewrite apache module enabled (I tested with a script I found on the net), and I also tried a test configuring a single domain including some code about redirection.
Right now I'm getting a nice "500 Internal Server Error"
This is the code in .htaccess
Code: Option +FollowSymlinks RewriteEngine On RewriteCond %{http_host} ^mydomain.com [NC] RewriteRule ^(.*)$ [url] (mydomain.com is, obviously, a replacement for the real domain in both cases)
I am trying to figure out how to do the following:
Say I have a URL like this: www.myreallylongsiteurl.com and I want it to automatically redirect to www.myRegularURL.com.
How would I go about doing this? Do I actually have to setup a whole new site in IIS and have a page there that just does a redirect or can I set up some sort of alias for this?
Also, my customer would like me to set it up so that myRegularURL.com redirects automatically to www.myRegularURL.com. they don't want to have to do the www in the url. Do I do this the same way as above?