I am trying to write about 5 websites all on one Apache server which is all on one IP address.
For example:
However, if I create a link on site 2 just using, for example. /index.php, you would expect it to look in /var/www/site2/index.php... but it actually resolves to /var/www/index.php.
Is there anyway of setting up Apache to know that the separate site folders need to behave and resolve to the separate folders?
This is my sites-available file at the moment. A fairly default setup I believe:
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerAdmin webmaster@localhost
DocumentRoot /var/www
<Directory />
Options FollowSymLinks
AllowOverride None
</Directory>
<Directory /var/www/>
Options Indexes FollowSymLinks MultiViews
AllowOverride all
Order allow,deny
allow from all
</Directory>
ScriptAlias /cgi-bin/ /usr/lib/cgi-bin/
<Directory "/usr/lib/cgi-bin">
AllowOverride None
Options +ExecCGI -MultiViews +SymLinksIfOwnerMatch
Order allow,deny
Allow from all
</Directory>
ErrorLog /var/log/apache2/error.log
# Possible values include: debug, info, notice, warn, error, crit,
# alert, emerg.
LogLevel warn
CustomLog /var/log/apache2/access.log combined
Alias /doc/ "/usr/share/doc/"
<Directory "/usr/share/doc/">
Options Indexes MultiViews FollowSymLinks
AllowOverride None
Order deny,allow
Deny from all
Allow from 127.0.0.0/255.0.0.0 ::1/128
</Directory>
Any help would be apreciated.
Thank-you kindly.
Andrew Barlow
You need a ServerName directive inside the <VirtualHost>
. It will tell the server which virtual host is currently in use depending on the browser request (if your client access http://site1.example.com or http://site2.example.com, they will connect to the same IP, hence server, but the request contains the original request url).
You'll have to duplicate your <VirtualHost>
block to have one per hosted site. Each block will differ by their ServerName and DocumentRoot mainly.
You can use "apache2ctl -S" to see how apache understood your virtual host settings.
You can use a single file with this kind of content :
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName site1.myserver.com
DocumentRoot /var/www/site1
...
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName site2.myserver.com
DocumentRoot /var/www/site2
...
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName site3.myserver.com
DocumentRoot /var/www/site3
...
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName site4.myserver.com
DocumentRoot /var/www/site4
...
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName site5.myserver.com
DocumentRoot /var/www/site5
...
</VirtualHost>
Of course, maybe sure that the dns for all of those name ends up on your IP. It needs not to be subdomains as long as they land on your server ip and you have a correspond ServerName for it. If you need extra names for a single site, you can add them with "ServerAlias secondname.myserver.com thirdname.myserver.com" below ServerName