Table of Contents
This is a detailed break down of all the configuration options and files available when configuring website hosting for a domain.
Throughout this chapter, as with the rest of this documentation, the domain
my-brilliant-site.com
is used as an example.
All configuration for the domain my-brilliant-site.com
will be performed
inside the /srv/my-brilliant-site.com/
directory.
The Bytemark Symbiosis project uses the popular Apache HTTPD software for serving your websites, and this comes complete with PHP7 along with many of the most popular PHP extensions.
All the files required for a website for the domain
my-brilliant-site.com are kept in
/srv/my-brilliant-site.com/public/htdocs/
.
index.html
or
index.php
respectively.
/srv/www.my-brilliant-site.com/public/htdocs/
.
If you wish to use CGI scripts for your domain, then simply copy them
to a directory named cgi-bin/
beneath the
public/
directory. They must all be marked as
executable. This means setting the permissions to 755. In
FileZilla, right click the file and select from the menu. The file should have Execute
set for the owner, group, and public permissions.
For example, for my-brilliant-site.com the scripts would live in
/srv/my-brilliant-site.com/public/cgi-bin/
.
Any executable files in that directory will now be treated as CGI
scripts for your domain. For example if you created the file
/srv/my-brilliant-site.com/public/cgi-bin/test.cgi
This would be
referred to as: http://my-brilliant-site.com/cgi-bin/test.cgi
Each hosted website can have visitor statistics automatically
generated and accessible at http://my-brilliant-site.com/stats/. These
statistics will be updated once per day, and the raw access logs will
be made available as
/srv/my-brilliant-site.com/public/logs/
.
As of the Stretch release of Symbiosis, these daily statistics are disabled by default. If you wish to continue using them, you’ll need to enable them explicitly with the creation of a stats
file in the website’s configuration directory. For example, for my-brilliant-site.com, the stats
file should exist at /srv/my-brilliant-site.com/config/stats
.
If you had previously disabled stats with the creation of a file config/no-stats
, this should be removed automatically following a dist-upgrade.
It is also possible to customise the statistics generated by editing
the file config/webalizer.conf
. This file is
documented at the Webalizer project
website.
If there are many sites on the same machine, then it is possible to
customise all the sites' Webalizer configurations by editing the
template that is available at
/etc/symbiosis/apache.d/webalizer.conf.erb
. Configuration files
will be updated when the statistics are next generated, but only for
sites whose configurations either do not exist, or have not been
edited by hand.
You can view new websites before any DNS changes are made.
For example, if the virtual machine example.default.bytemark.uk0.bigv.io is hosting
www.my-brilliant-site.com, i.e. the directory
/srv/my-brilliant-site.com/public/htdocs/
has been
created, then the website can immediately be viewed at
http://my-brilliant-site.com.testing.example.default.bytemark.uk0.bigv.io.
There are some important things to note though: - There is no www part added to the domain name — it is just the directory name prepended to .testing.example.default.bytemark.uk0.bigv.io. - This testing alias isn’t guaranteed to work in all cases, for complex site setups it might not work entirely as expected. - The testing alias only allows the testing of websites. Therefore FTP logins, email delivery, or checking is explicitly unsupported.
In this scenario, you have registered two domains for example my-brilliant-site.com and my-brilliant-site.co.uk, but you want the same content to be served at both addresses. There is no need to create two separate directory structures, you can just set up one directory structure and then create a soft link (aka symbolic link or symlink) to the second.
Once the my-brilliant-site.com directory structure has been completed, log on to your machine as admin over SSH.
Run the command ln -s /srv/my-brilliant-site.com /srv/my-brilliant-site.co.uk
This creats a symbolic link of my-brilliant-site.co.uk
pointing at my-brilliant-site.com
.
Now browsing to my-brilliant-site.co.uk will show the same content that appears at
my-brilliant-site.com.
If a document tree were created in
/srv/my-brilliant-site.com/public/
then that site would be
available under two hostnames:
There are people who prefer to use only a single name, and to automatically redirect visitors using the wrong name to using the preferred name. This can easily be achieved by using Apache’s mod_rewrite facility.
If you prefer all visitors see the www-based site you could create the
file /srv/my-brilliant-site.com/public/htdocs/.htaccess
with the
following contents:
RewriteEngine on RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} !^www.*$ [NC] RewriteRule ^(.*)$ http://www.%{HTTP_HOST}/$1 [R=301,L]
This examines each incoming request, and if the hostname doesn’t begin with "www." then it is prepended to the request and a redirect is issued.
It is perfectly possible to alter the way Symbiosis configures Apache, either for an individual domain, or for all domains hosted on the server.
Symbiosis hosts sites on a server in one of two ways, based on the IP address that site has configured. If it uses one of the server’s primary IP addresses, then it is assumed that the site is hosted using the "mass-hosting" configuration. If the site has a secondary IP assigned then Symbiosis generates an individual snippet for that site, and Apache is configured to use that snippet when dealing with HTTP requests for that domain. Both configuration techniques are configured using a template, which allows the server’s administrator to fiddle with, and tweak the configuration.
In /etc/symbiosis/apache.d/
there are a number of
templates that are used to generate configuration snippets for both
the mass-hosting, as well as individual sites.
By default, access requests for each site on a machine will go to
public/logs/access.log
. If the site has SSL enabled, the request
logs will go to public/logs/ssl_access.log
. These logs get rotated
once a day, and compressed after two days.
The error logs for a site will go to one of two places, depending on
how the site is configured. If the site has its own SSL certificate,
or otherwise has its own IP address, then the error logs will go to
public/logs/error.log
, or public/logs/ssl_error.log
. Otherwise
the error logs will go to
/var/log/apache2/zz-mass-hosting.error.log
.
Finally, if a request is received for a domain that is not present on
the box, then it is logged to zz-mass-hosting.access.log
if it
received on the primary IP of the machine. If the request comes on
any other IP then it is logged to other_vhosts_access.log
. Both of
these last two files are located in /var/log/apache2
.
Here is an example configuration layout for the domain
my-brilliant-site.com
, all of which is contained under
/srv/my-brilliant-site.com/
.
config/stats
config/ssl-only
config/webalizer.conf
public/cgi-bin/
public/htdocs/
public/htdocs/stats/
public/logs/access.log
public/logs/ssl_access.log
public/logs/error.log
/var/log/apache2/zz-mass-hosting.error.log
.
public/logs/ssl_error.log