We are happy to announce that Vesta is back under active development as of 25 February 2024. We are working on v1 candidate and expect to engage more with the community over the coming months. We are committed to open source, and we encourage contributors to help us build the future of Vesta.
Can I see a html_public without domain?
Can I see a html_public without domain?
Hi, can i a html_public without domain.com, for TEMP time?
I need to enter and see the documents but i dont know to have it...
/user/domain/public_html/ not works...
Thanks and sorry for my english.
I need to enter and see the documents but i dont know to have it...
/user/domain/public_html/ not works...
Thanks and sorry for my english.
Re: Can I see a html_public without domain?
what do you mean? :D
theres a default domain created under admin account i believe.
or if you want to test files w.o domain not yet pointing to your name server, you can try alias.
try alias :
How to configure temporary links for new domains
If you are running hosting company most likely you would want to provide your customers temporary link to access their site before actuall domain propagation. This is especially useful when customer is moving site from another host and want to check if everything works as expected.
For instance, you have 2 IP addresses on a server, 192.168.3.57 and 192.168.3.58. Let's say your site is tophost.ltd. Then you need to set up 2 wildcards for each ip address. Go to the DNS menu. Click on a "add record" under the tophost.ltd domain and enter following
Record: *.alpha
Type: A
IP: 192.168.3.57
Press Add button and add second record
Record: *.beta
Type: A
IP: 192.168.3.58
The DNS part is complete. Let's assign those domains to corresponding ip addresses. Go to the IP menu. Select 192.168.3.57. Click on edit button opposite and add alpha.tophost.ltd in the "Assigned Domain" text field. Save and repeat accordingly for the 192.168.3.58 address and beta.tophost.ltd domain.
Now when your user add new domain it will automatically get tophost alias. If he added bbc.com on a 192.168.3.57 then he will be able to see his domain by opening http://bbc-com.alpha.tophost.ltd As you can see dots in original domain has been replaced with
or
why not just get free domain like .tk .cf
theres a default domain created under admin account i believe.
or if you want to test files w.o domain not yet pointing to your name server, you can try alias.
try alias :
How to configure temporary links for new domains
If you are running hosting company most likely you would want to provide your customers temporary link to access their site before actuall domain propagation. This is especially useful when customer is moving site from another host and want to check if everything works as expected.
For instance, you have 2 IP addresses on a server, 192.168.3.57 and 192.168.3.58. Let's say your site is tophost.ltd. Then you need to set up 2 wildcards for each ip address. Go to the DNS menu. Click on a "add record" under the tophost.ltd domain and enter following
Record: *.alpha
Type: A
IP: 192.168.3.57
Press Add button and add second record
Record: *.beta
Type: A
IP: 192.168.3.58
The DNS part is complete. Let's assign those domains to corresponding ip addresses. Go to the IP menu. Select 192.168.3.57. Click on edit button opposite and add alpha.tophost.ltd in the "Assigned Domain" text field. Save and repeat accordingly for the 192.168.3.58 address and beta.tophost.ltd domain.
Now when your user add new domain it will automatically get tophost alias. If he added bbc.com on a 192.168.3.57 then he will be able to see his domain by opening http://bbc-com.alpha.tophost.ltd As you can see dots in original domain has been replaced with
or
why not just get free domain like .tk .cf
Re: Can I see a html_public without domain?
I dont understand :S
But.. i have only 1 ip in the server.
When I ADD WEB, the first web that I add, is the web that I can acces with the IP URL.
Thanks :S im noooob...
But.. i have only 1 ip in the server.
When I ADD WEB, the first web that I add, is the web that I can acces with the IP URL.
Thanks :S im noooob...