I need to know in which folder is located the address of my joomla site. In the address bar it shows http://www.gybr.com.br/index.php/videos , so where is this page??
The videos page would not be located in any particular folder, but is built from a record in the database. You should be able to go to the root of your website hosting files and see the index.php file there, but you won't find any of the pages in the folders, because they don't exist as files. Each are referenced in the database and built accordingly. Joomla then uses a routing class to parse that url and connect it to the appropriate database record.
You would need to log in to the administration side of Joomla and see what menu item type the videos page has to determine what component generates the page. This could help you find the correct file if you are trying to change something, but in the end, it will have little relation to the path you are seeing in the url.
To find out the folder, adding the following PHP code to somewhere in your site should do the trick (index.php is probably your best bet):
<?php
if (defined('JPATH_BASE')) {
echo JPATH_BASE;
}
else {
echo getcwd();
}
?>
Related
We are uploading a pre built static site to gh pages using the .nojekyll file in the root folder. However if we use pretty URLs without the .html extension then all of our links present the user with a file open/save as dialog because the browser thinks it's file octet stream.
As we are not using Jekyll do we need to have a _config.yml ? Either way with or without cant get pretty urls to work.
I created a static website using Hugo and I don't know how to host it on github. The documentation on their website didn't help me.
After finishing my website, I created the public folder which contains in theory all the files needed for the website (whith this command : hudo -t hyde-hyde). When I open index.html with chrome I only see the content of my website without the theme. Is it normal ?
Then I moved all the files within the public folder into my gihub repo username.github.io/ , but I can't see any result (I can only see my previous commit which is a simple Hello World).
How should I porceed to generate correctly my website and host it on github ? Thanks.
How to create with HUGO
If you have a problem while creating your site, check this tutorial.
How to Host HUGO website on GitHub (Pages)
Check this LINK where it shows you step by step all the procedures to host HUGO on GitHub, on both User/Organization Pages and on Project Pages.
Check list:
When I open index.html with chrome I only see the content of my website without the theme. Is it normal ?
I know it might seem a little too obvious, but check the spelling. Sometimes you spend hours trying to find the error and it's just a typo, this case in the theme you wanted to.
Have you tried another browser? It might not be the case, but checking it will get you out of doubt, also remember to delete the cache just in case.
Then I moved all the files within the public folder into my gihub repo username.github.io/ , but I can't see any result (I can only see my previous commit which is a simple Hello World).
Do you have a User/Organization Page (syntax: username.github.io) or a Project Page (syntax: username.github.io/project)?
UPDATE 1: Follow the instructions on this video for hosting on GitHub if unclear.
Could you add a link to your repo? Thanks.
I am using Joomla for my website when I search in google for SAPBuddy I always get search result.
Can some one help me I tried to add my side in Google webmaster, but the result is same.
sapbuddy.com/index.php/component/users/?view=reset
Check you've followed these steps.
Create a sitemap. You can use an online tool for this, or a Joomla extension
If you used an online tool to create your sitemap, upload the site the xml file to your server. If you're using an extension, follow their direction. When finished, you should be able to open it with your web browser, e.g. www.domain.com/sitemap.xml . Check if the indexed pages looke good and copy this URL
In webmaster tooks, add your domain then register this sitemap, pasting in your URL
After a short period, check back on Webmaster tools. It will show which pages have been indexed and if there were any errors.
Good luck!
We have a multisite SiteCore setup with 2 sites within the same .Net solution.
This works by setting the rootPath property on a Site Definition in web.config to limit the site to part of the SiteCore folder structure.
This works well apart from when pages are created with the same name as in the other site then it's serving content from the other site! We have inherited a fair bit of custom code in this solution form the other site so this may be the cause but dont know what Im looking for ...
Thanks
How are you referencing the sites? Do they each have their own host name? Do you have the "hostName" property set for the site node in the Site Defintion?
I will assume that you are not referring to them this way and instead, the sites are using the "virtualFolder" property. If both sites have the same default value of "/" for virtualFolder, attempting to get to either site will result in Sitecore rendering the first site that it matches on, which would be the site listed first.
Try putting the actual site name for "virtualFolder" and "physicalFolder" (e.g. "Site1" and "Site2", respectively). Then you can address your sites as http://yourserver.com/Site1 and http://yourserver.com/Site2. The "virtualFolder" will match first and render the correct site.
See Configuring Sites in the web.config File on SDN for additional information.
Hope this helps.
It turns out this is happening in this case because of a System alias that is redirecting for a subset of pages
I'm using fossil to manage some home projects and keeping notes in the wiki. After running like this for a few months, I'd like to at least try to use embedded documentation; mainly so as to be able easily to go back to previous versions.
I've studied the website page about managing project documentation which confirms that this is a technique I want to follow up, but I can't make out how to do it.
I've cut-and-pasted one of my wiki pages and added it to my fossil repo, but I can't work out where it should go in the directory structure to be accessible as described on the above page.
I've tried in a few places none of which worked. The document is currently %fossil-root%\doc\foo.wiki, (I'm on Windows), where %fossil-root% is the directory holding _ _FOSSIL__ (slighly mangled filename because of markdown), but having started a server with fossil ui, when I point my browser at http://localhost:8080/doc/foo.wiki, fossil presents me with a nicely formatted page saying it can't find index.html. I created /doc/index.html to see what would happen, but it made no difference.
Please can someone help me out, and/or point me to an example repository containing embedded documentation or another "how-to" document.
If your document is located in %fossil-root%\doc\foo.wiki, you can access it at the following URL:
http://localhost:8080/doc/trunk/doc/foo.wiki
This URL breaks down as follows:
http://localhost:8080 is the root URL to access Fossil when you run fossil ui
/doc signals that you want to access embedded documentation
/trunk indicates the checkin containing the documentation you wish to access
/doc/foo.wiki is the path of the document inside the repository
Instead of trunk, you can also specify a tag, or a branch name, or even a hexadecimal checkin identifier.
In the URL you were using, http://localhost:8080/doc/foo.wiki, foo.wiki is interpreted as the checkin name, and no document path is specified, which logically means Fossil won't find anything.
As for an example repository containing embedded documentation, the homepage of the Fossil website itself is a prime example:
https://www.fossil-scm.org/index.html/doc/trunk/www/index.wiki
where
https://www.fossil-scm.org/index.html is Fossil's root URL
/doc indicates a request for embedded documentation
/trunk indicates we want to fetch files from the trunk
/www/ is the path to the requested file inside the repository
index.wiki is the name of the file inside the repository.
So, in the 'trunk' branch of the repository, the file www/index.wiki contains the home page of the Fossil website.
You simply need to put the documentation under the %fossil-root%\www\ directory (or any other directory under version control) in your repository and then you can, for example, add the following line to your header's mainmenu section to link to it:
html "<a href='$home/doc/trunk/www/foo.wiki'>Documentation</a>\n"
As I said, it can be any directory under version control. To test this, pick any file in the repository, let's say a README file at the top level, and go to http://localhost:8080/doc/trunk/README. You should see the README file load up in your browser in a raw text format. By putting wiki or html files under a particular directory such as www you make it easy to organize the files that you specifically want rendered as documentation, which makes it easier to link to them.
http://www.fossil-scm.org/index.html/doc/trunk/www/embeddeddoc.wiki
After fossil 1.33, just prepare your document in the repository.
If the wiki file is put in
/doc/index.wiki
And use web browser to setup -> Admin -> Configuration.
There is a "Index Page" field, fill in your main index.html.
For example:
/doc/trunk/doc/index.wiki
Or if you just want the released version:
/doc/<version>/doc/index.wiki