I had a domain that had been inactive for several years (as far as a web page is concerned, it still received email and some other services). I went to enable the domain by uncommenting it’s host block, and it did not work. <VirtualHost *:80> ServerName www.thedomain.tld ServerAlias thedomain.tld DocumentRoot /home/kris/www/thedomain.tld/wordpress </VirtualHost> In order to get the domain to load, I had to add a directory clause: <Directory /home/kris/www/thedomain.tld> Options Indexes FollowSymLinks AllowOverride All Require all granted </Directory> Of course, I did this for the domains that were active when I switched to Apache 2.4, but it occurs to me that I *should* be able to specify the directory settings for both /www/* and /home/*/www/* in the http.conf file as I did in the old ancient versions of apache. So I tried it: <Directory "/usr/local/www"> Options +Indexes +FollowSymLinks +Includes AllowOverride All Require all granted </Directory> (/www/ is a link to /usr/local/www) But no, it doesn’t work. If I create a new folder “fred” and put an index.html file in it, apache will not access it unless I put a specific directory clause for that new folder. In fact, it will not even access www.mydomain.tld/fred/index.html even though the folder and files are world readable. All I get is a Forbidden error. On the one hand, the few domains that are hosted are working, but on the other hand, boy this is annoying and I don’t know what I am missing. -- "I am" is reportedly the shortest sentence in the English language. Could it be that "I do" is the longest sentence? --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx For additional commands, e-mail: users-help@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx