Bruce Whealton wrote: <snip> >>One option is to find an appliance ISO and use that rather than try to > install a LAMP stack on top of an existing system. > > I suppose you are correct. The real problem I was having was getting > domain1.com to point to one location and domain2.com to point to another > and to serve php files from both. Previously, I had problems with this, > especially frustrating was when php didn't work. Didn't work meaning it > wasn't being processed on the server. With my latest install that does > work now. It was soooo frustrating. Nothing out there seemed to offer a > solution and the log files were unhelpful. > These packaged lamp stacks do not resolve the issue of running virtual > domains, such as domain1.com and domain2.com. As noted in a prior email, > when I added a vhost.conf file, the server would not restart. You should note that current practice is to touch /etc/httpd/conf as *little* as possible. It includes /etc/httpd/conf.d, and in there, you put your files. What most people do is one for each domain. mark _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos