Do not remove nginx without checking if anything depends on it first. As counter-intuitive as this may look, many hosters use nginx as a front-end proxy.On Mon, 21 Nov 2022 at 12:12, Antony Stone <Antony.Stone@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:On Monday 21 November 2022 at 17:59:58, Ju lien wrote:
> Hello,
>
> We are developers and supposed to create a website. The website is created
> but we are also supposed to put it on line through Apache.
The first thing I recommend that you do, then, is to remove nginx from the
machine.
In case you are not aware, Apache and nginx are both web servers, and you will
run into all sorts of trouble if you try to run both on the same machine.
I also recommend that you do no configuration of apache whatsoever, and make
sure you can get to the example web page which is supplied with every
installation of Apache I have come across.
Here is a random example I just found from a Google search:
http://www.lukminer.net/
Once you can get your web server to show *that* then you are ready to start
configuring it for your own content.
Antony.
--
“If code doesn’t receive constant love, it turns to shit.”
- Brad Fitzpatrick, Google engineer
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