Chapter 4. Administration — Configuration, Modules, and Reporting
WHAT YOU WILL LEARN IN THIS CHAPTER:
Configuring your site's title, e-mail address, and slogan
Modifying the Page not found (404) and Access denied (403) error messages
Adjusting the date/time formats and default server time
Enabling Clean URLs
Reviewing and adding text formats
Setting your public and private file system preferences
Maintenance mode (taking your site temporarily offline)
In the previous chapter you configured your new website in a rapid-fire fashion making the rounds to the most common administrative functions. Now it is time to get down and dirty exploring these administrative areas in depth over the next four chapters. In this chapter you will explore the foundation settings of your website that should be configured before you put your site into production to avoid any potential issues down the road. Although Drupal's defaults are sane, reviewing and understanding them will help you create a top notch website.
For example, your site's name is used when people bookmark your website or view your RSS feeds. If you decide to change the name later, those who have already bookmarked your website will not receive the update.
Drupal's administration is separated into six main sections: Content, Appearance, People, Structure, Configuration, Modules, and Reports. Additional modules you install will expand these sections with more settings. The following four chapters dissect each of these areas helping you to understand ...
Get Beginning Drupal® now with the O’Reilly learning platform.
O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.