Chrome is not loading my localhost with a subdommian [closed] - laravel

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When i hit my local host to open my local site it dont perform any action it is working fine for firefox.dont know the reason.It has app before address.
http://app.127.0.0.1:8000/login

You can try to create a domain by editing your host file. Let's say your domain name is myapp.local.
Edit your host file and add the line
127.0.0.1:8000 myapp.local
Then in your browser, you just have to open HTTP://myapp.local
So with this configuration, you can use Laravel you can use the subdomain routine like so
Route::domain('{app.myapp.local')->group(function () {
// put your routes here
});
Please keep in mind that this is for your development environment. You'll need to have another configuration with the real domain name when you go live.

I assume you're either usng xampp or wamp to create your virtual hosts ( subdomain for localhost). I'm writing method for xampp as you've mentioned the hosts file and configuring virtual hosts.
For xampp:
Follow the steps below to create a virtual host:
1- Change to your XAMPP installation directory (typically, C:\xampp) and open the httpd-vhosts.conf file in the apache\conf\extra\ subdirectory using your favourite text editor.
2- Replace the contents of this file with the following directives:
<VirtualHost *:80>
DocumentRoot "C:/xampp/htdocs/"
ServerName localhost
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost *:80>
DocumentRoot "<path to your website folder>"
ServerName apps.localhost
</VirtualHost>
This contains two virtual host configuration blocks:
The first block is the default or fallback virtual host, which is used for all requests that are not matched by subsequent blocks.
The second block sets up a virtual host named apps.localhost. The DocumentRoot directive specifies the directory to be used when serving requests for this virtual host (in this case, the WordPress installation directory), while the ServerName directive specifies the custom domain name for the virtual host.
To add more virtual hosts, simply duplicate the second virtual host block and modify the port number, DocumentRoot and ServerName directives as per your requirements. For example, if you want to use SSL with your custom domain name, you can add a new virtual host block for port 443.
3- Restart Apache using the XAMPP control panel for your changes to take effect.
4- At this point, your virtual host is configured. However, if you try browsing to the apps.localhost domain, your browser will show a failure notice, since this domain does not exist in reality. To resolve this, it is necessary to map the custom domain to the local IP address. To do this, open the file C:\windows\system32\drivers\etc\hosts and add the following line to it:
127.0.0.1 apps.localhost
This takes care of mapping the apps.localhost domain name to the local machine, which always has the IP address 127.0.0.1.
On some versions of Windows, you will not be able to edit the C:\windows\system32\drivers\etc\hosts file without administrator privileges. You can edit the file by right-clicking the Notepad icon and selected the "Run as administrator" menu option, then entering administrator credentials (if required) and clicking "OK" or "Yes" to proceed.
At this point, you should be able to enter the URL http://apps.localhost in your browser’s address bar and see your WordPress installation.

You should try using chrome Developer Tools. You can access them from the menu or pressing f12 in default configuration. Try checking the console tab to see if you receive an error not present in Firefox (Same as chrome). This can help you troubleshoot if your site is having trouble on the client side or server side.
You can also check this answer and try to set your address in your host file or web server config to ensure your web server is actually responding through the address you need.
https://softwareengineering.stackexchange.com/questions/178734/add-a-prefix-to-localhost

#Hassaan is right and in addition to that if you want to add virtual hosts in wamp you can just click on Add virtual hosts in wamp options and fill out the form to add a new subdomain in your localhost.

Related

IIs page (internet information service) always appears when I try to create virtual host web site by xampp

Internet Information Services on typing localhost(IIS) when I trying to create virtual host on by laravel project called usingapi.test
I'm using xampp and tried to change the port in httpd.conf and the other two files who are httpd.vhosts.conf like:
DocumentRoot "C:/xampp/htdocs/usingapi/public"
ServerName usingapi.test
and the other one in windows/system32/drivers/etc/hosts file to:
127.0.0.1 usingapi.test
but always shows me IIS page, i'm very tiered of thsi please help

Hosting multiple site on apache server in windows 2012 server

I am trying to host two sites on apache 2.4 server which is running in windows 2012 server. I have added vhost entries for two sites one running on 80 and other on 8080.
Sample vhost entries:
<VirtualHost *:80>
DocumentRoot "/www/example1"
ServerName www.example.com
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost *:8080>
DocumentRoot "/www/example2"
ServerName www.example2.com
</VirtualHost>
With this configuration both the domain points to site running on port 8080. Considering above sample, sites opens same code in directory /www/example1 on both www.example.com and www.example2.com domains.
But if I access site with I.P. like http://198.21.22.1:80 and http://198.21.22.1:8080 the sites work fine but through domains it does not.
We have a load balancer in between which point to the actual server.
Need to know what configurations or setting if any I have missed.
I have added Listen entries for 80 and 8080 in httpd.conf file.
UPDATE
On further analysis I found that, from different systems different version of site opens up. Example, from my system both the domain opens up code running from /www/example1, but from my mobile client it opens up code running from /www/example2 for both domains.
So, I checked from some other system and found that it opens code running from /www/example1 for both domains and again from some other system it opens up code running from /www/example2 for both domains.
We have a load balancer in between which redirects to the http server on which /www/example1 and /www/example2 are present. Currently I do not have access to this load balancer, but can load balancer be cause of this issue?
Thanks,
Uday
I just added virtualhost entries with same port 80 for both sites with different servername.
Issue was with tow systems being present had to make changes on both server in the load balance cluster.

Instead of IP Address use Hostname in IIS 7

I have a simple project in asp.net mvc3 I publish in my local PC and using my IP Address to open it. I try to use the hostname that I set in the IIS but it will not open the project. How to use hostname in IIS7?. Anyone knows?.
To add a hostname in IIS7 follow this procedure from Microsoft:
Open IIS Manager. For information about opening IIS Manager, see
Open IIS Manager (IIS 7).
In the Connections pane, expand the Sites
node in the tree, and then select the site for which you want to
configure a host header.
In the Actions pane, click Bindings.
In the
Site Bindings dialog box, select the binding for which you want to
add a host header and then click Edit or click Add to add a new
binding with a host header.
In the Host name box, type a host header
for the site, such as www.contoso.com.
Click OK.
To add an
additional host header, create a new binding with the same IP
address and port, and the new host header. Repeat for each host
header that you want to use this IP address and port.
This configuration means requests received by IIS for this hostname will be sent to the specific site you have configured.
However you need a configuration for requests to actually arrive to this IIS Server and this is where DNS is used.
Your server can be found via its IP(s) address(es). Here you want your server to be found via a hostname, so you need a configuration somewhere which says your hostname points to your server IP.
If this is for an intranet site, ask your network team.
If this is for an internet/extranet website, you need to buy a domain name, and your provider will allow you to make the DNS configuration.
If this is for local (windows) use only, you can bypass DNS by using the hosts file. Check this page for example. The hosts file allows you to tell your local computer to point a hostname to the IP of your choice.

mac osx - apache - one website, multiple ports?

I'm building a website on my laptop that needs to be referenced via a custom hostname, instead of deep off of the localhost directory.
I need this site to be referenced locally via http://project.name/
I have this working by having created a new entry in my hosts file as well as a virtual host entry in my apache vhosts conf.
I also want to allow external users to view my site. They would need to access it by my ip address plus a port number, I imagine.
How do I do this?
I assume 'Listen 8080' needs to be added to apache.conf.
Do I create a new vhosts entry that duplicates the one I created before for the local host name, but with a "localhost:8080" name? (this smells bad).
Or can the existing vhosts entry be amended to also listen on localhost:8080?
To further clarify, I need:
http://project.name and
http://localhost:8080
to reference the same, exact site. This is because I need to create the site with a custom host name. My image references, for example need to start with "/images/example.jpg" instead of relative references. This is because the tech dept would have to do 10 mins of extra work. :^)
Thanks,
Scott
Rather than specifying a host (such as localhost) in your vhost directives, use * instead. This will allow you to reach that virtual host via different host names. If you omit ServerName from the block completely, that will allow you to hit the same site via http://localhost:8080, or from outside the machine via http://<ip address>:8080.
NameVirtualHost *:8080
<VirtualHost *:8080>
# your stuff
</VirtualHost>
You can then tune what interface these vhosts use with the Listen directive itself:
Listen 8080 # you can hit the sites from outside your machine, OR
Listen 127.0.0.1:8080 # no access outside your machine
Use apachectl -S to double check your vhost settings.

virtualhost on xampp and accessible from external device

I'm running XAMPP on my WIN7 laptop for developing websites. Now I use virtualhost and a modified hosts file, so I can access my website "www.thisshouldbemysite.nl" through this URL. But it will be loaded from my XAMPP server.
For me locally, this is working fine. I can do what I want. But I also want to access this server from an external device, e.g. a smartphone or tablet so that I can see how the site is rendered on other devices. But entering the IP address of my XAMPP PC in a tablet browser will bring me to the C:\xampp\htdocs directory and I'm unable to access the C:\xampp\htdocs\thisshouldbemysite.nl directory.
Does anyone has an idea of how I can configure my server to get both working (local and remote). Remote should be in the same local network!
Here you can find my current settings.
hosts:
127.0.0.1 www.thisshouldbemysite.nl
httpd-vhosts.conf:
<VirtualHost *:80>
DocumentRoot C:\xampp\htdocs
ServerName localhost
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost *:80>
DocumentRoot C:\xampp\htdocs\thisshouldbemysite.nl
ServerName www.thisshouldbemysite.nl
</VirtualHost>
I want to cover a few things to give you the full picture, maybe if you better understand each part of the process then you can identify where your problem is and therefore find an answer.
The first thing we need to understand is how your browser knows where to go when you type in a domain name. Your browser will check your local hosts file, then your local DNS cache, then make a request to a DNS server. The DNS server is either set automatically by your ISP / DHCP, or set manually in your internet connection settings. So, making a request to a domain name, your browser/OS will check those places in that order for matching entries. If no entry is found, then the domain name will not resolve.
A DNS server can have different kinds of entries. It can tell you where a domain name is hosted, it can tell you where a subdomain is, it can point a domain name to another DNS server...its a flexible multi-use spot where a domain name can point to anywhere. Also depending on the kind of DNS entries are set for a domain name, your browser will automatically know if it needs to ask another DNS server for where a domain name points, or if that it the final result it is looking for. Improperly setup DNS servers can cause a user to get stuck in a DNS loop - where one DNS points to another DNS, and the 2nd DNS points back to the first DNS. These kinds of things are very easy to figure out.
The Hosts file is basically like a local, manually set DNS-like system. It allows you to say that "any.domain" is at "any-ip-address". In this manner you can locally over write or disregard other DNS resources. It's good for local stuff, but if you are going to want to access things from over the internet or by many devices, I highly recommend using a DDNS service, which I will go over below.
---Apache VHost File---
In the vhosts file I set a default vhost. This way, if I type in my IP or a domain name that doesn't have a vhost explicitly defined, I still get some kind of response from my web server. This is just my preference, but totally unnecessary. After I set a default, I explicitly define what domains/subdomains I want to serve.
NameVirtualHost *:80
##############localhost
ServerAdmin webmaster#localhost
DocumentRoot "D:/xampp/htdocs"
ServerName localhost
<Directory "D:/xampp/htdocs">
AllowOverride All
Order Allow,Deny
Allow from all
Require all granted
</Directory>
########othersite.local.whatever
ServerAdmin webmaster#localhost
DocumentRoot "D:/xampp/othersite.local.whatever"
ServerName othersite.local.whatever
AllowOverride All
Order Allow,Deny
Allow from all
Require all granted
After your VHost file is saved, restart apache. If apache starts then stops running automatically, then you probably have an error in your apache config / Vhosts file double check your work, try to start apache after saving each change you make until it works.
---Windows Hosts File---
Unless you have a DNS server setup, you will want to modify your Windows Hosts file in order to tell your machine that othersite.local.whatever points to your apache server. What this file does is locally point a domain name to an ip address. It does not effect other computers, it is only for this one machine that is also running your server.
The hosts file is located C:/windows/system32/drivers/etc/hosts
Depending on your windows permission, you may need to copy the hosts file to the desktop first, open it up with notepad or your fav text editor, make your modifications, save it and copy it back to its original location. On a new line, add a new entry:
127.0.0.1 othersite.local.whatever
After you save your hosts file back to C:/windows/system32/drivers/etc/ you should now be able to access othersite.local.whatever on the server machine without issues. If you have other local windows computers, you can modify their hosts files to point to the server's ip address (usually something like 192.168.1.xx) so that those computers can also access the vhost at othersite.local.whatever.
192.168.1.?? othersite.local.whatever
---Addressing your problem through alternate means---
Depending on what your needs are, you can do a couple things.
1) Modify the vhost file on all windows computers, do some research on how to do it on other devices. If all the devices think that othersite.local.whatever points to your server, your server should respond with the proper vhost page. That is how it works weather on a local network or WAN / internet.
2) Setup a local DNS server, point all your devices to your DNS, and add an entry in your DNS to point to the domain to your server. This is a complicated task if you have never done it before, but you might find it useful.
