I'm also running on port 80. The config. below pretty much matches what I
have, with the exception of the 2nd directory container. Wouldn't the
container immediately above it handle that, making the 2nd one redundant?
The only other difference is that my document root is htdocs. That
shouldn't matter. I'd be interested to see if you can get it to work.
Thanks,
Todd
Pete Helgren
<Pete@xxxxxxxxxx>
Sent by: To
web400-bounces@mi Web Enabling the AS400 / iSeries
drange.com <web400@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
cc
2009-03-16 13:50 Subject
Re: [WEB400] WordPress with Zend
PHP
Please respond to
Web Enabling the
AS400 / iSeries
<web400@midrange.
com>
Todd,
I am not using Wordpress (yet) but in Serendipty (another blog php app)
I used the default 80 port. The proxy pass directive handles the
"translation" to/from the default port you specify in the web
configuration file in Web Admin.
My (relevant) configuration settings in Web Admin look like this:
# Configuration originally created by Create HTTP Server wizard on Mon
Feb 05 16:09:18 MST 2007
.....
Listen 10.0.10.206:80 http
DocumentRoot /www/zendcore/htdocs
.....
DirectoryIndex index.html index.php
ProxyPass /
http://127.0.0.1:8000/mywebroot/
ProxyPassReverse /
http://127.0.0.1:8000/mywebroot/
<Directory />
Order Deny,allow
Deny From all
</Directory>
<Directory /www/zendcore/htdocs/mywebroot>
Order Allow,Deny
Allow From all
</Directory>
<Directory /www/zendcore/htdocs/mywebroot/myblogroot>
Order Allow,Deny
Allow From all
</Directory>
I do plan to install Wordpress because I have run into a couple issues
with Serendipty and would like to use Wordpress.
Pete
TAllen@xxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
Has anyone gotten WordPress to work with the Zend PHP product? I'm
having
no success, mainly due to the fact that there are basically 2 servers -
the
native Apache server and the Zend Apache server running in PASE.
WordPress
originally set the site URL (WordPress address) as 127.0.0.1:8000 (PASE
server). Changing that to the real IP address seemed to fix the problems
but there is another address in the settings for the blog address, which
is
set to 127.0.0.1:8000. Changing the blog address to the real IP address
caused the WordPress home page to become unreachable.
To change the theme I had to update the blog address to the real IP
address
and then change the address back to 127.0.0.1:8000 to get to the WP home
page.
Perhaps WordPress is too smart for its own good but it seems this problem
could come up with other PHP applications.
Thanks,
Todd
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