I am trying to have Apache follow a symlink to a raid array server that will contain some large data files. I have tried modifying httpd.conf to have an entry like this
Options FollowSymLinks AllowOverride all Order allow,deny Allow from all
to have Apache follow any sym link in the Sites folder.
I keep getting an error return that seems to indicate I don't have any permissions to access the files. The error is: Forbidden
You don't have permission to access /~imagine/imageLibraryTest/videoClips/imageLibraryVideos/imageLibraryVideos/Data13/0002RT-1.mov on this server.
the sys link file is the last "imageLibraryVideos" in the line with the Data13 being the sub dir on the server containing the file.
The 0002RT-1.mov file hase these permissions: -rwxrwxrwx 1 imagine staff 1138757 Sep 15 17:01 0002RT-1.mov and is in this path: cd /Volumes/ImagineProducts-1/Users/imagine/Sites/imageLibraryVideos/Data13
the link points to: lrwxr-xr-x 1 imagine staff 65 Sep 15 16:40 imageLibraryVideos -> /Volumes/ImagineProducts-1/Users/imagine/Sites/imageLibraryVideos
-
Look in the enclosing directories. They need to be at least mode 711. (
drwx--x--x)Also, look in
/var/log/apache2/error_log(Or whatever the concatenation ofServerRootandErrorLogis from thehttpd.conf) for a possibly more-detailed error message.Finally, ensure you restart apache after messing with
httpd.conf.From Pi -
This is a permissions problem where the user that your web server is running under does not have read and/or execute permissions to the necessary directories in the symbolic link path. The quick and easy way to check is to
su - web-user(whereweb-useris the user account that the web server is running under) and then try to cd into the path and view the file. When you come across a directory that you don't have permission to enter, you'll have to change the permissions and/or ownership to make it accessible by the web server user account.From Michael Ridley -
Thanks,
I've set the permissions to all the enclosing directories to 755
but Apache cstill cannot access the file. -
You should also look at bind mounts rather than symlinks - that would allow you to remount a given path at a new point. The following is an example:
mount --rbind /path/to/current/location/somewhere/else /new/mount/pointYou can also edit your
fstabto do this at boot:/path/to/original /new/path bind defaults,bind 0 0From warren
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