3) Set up a Dynamic DNS (DDNS). This one is a little complicated, but it is actually pretty easy to do. It can really help you open up your options.
Here is how it works - your home internet connection's WAN IP probably changes from time to time - A Dynamic IP assigned from your ISP by their DHCP service. If you turn your internet modem off and on again, your IP probably changes. This is no good because if you have an external DNS or link that points to your IP in some way, and your IP changes because either your power turned off and on or DHCP renewed your IP lease with a new IP, then you are cut off from your server. So to get around this we have something called a Dynamic DNS. You sign up with a DDNS service (many of them are completely free), you run a little DDNS program on your PC. The DDNS program simply checks your IP address every few minutes and updates the DDNS servers with your IP. If your IP changes, then within minutes the DNS servers are notified of the change and you are back to accessing your server.
To get this all setup you need to setup your local internet connection to forward incoming connections on port 80 (your website probably runs on 80 unless you changed it) to your web server. Set your server's local IP address to a static one (so it doesn't change on your local network, you know something like 192.168.1.100 or whatever suits your needs) and modify your internet gateway/modem/router to forward everything on port 80 to your server PC.
I like to use a free DDNS service called No-IP (http://no-ip.com/). It's free, simple and reliable. Create an account with them, pick a single subdomain - you could go with something.bounceme.net or other predetermined free DDNS names. After you pick a name, install the DDNS / No-IP program on your server PC. Now something.bounceme.net will always go to your home IP. If you setup port forwarding properly, anything on port 80 will automatically go to your webserver.
Now the last step is to get a normal domain name to point to your home IP instead of something.bounceme.net. You could either pay No-IP to do some fancy stuff, or you can do it the free way which is what I will explain here.
I used Godaddy as a domain registrar the last time I did this, and everything has changed so much, you may need to call Godaddy or your domain registrar and ask where/how you can do this with their service.
First is, you need a domain name. Let's say you own homesite.com and let's also say you want laptop.homesite.com to point to your home web server.
For the domain homesite.com, add a DNS record of the type CNAME with a key of "laptop" and a value of your DDNS name "something.bounceme.net". This will make it so that laptop.homesite.com will resolve to your home IP address. Make sense? Now when you type laptop.homesite.com the DNS will tell it to check something.bounceme.net and that will resolve to your home IP.
There are some limitations to the CNAME entry. You can't forward just "homesite.com" to your DDNS IP. You basically have to use a subdomain entry, like laptop or home or something like that. One thing you can do, though, is use the 'subdomain' entry WWW, so that www.homesite.com will point to your home IP. If you use Godaddy, you get a free limited hosting account with your domain name that shows Godaddy ads on it. You can set this account up for "homesite.com" and place some redirect code in it to send users to "www.homesite.com". This way, people type homesite.com and automatically get sent to www.homesite.com.
I hope this is all making sense.
So let's review - Set your servers Static IP, setup port forwarding so the port 80 points to your server's local IP, setup a DDNS (like http://www.no-ip.com) and install their DDNS program, set a CNAME with your domain registrar so that www.yoursite.com points to your home server (CNAME www -> your-ddns-url.bounceme.net). Now you should be able to access your server from anywhere in the world at www.yoursite.com, from inside your local internet connection or from a starbucks.
You can also setup port forwarding for an FTP server (usually 21) to remotely edit your website or access your home files. You can do all kinds of things when you can remotely access your home PC.
I hope this short walk-thru will help you understand each part that is necessary to access an apache VHost across all devices. I like using the DDNS setup/option because you don't need to setup hosts file for each device or anything like that. It's just like accessing a regular website!
Questions or comments welcome. I literally just wrote this all out off the top of my head, I hope it helps.
Have you tried this configuration for your virtual host?
<VirtualHost *:80>
DocumentRoot C:\xampp\htdocs\thisshouldbemysite.nl
ServerName localhost
</VirtualHost>
in this file there is virtual hosts definitions:
C:\server\apache\conf\extra\httpd-vhosts.conf
one virtual host already exist and you are using as default "localhost".
create another one for new project with different port number (81 is here)
<VirtualHost *:81>
DocumentRoot "C:\server\htdocs\YOUR_PROJECT_FOLDER"
ServerName YOUR_SERVER_NAME
<Directory "C:\server\htdocs\YOUR_PROJECT_FOLDER">
Order allow,deny
Allow from all
</Directory>
</VirtualHost>
than in this file contains default ports which apache will listen
C:\server\apache\conf\httpd.conf
#Listen 12.34.56.78:80
Listen 80
Listen 81
add your new ports here
Now you can open http://YOUR_SERVER_NAME from local machine
and open http://local_ip_adress_of_your_machine:81 from other local network connected pc.
Windows users need to add new server name to the C:\Windows\System32\drivers\etc\hosts file
127.0.0.1 YOUR_SERVER_NAME
i hope it helps someone who need

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