Ok, so i've previously set up two virtual hosts and they are working cool. they both house simple web projects and work fine with http://project1
and http://project2
in the browser.
Anyway, I've come to add another vhost. I edited the /etc/hosts file with 127.0.0.1 project3 and also updated the httpd-vhosts.conf file by copy and pasting the previous entries for project2 and editing the file path.
I've checked all the file and folder permissions (in fact I copied and pasted from project2) and simply put a "hello world" message in the index.php file.
I get a 403 forbidden permission denied message when accessing http://project3
Why is this, I just can figure out what step I've missed as everything seems to be set up correct.
Thanks in advance.
The server may need read permission for your home directory and .htaccess therein
I just fixed this issue after struggling for a few days. Here's what worked for me:
First, check your Apache
error_log
file and look at the most recent error message.If it says something like:
then there is a problem with your file permissions. You can fix them by running these commands from the terminal:
Then, refresh the URL where your website should be (such as
http://localhost/mySite
). If you're still getting a 403 error, and if your Apacheerror_log
still says the same thing, then progressively move up your directory tree, adjusting the directory permissions as you go. You can do this from the terminal by:If necessary, continue with:
and, if necessary,
DO NOT go up farther than that. You could royally mess up your system. If you still get the error that says
search permissions are missing on a component of the path
, I don't know what you should do. However, I encountered a different error (the one below) which I fixed as follows:If your
error_log
says something like:then your problem is not with your file permissions, but instead with your Apache configuration.
Notice that in your
httpd.conf
file, you will see a default configuration like this (Apache 2.4+):or like this (Apache 2.2):
DO NOT change this! We will not override these permissions globally, but instead in your
httpd-vhosts.conf
file. First, however, make sure that your vhostInclude
line inhttpd.conf
is uncommented. It should look like this. (Your exact path may be different.)Now, open the
httpd-vhosts.conf
file that you justInclude
d. Add an entry for your webpage if you don't already have one. It should look something like this. TheDocumentRoot
andDirectory
paths should be identical, and should point to wherever yourindex.html
orindex.php
file is located. For me, that's within thepublic
subdirectory.For Apache 2.2:
The lines saying
are critical for Apache 2.4+. Without these, you will not be overriding the default Apache settings specified in
httpd.conf
. Note that if you are using Apache 2.2, these lines should instead sayThis change has been a major source of confusion for googlers of this problem, such as I, because copy-pasting these Apache 2.2 lines will not work in Apache 2.4+, and the Apache 2.2 lines are still commonly found on older help threads.
Once you have saved your changes, restart Apache. The command for this will depend on your OS and installation, so google that separately if you need help with it.
I hope this helps someone else!
PS: If you are having trouble finding these
.conf
files, try running thefind
command, such as:restorecon
command works as below :You can try disabling selinux and try once again using the following command
Check that :
Additionally, you can look at the error.log file (usually located at /var/log/apache2/error.log) which will describe why you get the 403 error exactly.
Finally, you may want to restart apache, just to be sure all that configuration is applied. This can be generally done with
/etc/init.d/apache2 restart
. On some system, the script will be called httpd. Just figure out.