SSI related Unix In (link) support needed


 
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# 1  
Old 07-29-2011
SSI related Unix In (link) support needed

I have multiple web sites and have SSI all working fine! but I want a script that allows me to place a SSI script (or .html) on any web site within my server - One problem, SSI is limited to files located within the file structure - I want to access a file outside, (but still on my server) I found this.

-----------------------------------------------------------------
Including Files Outside Your Document Directory
For security reasons, many servers are configured not to allow you to copy in files located outside your webspace, or DocumentRoot. You can either copy the file to your document directory, or do this little trick:

The unix ln (link) command allows you to create a entry in a directory that points to a real file located elsewhere on the computer. If you have a file called myfile.txt located in /usr/me/mybookfiles/source you could do this:

cd public_html (or wherever your webpage is located)
ln -s /usr/me/mybookfiles/source/myfile.txt myfile.txt

You will now have a directory entry in the document directory and your include should work just fine!
------------------------------------------------------------------------

I think that's exactly what I want to do but am not sure how to write the script/syntax ------ I am used to writing in this format

<!--#include virtual="/somedir/file.txt" -->

BUT since this is a unix script there doesn't look like there are any brackets <> so maybe I don't need no brackets for unix (yes newbie hereSmilie --- if I don't need brackets then this would be where the file is located:

cd public_html/thefileIwant.html (do I place this in the head or body or .... of my html page?)

ln -s /usr/me/mybookfiles/source/myfile.txt myfile.txt
means what? how do I interpret this line.........
In (is the command that tells unix to let me in)
-s /usr/me/mybookfiles/source/therfileIwant.html (if the first line points to the file that I want - then what does this script do and what do I write?)

-
do I need to alter the .htaccess file? or it has nothing to do with it because it's a unix command and not SSI Smilie

so I need help to write these 2 lines because I want to call in a file to appear on any of my domains within my server.

Thanks
JohnSmilie

---------- Post updated at 05:51 PM ---------- Previous update was at 03:22 PM ----------

Well, I can't complain about 52 people having a look, but no response? maybe I need to make it clearer.

I think I have found the script to make me happy, just don't know what to do to implement.

I need to customize this:

cd public_html (or wherever your webpage is located)
ln -s /usr/me/mybookfiles/source/myfile.txt myfile.txt

my guess for the first line:
cd public_html/myfile.html

I don't have a guess for the second line:
ln -s /usr/me/mybookfiles/source/myfile.txt myfile.txt

The file I have sits inside my public_html folder and works with the root domain - I am using SSI and it all works fine! BUT now I just want to be able to call this file to other web sites on the same server, (and SSI cannot do this since it calls a file from within the folder structure not outside) and I want to use a common menu, which is found outside the domain folders and in the root for example, public_html/myfile.html.

Looking forward to getting some help.

Thanks.
# 2  
Old 08-01-2011
The 'ln -s' command creates a symbolic link.

A UFS device is a pile of inodes, some directory, some file, device, named pipe or symbolic link.
https://www.unix.com/man-page/All/2/STAT/
https://www.unix.com/man-page/All/7/symlink/

A directory is just a pile of entry names and inode numbers (for same device as directory inode). If an inode number is in more than one directory, it is hard linked. Every directory /x/y/dir_name has '/x/y/dir_name/.' hard linked to '/x/y/dir_name and every child dir '/x/y/dir_name/*/..' ! Otherwise, directories cannot be hard linked, but other inodes can be mentioned in two directories, and so be hard linked.

Soft link is creating an inode marked as sym-link containing a path, either relative or absolute. The target might not exist. Some commands traverse the soft link, others look at the link itself. You can soft link either a file or a directory, anything, across devices or within. The resouce you want to soft link has to be mounted locally on that host, and then you can soft link it to be references anywhere. I used to have a web supported dir in mu home dir, $HOME/pub_html/ or something such, and to get out, I used symlinks. Same for FTP web access that presented my home dir as root, just 'ln -s $HOME/root /' and navigate through /root/!

Last edited by DGPickett; 08-01-2011 at 02:45 PM..
 
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