Solutions tagged with ‘configure’:
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When you configure your site, the 'site url' should be "http://www.mysite.co.uk"
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When you configure your site, public_html should be your document root. this way when you go to assign a page, you don't even see the public_html folder, you just see it's contents. ...
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1) you will need to download the site/files from the ftp server each time *you* want to make some (non-cushy) changes -- since cushy uploads files directly, the latest version of any given ...
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This issue is now resolved. the giant amount of files in the root directory was giving cushy some grief. for the future, you (and/or your designer) may like to create an 'uploads' directory ...
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Vicky, first you'll have to connect via ftp manually (with an ftp app), and create a new "uploads" folder (you can call it whatever you like, really). then, in your cushy control panel, go to ...
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I notice that upon connection, the server prompts cushy for the password which it delivers, then stalls for several minutes without confirming the user/pass were actually correct. i've seen it ...
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The problem *usually* occurs due to a problem with the "site url" field (the first field under the configure section for any site). remember that this site url is prepended to each image tag ...
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Go into your site's "configure" section and fix the path field -- cushy is looking for the folder /var/www/html, which does not actually exist. simon
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It looks like you have some images linking to the root directory (/public_html) and some located inside the images folder (/public_html/images). you set the file uploads path (which is for ...
Problems tagged with ‘configure’: