You mean for the Proxmox VE Web GUI? _______________________________________________ nginx mailing list nginx@nginx.org http://mailman.nginx.org/mailman/listinfo/nginxby fbhosted - Nginx Mailing List - English
PHP is a common cause of such an error _______________________________________________ nginx mailing list nginx@nginx.org http://mailman.nginx.org/mailman/listinfo/nginxby fbhosted - Nginx Mailing List - English
If you feel like playing with reliability, use CentminMod. It requires a clean install of CentOS, run the installer and it installs nginx, MariaDB (100% compatible MySQL database), php-fpm and other goodies. I recommend it. You just choose option 1 for the initial setup and option 2 for the domain. PS works really great on vBulletin _______________________________________________ nginx mailing lby fbhosted - Nginx Mailing List - English
I've had this problem in the past and I replaced /etc/init.d/php-cgi with one that enables FastCGI and that stopped the problems. I think it's Ubuntu specific because I cannot recreate the problem (on a virtual server) on Debian. _______________________________________________ nginx mailing list nginx@nginx.org http://mailman.nginx.org/mailman/listinfo/nginxby fbhosted - Nginx Mailing List - English
Are these distribution packages (.deb / .rpm) or compiled from source? _______________________________________________ nginx mailing list nginx@nginx.org http://mailman.nginx.org/mailman/listinfo/nginxby fbhosted - Nginx Mailing List - English
Also the header (first 20 - 30 lines or so) of /etc/init.d/php-cgi or whatever PHP startup script you are using _______________________________________________ nginx mailing list nginx@nginx.org http://mailman.nginx.org/mailman/listinfo/nginxby fbhosted - Nginx Mailing List - English
What is the contents of /etc/nginx/fastcgi_params _______________________________________________ nginx mailing list nginx@nginx.org http://mailman.nginx.org/mailman/listinfo/nginxby fbhosted - Nginx Mailing List - English
If you are inexperienced, do not run phpmyadmin publically as /phpmyadmin or you will fall behind a security update to find your system compromised (and now the new member in the botnet!) I used to hunt botnets for awhile and PhpMyAdmin was a common way to get in _______________________________________________ nginx mailing list nginx@nginx.org http://mailman.nginx.org/mailman/listinfo/nginxby fbhosted - Nginx Mailing List - English
You're making it too complicated and just stick with iptables On Fri, Sep 9, 2011 at 5:02 PM, Alfredo Palhares <masterkorp@gmail.com> wrote: > Hello, > > I think that out of nginx scope. > > On 7 Sep 2011 14:42, "arleybls" <nginx-forum@nginx.us> wrote: >> Currently Nginx can block IP on application level and thus send a 403 >> forbidden message bacby fbhosted - Nginx Mailing List - English
location / { proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:81; } Try this and make sure your Wordpress configuration is good on your Apache webserver _______________________________________________ nginx mailing list nginx@nginx.org http://mailman.nginx.org/mailman/listinfo/nginxby fbhosted - Nginx Mailing List - English
location / { root /data/xtremenitro/; index index.php index.html index.htm; proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:81; } This may be the reason - you are serving the files on your nginx server _______________________________________________ nginx mailing list nginx@nginx.org http://mailman.nginx.org/mailman/listinfo/nginxby fbhosted - Nginx Mailing List - English
I'll just stick with the Ubuntu PPA packages as mentioned here: http://wiki.nginx.org/Install _______________________________________________ nginx mailing list nginx@nginx.org http://mailman.nginx.org/mailman/listinfo/nginxby fbhosted - Nginx Mailing List - English
If it's a PHP web application, look into memcached _______________________________________________ nginx mailing list nginx@nginx.org http://mailman.nginx.org/mailman/listinfo/nginxby fbhosted - Nginx Mailing List - English
Resolved it since it was Apache .htaccess rewrites by doing a reverse proxy _______________________________________________ nginx mailing list nginx@nginx.org http://mailman.nginx.org/mailman/listinfo/nginxby fbhosted - Nginx Mailing List - English
