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Setting
up a Web Server - The Most Important Step
to Hosting your Website from Home |
by:
Pedro
Garcia |
You
might be trying to decide whether you want
to host your website yourself rather than
pay a hosting company. Maybe you just want
to learn how it is done, or you want to
save some money by doing it yourself. In
this article I'll discuss the most important
part of hosting your website from home,
the web server.
The word "server" sounds scary and because
of this many people think only a professional
hosting company can host a website. This
is not true. A server is nothing more than
software that runs in the background listening
to requests from "clients." The client in
our case is an internet browser, like Internet
Explorer.
How do you get a web server? Most Windows
operating sytems come with a web server
that just needs to be installed. There are
also web servers than can be downloaded
for free, like Apache. I'm not going to
go over how to do this. In this article
I'll discuss the concepts and what's needed
to get your web server up and running and
serving your site to the public after it's
been installed. Every web server is different
but the concepts are the same. By
going over the general concepts that are
true for any web server, you'll know what
to look for regardless of the software you
are using.
Like I mentioned before, a server is just
software that runs in the background. A
web server is a server that listens to requests
from internet browsers for a specific page,
finds that page in the computer it is running
on and then sends it to the browser that
requested it. Keeping this in mind, can
you believe there are actually just two
things you need to do to have your web server
configured?
1) Tell your web server where to find your
web site. Your website probably consists
of multiple pages. You need to tell the
web server the path of the folder where
you keep
your pages. For example, when someone types
www.yourdomain.com/main.html, the server
will look in the folder where all your pages
live, and look for file main.html.
2) Tell your web server about your default
page. This is the page that is displayed
when someone types www.yourdomain.com in
their browser without specifying a page.
The web server already has some default
page names like "index.html" so if you have
a page with this name
it will be displayed by default when no
document is specified in the request. You
may also add some more default file names
to your web server. If you don't want to
name your file "index.html" you can tell
your web server that your default page's
name is "mainpage.htm."
This is basically all there is to configuring
your web server. Actually, there is more,
but these two steps will allow your web
server to start serving your website. Of
course, there is also more to hosting your
website from home, like getting a domain
name, dealing with your router if you have
one, but these topics are beyond the scope
of this article. I hope I've convinced you
of how easy it is to set up a web server,
which happens to be the most important step
to hosting your website from home.
About the author:
For detailed information on how to host
your website from home please visit "webhosting
steps.com">Setting up a Web Server"
where you can learn all the aspects of running
your own web server and getting your own
domain name.
Circulated by Bandoni
Media
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