Apache 2.0.52 help

Clay cculver at darkness-is.com
Fri Oct 29 22:33:24 PDT 2004


-----Original Message-----
From: owner-freebsd-questions at freebsd.org
[mailto:owner-freebsd-questions at freebsd.org] On Behalf Of Aaron P. Martinez
Sent: Friday, October 29, 2004 11:22 PM
To: Clay
Cc: freebsd-questions at freebsd.org
Subject: RE: Apache 2.0.52 help

------snip

> > >             I just did a default install of FreeBSD 4.10 and used
CVSup
> to
> > > download the newest port of Apache (2.0.52), did a make, then make
> install
> > > everything looked like it went well. Used /usr/local/sbin/apachectl
> start,
> > > to start up the httpd and put this line in to my /etc/rc.conf so it
will
> > > start up when the server boots. The problem I am having is that anyone
> not
> > > on the subnet on the server gets a DNS error (Page can not be
> displayed).
> > > I can view the page fine as I have the same subnet of the server, but
> > tried
> > > it on another machine (different Internet Service Provider) to verify
> and
> > > it would not load. Any suggestions on what could be causing this
issue?
> I
> > > am new to both FreeBSD and Apache, and right now am finding the
> > > documentation for Apache 2 a little lacking for troubleshooting
> something
> > > like this.
> > 
> > Doesn't sound like an Apache problem to me.  From outside the subnet,
can
> > you ping the server by ip?  By name?  Is it a public (routable) IP
> address?
> 
> >Hi Clay,  please bottom post..it helps people get the whole story..
> 
> >you can ping the ip from remote isp.......can you also telnet to port 80
> >on the apache machine from the remote isp? 
> 
> >telnet <ip of apache server> 80
> 
> >Aaron
> 
> 	Sorry, I find bottom posting a pain in the arse. No it looks like
> ftp and telnet do not work from the remote ISP.
> 

>You say you're behind a 3com dsl router.....  do you have port 80 set to
>forward port 80 requests to the machine running apache?  the pings that
>you are seeing are likely just ping responses from the external IP of
>the dsl router.

>Aaron

	It is not a DSL Router/Modem, just a straight old school ADSL modem.
I have three static IP addresses. One is being used for the current web
server, one is on the machine I am typing this on, and the third is being
used for this server for testing.

Clay 




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