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Topic: Changing Document Root |
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Author |
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sadkinso
Joined: 07 Apr 2007 Posts: 1 Location: Oregon
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Posted: Sat 07 Apr '07 3:16 Post subject: Changing Document Root |
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Hello there,
I'm doing a website hosting project for my senior project in college, and I need some help. I want to allow people to register and create (or upload) a website that I host, and I want their site to be accessed two ways.
I already have virtual hosts working, so that "www.theiraddress.com" can be forwarded to my server, and change the document root. This is one way to access their website.
But if they don't have a registered domain, or don't want to forward it to me, I want them to be able to access their website with "www.collegehost.net/~username".
Here's the problem. Using UserDir, I can get the server to open up the folder where their files are, the same folder that is set to document_root in virtual hosts. But if they access their site this way, then anything that uses the document_root for directory location (for example <img src="/images/logo.gif" >, they get the document_root for my hosting website, collegehost.net, and thus, it goes into my images folder.
Is there anyway that I can use UserDir, and have the document_root change along with it. Or does anyone have any advice as to a better way to do this than the way I am doing it?
Any tips will be most appreciated. Thanks very much everyone!
- Sean |
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James Blond Moderator
Joined: 19 Jan 2006 Posts: 7371 Location: Germany, Next to Hamburg
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Posted: Fri 20 Apr '07 17:02 Post subject: |
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The easiest solution is to tell people creating relative paths in their html
like <img src="images/img.jpg" that would work on both ~username and domain. |
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