I've got a script and the rewrites are kicking my butt RewriteEngine on RewriteCond %{REQUEST_URI} \/([0-9a-z]{1,9})$ RewriteRule ^(.*) http://URL/?%1 RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} -s RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} -l RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} -d RewriteRule ^.*$ - -- --C "The dumber people think you are, the more surprised they're going to be when you kill them."by fbhosted - Nginx Mailing List - English
I don't mean to hijack your discussion but it's relevant - how do I allow Facebook as a referrer _______________________________________________ nginx mailing list nginx@nginx.org http://mailman.nginx.org/mailman/listinfo/nginxby fbhosted - Nginx Mailing List - English
I would also look into some kind of blacklist, like spam/drone/proxy/etc, to compare IP addresses that are suspicious and kindly redirect them to /dev/null -C _______________________________________________ nginx mailing list nginx@nginx.org http://mailman.nginx.org/mailman/listinfo/nginxby fbhosted - Nginx Mailing List - English
Post your /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/ files and also, keeping phpmyadmin on a public directory is bad since bots / scripts automatically scan for that in URLs. Restrict it with .htaccess if you want to keep phpmyadmin as the directory name or change it to something like "fuzzykittens" to hide it. On 5/24/11, Trazzt <nginx-forum@nginx.us> wrote: > Hi, > > I recently installeby fbhosted - Nginx Mailing List - English
http://www.shanestillwell.com/blog/2009/03/24/throttle-traffic-iptables I wish you luck on a solution but it seems rather odd On 5/4/11, Yanxin Z. <lists@ruby-forum.com> wrote: > Hi Chris, > I want to control the public to do query inside my website, so that bad > guy can not do database harvest. > For example, each IP can only do query 10 times per day. > > The IP I do nby fbhosted - Nginx Mailing List - English
Many are available online in regards to SSH limiting however you have to put in IP ranges of people you do not want to limit, which could be very hard. What exactly are you trying to do? On 5/4/11, Yanxin Z. <lists@ruby-forum.com> wrote: > Thanks Chris. > Do you have example I can refer? > Yanxin > > -- > Posted via http://www.ruby-forum.com/. > > ___________________by fbhosted - Nginx Mailing List - English
You might be better off researching a solution with iptables On 5/4/11, Yanxin Z. <lists@ruby-forum.com> wrote: > Hello, > I want to limit the number of connection per hour from IP range. > > For example, I want to limit every hour, each IP can only visit our > website for 5 times. > > How can I write the config? > > There is limit_req, which limit the connectionby fbhosted - Nginx Mailing List - English
Yeah. I'm trying to migrate her over to Wordpress but she has 7000+ HTML pages. It's like an online encyclopedia she is running. I was going to put her on one of mine that could handle her traffic but she made the offer to purchase her own VPS so this will be fine. I keep telling her Frontpage is EOL but she knows us computer folks can think of something. Maybe I'll put in a bid to copy/pastby fbhosted - Nginx Mailing List - English
No kind of hack you could think of? On 03/09/2011 04:11 AM, Igor Sysoev wrote: > On 08.03.2011, at 7:39, vpslist wrote: > >> Hello, >> >> I'm a long time mailing list subscriber and I had a client ask me about >> this. I drew a blank so here goes: >> >> My client wants to use Frontpage extensions because she is accustomed to >> using them. I run allby fbhosted - Nginx Mailing List - English
Would not advise keeping your phpmyadmin directory public - change it to something more obscure like phpmyadmin111 or something random. I've seen too many webservers compromised because of a phpmyadmin installation being far behind on an upgrade or you can restrict it to your IP. _______________________________________________ nginx mailing list nginx@nginx.org http://nginx.org/mailman/listinfby fbhosted - Nginx Mailing List - English
apt-get install exim4 I was having issues of a Wordpress script not emailing and switching to exim4 fixed it rather than dealing with Sendmail. On 02/10/2011 06:50 PM, Parker, Joshua wrote: > Ok, I have postfix installed and these are the steps I took: > > sudo aptitude -y install postfix telnet mailx > sudo nano /etc/aliases > root: some_value > sudo newaliases > sby fbhosted - Nginx Mailing List - English
Disable IPv6 in your configuration fileby fbhosted - Nginx Mailing List - English