https://www.zerostopbits.com/how-to-create-a-virtualhost-in-apache-2-2-on-centos-6-7/
How to Create a VirtualHost in Apache 2.2 on CentOS 6.7
1. Confirm Apache 2.2 is correctly installed and running
Type in the following command to verify your Apache version:
httpd -v
Output should look like:
Server version: Apache/2.2.15 (Unix)
Server built: Aug 24 2015 17:52:49
Now let’s confirm Apache is running:
service httpd status
Output should look like:
httpd (pid 26102) is running...
Perfect!
2. Configure VirtualHost container
Apache stores the configuration files not
directly related to the core in “/etc/httpd/conf.d”. Any time you
create a VirtualHost, you’ll want to make sure you put it in this
directory. It’s not a requirement, but it keeps your system looking nice
and tidy.
First, we need to configure the httpd.conf file for VirtualHost’s.
nano /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
Scroll to the bottom of the configuration file (press and hold CTRL-V) and add the following line:
NameVirtualHost *:80
Now type CTRL-O to save, and CTRL-X to exit
Next, let’s create the actual VirtualHost file
nano /etc/httpd/conf.d/yourdomain.com.conf
You’re now going to have to copy/paste the following into that file. (NOTE: MAKE SURE YOU CHANGE YOURDOMAIN.COM TO YOUR ACTUAL DOMAIN!!)
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerAdmin webmaster@yourdomain.com
DocumentRoot /var/www/virtual/yourdomain.com/public_html
ServerName www.yourdomain.com
ServerAlias yourdomain.com
ErrorLog /var/www/virtual/yourdomain.com/logs/error_log
CustomLog /var/www/virtual/yourdomain.com/logs/access_log combined
<Directory "/var/www/virtual/yourdomain.com">
Options -Indexes FollowSymLinks
AllowOverride All
Order allow,deny
Allow from all
</Directory>
</VirtualHost>
Type CTRL-O to save, and CTRL-X to close the file.
At this point, I need to re-iterate that
this guide is based on the assumption you followed my previous guide. If
you simply copy/paste everything, you probably won’t have a working web
server.
Create the DocumentRoot and Log Directory we specified in the VirtualHost configuration file:
mkdir -p /var/www/virtual/yourdomain.com/public_html
mkdir -p /var/www/virtual/yourdomain.com/logs
chown -R apache:apache /var/www/virtual/
chmod -R 755 /var/www/virtual/
3. Test VirtualHost and confirm everything is working
Now, let’s test out your VirtualHost, and make sure everything is working correctly.
Move into your VirtualHost’s DocumentRoot. This is where you’ll store all of your web content:
cd /var/www/virtual/yourdomain.com/public_html
Create an index file so we can test functionality:
nano index.html
Copy and paste the following into the file:
<h3>Hello World!</h3>
Type CTRL-O to save, and CTRL-X to close the file.
Now restart Apache:
service httpd restart
Should produce the following output:
Stopping httpd: [ OK ]
Starting httpd: [ OK ]
If you’ve already updated DNS at your
registrar and pointed yourdomain.com to your server’s IP address, you
should now be able to open up a browser, and type in the URL
yourdomain.com. It should load up the “Hello World!” index file that we
created.
If you haven’t updated DNS yet, but want to check if everything is working, we can do the following:
http://your-server-ip
That about wrap this tutorial up! Thanks for reading, hopefully this helps you get Apache 2.2 and VirtualHosts up and running.
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