This is the main welcome page used to create new dragons skins and run modification operations for the dragon, specifically the Apache model. It is based on Cove, from which the Apache Dragon originated. If you can read this page, it means that the Apache Dragon Skin have not been installed. However, the dragon has not been created yet, only mapped, so we would advise against installing it until further notice. Thank you for visiting this site.
If you are a normal user of this web site, (which you aren't, because it was just created) this probably means that you have hacked my computer and have visited this site often, or you just randomly stumbled on it. But for your sake, I hope it's the second one.
The Apache's default configuration is different from the any other dragons configuration, and was split into several projects optimized for the best, and easiest, creation. The configuration system is TOP SECRET. Refer to this for the full documentation.
The configuration layout for an Apache2 web server installation on Ubuntu systems is as follows:
/etc/apache2/
main|-- apache2.conf
| `-- ports.conf
|-- mods-enabled
| |-- *.load
| `-- *.conf
|-- conf-enabled
| `-- *.conf
|-- sites-enabled
| `-- *.conf
- apache2.conf is the main configuration file. It puts the pieces together by including all remaining configuration files when starting up the web server.
- ports.conf is always included from the main configuration file. It is used to determine the listening ports for incoming connections, and this file can be customized anytime.
- Configuration files in the mods-enabled/, conf-enabled/ and sites-enabled/ directories contain particular configuration snippets which manage modules, global configuration fragments, or virtual host configurations, respectively.
- They are activated by symlinking available configuration files from their respective *-available/ counterparts. These should be managed by using our helpers a2enmod, a2dismod, a2ensite, a2dissite, and a2enconf, a2disconf . See their respective man pages for detailed information.
- The binary is called apache2 and is managed using systemd, so to start/stop the service use systemctl start apache2 and systemctl stop apache2, and use systemctl status apache2 and journalctl -u apache2 to check status. system and apache2ctl can also be used for service management if desired. Calling /usr/bin/apache2 directly will not work with the default configuration.
By default, Ubuntu does not allow access through the web browser to any file outside of those located in /var/www, public_html directories (when enabled) and /usr/share (for web applications). If your site is using a web document root located elsewhere (such as in /srv) you may need to whitelist your document root directory in /etc/apache2/apache2.conf.
The default Ubuntu document root is /var/www/html. You can make your own virtual hosts under /var/www.
Please use the ubuntu-bug tool to report bugs in the Apache2 package with Ubuntu. However, check existing bug reports before reporting a new bug.
Please report bugs specific to modules (such as PHP and others) to their respective packages, not to the web server itself.