You can reach your control panel by
using the url http://www.domain_name.com:2082 where domain_name.com is your own
domain.
To access the control panel using SSL (Secure Web) use the url
https://www.domain_name.com:2083
To recap, port :2082 is your control panel using http (non secure web)
and port :2083 is your control panel using https (secure web).
To allow your email users to check their mail using webmail use the url:
http://www.domain_name.com:2095 , thats port :2095 for webmail users.
General Account Information
We offer storage space
for web pages with global public access to those pages over the Internet. We
also offer a limited form of program execution known as "cgi-bin." Our computers
are Pentium machines running Apache over Linux. Apache responds to web page
requests from remote browsers while Linux is one of several variants of the Unix
operating system. Our servers are connected to the Internet backbone over an
OC-3 with multiple T3 lines for redundancy.
Every customer
gets his own password protected userid under Linux. By logging in with his
userid, the customer gains access to his web storage space. Every userid "owns"
a structure of disk subdirectories in the Linux file system. The "root" of this
structure is the "home" directory, found at path "/home/userid." Note that this
is somewhat similar to the MS-DOS directory structure, except that there is no
drive letter and forward slashes are used instead of backward slashes. The path
referred to above, however is in relation to our own servers. When you FTP to
your account using your domain name and userid, you don't need to put in
"home/userid." You will automatically be taken there.
Inside the home
directory are many files and other directories. The most important one is named
"public_html". Every customer has his own separate "public_html" subdirectory.
Files placed in the "public_html" directory are visible to remote browsers over
the Internet, so this is where you want to place all your html documents,
graphics, sounds, files, etc. which you want people to be able to access from
the world wide web. For example, when a browser asks for URL
http://yourdomain.com/page.html, Apache looks for the file:
/home/username/public_html/page.html and sends it out.
The Index Page
The filename of
your home page should be index.htm or index.html. The webserver will
automatically send the file at path /home/username/public_html/index.htm when a
browser specifies http://www.yourdomain.com. When your account is set up, there
will be an index.html page already installed. This just tells anyone accessing
your domain that your site is under construction and will be available soon. You
will replace this file in the public_html directory with one of your own
creation. If you wish to use any of the cgi features we provide that use Server
Side Includes (SSI), you must name your page with the .shtml extension. You can
put an index.html file in any subdirectory that you wish, and it will be the
default page served when you don't want your visitors to have to type a full
page URL reference, for example, http://www.yourdomain.com/whatever instead of
http://www.yourdomain.com/whatever/index.htm, or
http://www.yourdomain.com/default.htm.
You may use any
of the following for a homepage of a directory:
index.htm , index.html
, index.php , index.phtml , index.shtml , index.php3 , default.htm ,
default.html
default.phtml , default.php ,
default.php3
SSL (Secure Pages)
You can secure
your website using our 128bit Thwate Super cert.
To secure your site you
simply need to access it via
https://secure#.u-build-it.net/~username where the # can
represent a number from 1 and up according to which server you are on and
username is your main sites username.
For example for site
joe.com and your username is joe
http://secure7.u-build-it.net/~joe
If you do not
know what secure number to use please contact support to request that
information.
9+ Character Names
A name of
anywhere from 3-26 letters is legal for email accounts, FTP accounts, and telnet
accounts. There is no limitation for file names on the
server.
Web Stats and Access Logs
To count
accesses, there is an online section of your CP called stats. To access it, just
log on the Internet and with your web browser, go to:
http://www.yourdomain.com:2082
click the stats menu to
the left
You will see a
breakdown of the various tools available to your for measuring traffic and
tracking users. If you are a brand new domain, you won't see any statistics
there yet.
You will also
see links in the stats area to view your log files. You can access these file
and open it in any browser to see exactly what files were accessed, what domain
the visitor came from, the dates and times of each visit,
etc.
Checking Server Space Usage
You can find out
how much space is in use by the www files for your domain by using your CP. At
your main page when you log in you will see the space used and space available
to your site. Another way is to telnet to log into your account and then from
the Unix prompt, typing the following:
du -s
/home/username
This will give
you a report back of the number of kilobytes (k) all files in your www directory
add up to.
Changing Your Password
To change your
password login to your CP and click the change password feature in the left
menu. Another way is to telnet to your account. After logging in with your
username and password, at the Unix prompt, type: passwd
A script will
ask you to type in your old password, then the password you want it changed to
will be asked for twice to verify. This will not work for POP-only accounts. To
change the password for a POP you need to click the email link in the left menu,
the click add/remove accounts. You will see a list of accounts on your site
along with options to the right to delete the POP and change your password for
that pop.
Password Protection
This is also
another feature that can be accomplished in the CP by clicking the Password
Protection link in the left menu.
1. You will then be taken
to your main web dir of your site with a listing of the folders in
it.
2. Click the
link to the folder you wish to pprotect or click the folder itself to open that
folder and navigate to a dir under it.
3. To protect
the dir once you have clicked the link of that dir , click the lock icon and
give your area a name in the box labeled "Prtected Resource
Name".
4. Next scroll
down to the bottom of that page, there you will find input boxes to enter the
usernames and passwords
of users you wish to have
access to that dir.
Or to password
protect via telnet:
If your home
directory is yourlogin, create a file named .htaccess in your web directory that
contains the following:
AuthUserFile
/home/yourlogin/yourdirectory/.htpasswd
AuthName Secure
AuthType
basic
require
valid-user
Then in your
home directory, type htpasswd -c /home/yourlogin/yourdirectory/.htpasswd
pumpkin.
You will be prompted to enter a password and verify
it.
This will enable
you to secure the directory so that only user pumpkin can enter this
directory.
To add
additional id/password pairs to the file, leave off the -c, which means 'create
a new file'. For example, htpasswd .htpasswd linus. You may well want any of the
user/password combinations you created in your .htpasswd file to allow
access.
Note that
you want to store the .htpasswd file in your home directory so it is hidden from
others. The one drawback to putting your .htpasswd file in your home directory
is that you will have to slightly lower the security of your home directory. Go
to /home (cd /home/yourlogin) and type chmod +x yourlogin. The WWW server needs
execute permission on to read the .htpasswd file.
File Manager
Included with
your site is a script that allows you to edit your files and create password
protected dirs thru your browser. This script is installed and ready for use
simply by clicking the "File Manager" link in the left
menu.
Click on the
folder to navigate through that dir, click a file to edit,delete, rename, or
modify it.