Chapter 21. Setting Up a Web Server
In This Chapter
Introduction to Web servers
Quick starting the Apache Web server
Configuring the Apache Web server
Starting and stopping the server
Monitoring server activities
Approximately 50 percent of all Web sites today are powered by the open source Apache Web Server Project (compared to about 31 percent for Microsoft Web servers). In February 2008, Netcraft (http://www.netcraft.com
) reported receiving responses from more than 158 million sites, more than 80,000 of which were running Apache. As registration of Internet domain names continues to grow at an average rate of more than 1 million a month, Apache is getting the lion's share of new Web sites being launched.
The Web has also been a boon to organizations seeking an inexpensive means to publish and distribute information. Using the Fedora distribution that comes with this book or RHEL, you can launch your own Web site using software available from the Apache project. Combine your own domain name, Internet connection, and Fedora or RHEL to create your own presence on the World Wide Web.
This chapter shows you how to install and configure the Apache Web server. Each of the server's configuration files is described and explained in detail. You learn about various options for starting and stopping the server, as well as how to monitor the activity of a Web server. Related security concerns and practices are addressed throughout the chapter in the descriptions and examples, as well as in a special ...
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