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Help With Installing A Content Management System.
#1
Posted 19 February 2006 - 03:16 AM
#2
Posted 19 February 2006 - 03:25 AM
I have installed a CMS only a couple of times and usually to a subsidiary folder under the public_html. Something like jlhaslip . com / forum. Is the CMS from the fantastico? There usually are instructions outlining the methods they reccomend right there. If the CMS installs in the sub-folder, you could then do a re-direct using the cpanel Redirect, if you wanted the CMS to become your Main page.
#3
Posted 19 February 2006 - 05:14 AM
#4
Posted 19 February 2006 - 08:12 AM
I installed Joomla tonight for a test case and it would not install in my root public_html because of a conflict of file names. Specifically, .htaccess, so I installed it into the sub-directory /joomla. You may be having the same or similar problems with filename conflicts, so phpnuke won't install where you want it to.
Now, to access the CMS, the URL is jlhaslip.trap17.com/joomla. When this directory (folder) is accessed, the instructions in the .htaccess file points the user to the correct file to start-up the CMS. I haven't looked, but it is probably Index.php.
If I was to make this folder a sub-domain, the address to access it would become joomla.jlhaslip.trap17.com and, again, the .htaccess file looks after pointing me to the correct start-up file.
In order to have this CMS become the starting point for a domain, simply do a 're-direct' by using the script in your cpanel. In my case, I would redirect from jlhaslip.trap17.com/index.html to jlhaslip.trap17.com/joomla and the re-direct should fire-up the CMS for the user.
Hope this helps to clarify the situation a bit.
#5
Posted 19 February 2006 - 09:03 AM
wild20, on Feb 19 2006, 05:14 AM, said:
YOu are facing problem installing it on the main folder which is public_html because there are certain folders like images and possibly others too if you have created. Remove (delete) whatever custom folders you have installed including images, and also index.html. And try to installed again. Since those cms like php-nuke, joomla, xoops may already have images folder with them. Try again and tell us the outcome.
You can definitely install it on the main folder that way. If you want it to be installed in the sub-folder, it shouldn't be having any problem. You can name the sub-folder as cms, or web and it will become yourdomain.trap17.com/cms or yourdomain.trap17.com/web to access your site. You can also redirect yourdomain.trap17.com to yourdomain.trap17.com/cms or yourdomain.trap17.com/web from Cpanel > Manage Redirect page. It is upto you to install the cms anywhere.
wild20, on Feb 19 2006, 05:14 AM, said:
wild20, on Feb 19 2006, 05:14 AM, said:
Also, the cms in Fantastico are not the latest version always, so if you can download their latest stable version from their respective site it is the best.
All the best!
Edited by Dragonfly, 19 February 2006 - 09:04 AM.
#6
Posted 19 February 2006 - 09:45 AM
Currently, I haven't really messed with Drupal beyond setting up a first account and changing the site time to my time zone (EST). I got to looking through it a bit, and realized the reviews I had read about it having a steep learning curve weren't exaggerating! I need to do a lot of tutorial and documentation reading on Drupal before I even think of trying to set up a site. I decided to take a break from doing that to come in here and wander around a bit, just to relax. I do like this forum.
#7
Posted 19 February 2006 - 12:26 PM
You should attention that may be you did not set the accessebility of the files and folders.
#8
Posted 19 February 2006 - 05:05 PM
Let us say that you take the index file and make it index.php. Would that make it the main page no matter what the extension? So far I have only only used either a index.htm or index.html. Would .php or .asp also be the main page? Thanks guys for your help, just this last question.
#9
Posted 19 February 2006 - 09:42 PM
now, I think you must have followed..all the instructions give above...and if not then go ahead and do it...and as far as your question is concerned.....
if you make a directory under public_html called "index" and then upload the current files in it...then people will be able to access it through http://yourdomain/index/
well...and for your second question.....no matter whatever extension you have...in your case it will be index.php it will take it up automatically and will be your main page....but make sure that you dont have any other file like index.html or index.htm in that same folder...because .html extension is given the preference over .php extension!
So, as far as you dont have the index.html & index.php file in the same folder...your index.php file will act as the main page
#10
Posted 20 February 2006 - 04:51 AM
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