Welcome to Your New Home in Cyberspace!
This is hostingweb2
This is a placeholder page installed by the Debian release of the Apache Web server package, because no home
page was installed on this host. You may want to replace this as soon as
possible with your own web pages, of course....
This computer has installed the Debian GNU/Linux operating
system but has nothing to do with the Debian GNU/Linux project. If you want
to report something about this host's behavior or domain, please contact the
ISPs involved directly, not the Debian Project.
See the Network Abuse Clearinghouse
for how to do this.
Unless you changed its configuration, your new server is configured as
follows:
- Configuration files can be found in /etc/apache.
- The DocumentRoot, which is the directory under which all your
HTML files should exist, is set to /var/www.
- CGI scripts are looked for in /usr/lib/cgi-bin, which is where
Debian packages will place their scripts.
- Log files are placed in /var/log/apache, and will be rotated
daily. The frequency of rotation can be easily changed by editing
/etc/apache/cron.conf.
- The default directory index is index.html, meaning that
requests for a directory /foo/bar/ will give the contents of the
file /var/www/foo/bar/index.html if it exists (assuming that
/var/www is your DocumentRoot).
- User directories are enabled, and user documents will be looked for in
the public_html directory of the users' homes. These dirs should be
under /home, and users will not be able to symlink to files they don't own.
All standard Apache modules are available with this release and can be
chosen with the apacheconfig script. Installing a new module on
your system is just a matter of compiling it (with the apache-dev package)
and adding a line to your httpd.conf configuration file.
More documentation on Apache can be found on:
You can also consult the list of World Wide Web Frequently Asked
Questions for information.
If you find a bug in this Apache package, or in Apache itself, please
file a bug report on it. Instructions on doing this, and the list of known bugs of this package, can be
found in the Debian Bug Tracking
System.
Thanks for using this package, and congratulations for your choice of a
Debian system!

Johnie Ingram, Treasure
Island, California 13 October 2001.