![]() I have not been able to repeat that message again.Īll you people in the midwest and east stay warm tonight. There was one instance of XP popping up a blocking message when I tried the upload from filezilla, but it happened so fast I could not read all the message. I tried the port forward, using the IP of this local computer, but it made no difference. Somewhere, when I try FTP, it still wants a very old username and password, which I no longer know. I had this computer built, and all my files were transferred onto the new harddrive. One strange thing is that when I use my FTP in the html editor, the user name defaults to "sailor" which is the original computer name I had years ago. I can select the file to upload, process the transfer and I get:Īfter the timeout limit, FZ client unhooks from the FZ server. I can see that filezilla client logs on to įZ client shows me the localhost\htdocs folder and the file I want to upload. ![]() Setup Here's how to set up Abyss on a bare Windows host, and add PHP and Perl. It supports server-side scripting through CGI in Perl, PHP, or ASP, and features a remote web management interface that makes its configuration as easy as browsing a web site. I can see that the abyss server is located at I can see that the filezilla server is Abyss is a free-as-in-beer, neat, cross-platform, lightweight web server. Now, if you are designing the site on the same pc that you are running the web server on (abyss), then you can simply copy your web pages to the htdoc folder manually (or if your web editor has a 'local' option instead of FTP) and accomplish the same thing. If everything goes right, your pages will be uploaded and then you can go to your web browser, punch in your domain name (or use if on the same PC as the web server) and your site should display. ![]() Then when you go to publish your web site, you will enter the account name and password that you created on the FTP server. Set the HOME (or default) folder for this account to the htdoc folder (or wherever you find the current Index.htm file). Then create an account and give it a password. What you need to do now is install an FTP server. When you go to your web site before publishing any of your own files, this index.htm page is what Abyss displays (so you know the web server is up and functional). By default, you should have an INDEX.HTM file in there which the Abyss install created. I don't have Abyss X1 (the free version, which I think you're using) but regardless of where you installed it, there is, or should be, a folder called htdocs (or something very similar). The FTP server accepts the files sent to it by the client and puts them wherever you tell it to. You need the server on the same PC as Abyss. Its dark, snowy, and might reach 20 here today, if we're lucky!! The sun is shining and it is going to be in the upper 50's today, Just for rubbing that in my face, I may not reply again.
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