Web Hosting
You don’t need to be an experienced webmaster to host your own home page, website, or Web 2.0 application with Mac OS X Server. With its intuitive administrative interface, you can immediately start...
View ArticleOptimizing an Xserve for Web Hosting
A single Xserve is ideally suited for smaller scale Web hosting, where the task is to host a handful of moderate-traffic sites. (With a fleet of Xserves, you could host an eBay or an Apple.com, but...
View ArticleWeb Services With WebObjects
Apple’s WebObjects is a comprehensive suite of tools and frameworks for quickly developing Java server applications. The release of WebObjects 5.2 allows developers to add standards-based web services...
View ArticleSetting up an OS X development server
Okay, so this was very much a case of fumbling around in the dark until stuff worked, lot’s of Googling and breaking stuff. The end result is a dev server on OS X that is running Textpattern with clean...
View ArticleInstalling Movable Type on Tiger
One of the biggest phenomenons to hit the Internet in the past few years has been the personal weblog: blog for short. A blog is basically a Web site that allows its owner to post his thoughts, ideas...
View ArticleReview of FreeNAS
FreeNAS, an open source NAS server, can convert a PC into a network-attached storage server. The software, which is based on FreeBSD, Samba, and PHP, includes an operating system that supports various...
View ArticleIntegrating OSX Clients with an OpenLDAP Directory
This is an article by Adam Shand you can view the original article at http://www.spack.org/wiki/AppleOsxIntegrationWithOpenLdap. Where I work is primarily a RedhatLinux shop, with a smattering of...
View ArticleBasic Command Line Utilities, Tips, & Commands
Many Mac users avoid the command line altogether, a reasonable amount probably don’t even know it exists. For the curious out there, here are some basic and essential commands and functionalities to...
View ArticleProtection for sensitive files when using Apache on an HFS+ volume
Security Update 2004-12-02 makes changes to the httpd.conf file. After a successful update, the Apache configuration file will deny access to the following files: */..namedfork/data */..namedfork/rsrc...
View ArticleNetwork Monitoring – Automated Reboot System
Bring State of the Art Network Monitoring in house – save money, offer more network monitoring options and stay ahead of your servers. Monitor the services you need to monitor – use login’s to verify...
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