From owner-freebsd-questions Thu Nov 5 10:18:43 1998 Return-Path: Received: (from majordom@localhost) by hub.freebsd.org (8.8.8/8.8.8) id KAA09681 for freebsd-questions-outgoing; Thu, 5 Nov 1998 10:18:43 -0800 (PST) (envelope-from owner-freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG) Received: from scientia.demon.co.uk (scientia.demon.co.uk [212.228.14.13]) by hub.freebsd.org (8.8.8/8.8.8) with ESMTP id KAA09271 for ; Thu, 5 Nov 1998 10:16:08 -0800 (PST) (envelope-from ben@scientia.demon.co.uk) Received: from ben by scientia.demon.co.uk with local (Exim 2.05 #1) id 0zbSkC-0004H7-00; Thu, 5 Nov 1998 16:58:48 +0000 Date: Thu, 5 Nov 1998 16:58:48 +0000 From: Ben Smithurst To: keith@apcs.com.au Cc: questions@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: www / cgi / html Message-ID: <19981105165848.B16404@scientia.demon.co.uk> References: Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii In-Reply-To: User-Agent: Mutt/0.94.12i (FreeBSD/3.0-CURRENT) Sender: owner-freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG Precedence: bulk X-Loop: FreeBSD.ORG Keith Anderson wrote: > Can some 1 please point me to the right direction. It would help if you didn't use stupid abbreviations like "some 1", but never mind. > I have created separate web pages for users in a dir that I need to give to my > users via the use of there passwd. Their normal Unix password, that they use to log in normally? Do _NOT_ do this for access via the web, the apache documentation explains why not. Read it. If you want to have seperate passwords for web pages, that should be fine. (I don't know how, I've never had to yet. The Apache documentation must explain it, you probably don't even need CGI scripts.) -- Ben Smithurst ben@scientia.demon.co.uk send a blank message to ben+pgp@scientia.demon.co.uk for PGP key To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-questions" in the body of the message