Topic awaiting preservation: Hosting my own site (Page 1 of 1) |
|
---|---|
Paranoid (IV) Inmate From: The Dark Side of the Moon |
posted 08-16-2003 19:26
So I have a crazy idea, why not host my own site. Problem is that I am unsure of what it takes to do such a thing. Anyone know the best way to go about hosting your own site? |
Maniac (V) Mad Scientist with Finglongers From: Cell 53, East Wing |
posted 08-16-2003 19:31
The Jackal: If you mean on your won computer: |
Maniac (V) Mad Scientist From: :morF |
posted 08-16-2003 19:34
Yeah except (just ot ruin his news) he's gone out and bought himself a dedicated web-server (I think he's planning on opening his own hosting company...mind you if I could get the kind of net connection that he has I'd probably do that too) |
Paranoid (IV) Inmate From: The Dark Side of the Moon |
posted 08-16-2003 21:13
I take then that my ISP would be the one to give me the IP address for my computer. How do I keep people from accessing other sections of my computer once it is set up? |
Paranoid (IV) Inmate From: everywhere |
posted 08-16-2003 21:26
Apache will do that for you (you specify a directory on your hard drive as the root of the server), but you'll want to have a firewall etc., just as anyone with an always-on connection would. |
Paranoid (IV) Inmate From: The Dark Side of the Moon |
posted 08-16-2003 22:35
What brand of firewall would ya reccomend? I use Zone Alarm for my personal computer. Would this work or do I need something more durable? |
Bipolar (III) Inmate From: Mpls, MN |
posted 08-16-2003 23:54
Well I run a webserver and ftp server on aDSL (256) seems just fine for now, but I only use it for personal and limited client access, and hosting sigs and images for weboards. If I ever finish my ideal for my texturehunter.com stock photo site. I may decide to move to a comercial host or go with biz class cable. |
Paranoid (IV) Inmate From: Czech Republic via Bristol UK |
posted 08-17-2003 00:10
Ok first thing to do before even thinking about hosting from your home is: |
Paranoid (IV) Inmate From: The Dark Side of the Moon |
posted 08-17-2003 08:59
What about Perl and email? Do I need to buy an email client? |
Paranoid (IV) Inmate From: Czech Republic via Bristol UK |
posted 08-17-2003 09:36
as for perl it can be installed again its all dependant on what server software platform you are going to be using |
Paranoid (IV) Inmate From: The Dark Side of the Moon |
posted 08-17-2003 21:30
Thanks Tom. I am planning on using NT as my platform because I know nothing about linux or unix. I have a cable modem running to my place and three PC's networked together. None of them are running through the server at the time. When I am finished all three boxes will run through the NT server and the server will be where the web page is hosted. That is of course if my ISP even allows me to host my own site. |
Nervous Wreck (II) Inmate From: |
posted 08-18-2003 03:06
Not that I have really much new to add, but I too have a cable modem & router & other computers kind of setup. Mine is a linksys that has some built in protection. I set the port forwarding very restricted (ports 80 and 21) to my web server (no email into it!) I use Apache (of course!!) and Cerbius FTP. Since it's really set up for fairly limited use I've not gone the route of registering a name. My ISP gives me a small homepage area which I use (through javascript) to redirect people to my computer and which ever page I want them to see -- I once setup apache to use such that if someone used a particular port they got a particular page -- worked ok till I got to work and tried it --- they limited port access :-( I even wrote a program the goes to my isp and downloads a file and then using that information automatically goes to my home computer and downloads a file! |
Paranoid (IV) Inmate From: Milwaukee |
posted 08-18-2003 04:17
As long as we're on the topic, can anyone think of a simple Linux command or program (I know, in Linux they're sort of the same) that finds out what my external IP is? I've got a Linux box behind a router, and it would be handy if I could get it to find out its own external IP every time my DHCP lease expires with the cable company. (My eventual plan is to link to items on the Linux box from my main web page, and have the Linux box update the links on its own as the address changes. Everything except finding out the IP address is simple enough using a shell script as a cron job.) |
Nervous Wreck (II) Inmate From: |
posted 08-18-2003 04:58
RE: IP |
Paranoid (IV) Mad Scientist with Finglongers From: Germany |
posted 08-18-2003 08:57
PT: Get a dyndsl account and client, and you'll have an (nearly always up to date) domain for your box... like perfectThunderbox@dyndsl.com ... there are any number of free dns services for this around. |
Paranoid (IV) Inmate From: Rouen, France |
posted 08-18-2003 13:37
No-IP can provide you a domain name for your computer, for example http://yourdomain.no-ip.com (several possibilities) with redirects or e-mail services. Once you registered (for free) and set up your account online, you just have to run a small application, it will make people accessing your domain go on your IP. Then you just have to set up Apache... |
Maniac (V) Mad Scientist with Finglongers From: Cell 53, East Wing |
posted 08-18-2003 14:13
Or use: |
Paranoid (IV) Inmate From: The Dark Side of the Moon |
posted 08-19-2003 21:41
Well, after contacting my ISP and finding out how much it will cost to have a business account (which I must have for a static IP and to host a web site), it is just cheaper to have it hosted somewhere else. The difference between the two (what I pay for cable modem access and a business account) comes out about $300 a year, and I can easily get my site hosted elsewhere for that kinda cash. In this case, it just is not cost effective to do it myself. Thanks for all the help guys. |