sceaton New Recruit 42 Posts user info edit post |
I'm used to using HSP control panel to administer my VPS. I'm evaluating GoDaddy's VPS hosting using the Plesk 8.0.2 control panel, which is similar (both made by SWSoft) but ... different.
I want to setup a website and test it using just the IP address assigned to the account. I don't want to point my domain name of the currently live site to the GoDaddy server until everything is up and running. Plesk has a "preview site" "feature" that brings the site up in a window with a (long, internal) URL. Just typing http://my.ip.add.res/ does not work. (I get a default "plesk" page)
How do I directly access the domain I created in Plesk through a browser before transferring the domain name?
Is there a plugin for firefox or something that will set the HTTP headers to the domain and IP I specify, even though they don't resolve to each other in DNS? I'm thinking that Plesk is receiving a request for the IP with no domain name, and therefore doesn't know where to direct the traffic to.
Anyone out there use plesk? 10/10/2006 4:49:09 PM |
quagmire02 All American 44225 Posts user info edit post |
so much of this post confuses me 10/10/2006 4:55:40 PM |
agentlion All American 13936 Posts user info edit post |
yeah... i don't know WTF he just said... 10/10/2006 4:56:27 PM |
dFshadow All American 9507 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "I'm thinking that Plesk is receiving a request for the IP with no domain name, and therefore doesn't know where to direct the traffic to." |
doubtful
hosts usually assign you a subdirectory - just ask them where yours is.
I've always used cPanel hosts but it's been http://123.456.789.012/~usernm/ as the temporary URL until the domain starts resolving. Plesk probably works the same way.10/10/2006 5:16:57 PM |
sceaton New Recruit 42 Posts user info edit post |
This is a VPS, Virtual Private Server, so it acts basically just like a standalone, dedicated server. Apache, MySQL, root access, etc.
I guess plesk is just a pretty interface to configure apache and some file directories. Maybe my answer lies in httpd.conf. 10/10/2006 5:34:45 PM |
dFshadow All American 9507 Posts user info edit post |
what's the long internal URL used by Plesk? 10/10/2006 5:38:35 PM |
sceaton New Recruit 42 Posts user info edit post |
https://ip-xxx-xx-xxx-xxx.ip.secureserver.net:8443/sitepreview/http/mywebdomainname.com/?previous_page=dom_ctrl
(I've replaced my IP address with "x"'s and changed the domain name to protect the innocent.) 10/10/2006 7:00:12 PM |
sceaton New Recruit 42 Posts user info edit post |
It turns out, I can traverse the folder structure as you would expect (which is what I was needing to do, but couldn't figure out), by adding the folder names onto the end of this crazy URL:
https://ip-xxx-xx-xxx-xxx.ip.secureserver.net:8443/sitepreview/http/mywebdomainname.com/newfolder/anotherfolder/specificfile.php
This end part is unecessary: ?previous_page=dom_ctrl
I guess I'll just use Plesk's "preview" option. I don't want to muck with the httpd file without plesk "knowing" about it ... Plesk might get really pissed then!
Anyway, thanks dF! 10/10/2006 7:46:59 PM |
dFshadow All American 9507 Posts user info edit post |
rofl yw, i guess 10/10/2006 9:25:49 PM |
sceaton New Recruit 42 Posts user info edit post |
In case anyone is interested, the REAL way to deal with this is by using the windows HOSTS file. XP looks to the hosts file BEFORE it looks to DNS, so if there's an entry in there that maps
ip.add.re.ss to mydomain.com
and you open IE and punch up mydomain.com, it will go to ip.add.re.ss, regardless of what IP is in DNS.
And, therefore, Godaddy's webserver gets a request with mydomain.com in the header and knows what to do with it. (this was what I was referring to regarding the Firefox plugin ... i was on the right track, just didn't know how to keep going!)
/thread. 10/11/2006 1:43:26 PM |