Cold Fusion over a home network?
6 Message(s) by 3 Author(s) originally posted in server admin
| From: Ian Skinner |
Date: Thursday, September 20, 2007
|
First thing I'd do is try a simple static
HTML page. If you can
access this page, but not a Cold Fusion page then you need to look at the
application server . If you can not even access a straight HTML page
then you need to look at the
network and|or
client settings.
| From: Ian Skinner |
Date: Thursday, September 20, 2007
|
"Tried static already, and no go. Which network/client settings'd
you suggest, and where do I find them? And have I got the
URL format
correct:
http://[ip address here]:8500"
That should be correct, but it does assume a correctly running network.
Unfortunately I can think of several possible culprits. Firewalls on
one or both
machine s, something in the network portal connecting the
machines,
browser settings, hosts
file entries.
Hopefully somebody more knowledgeable in getting computers to
talk to
each other can chime in.
I just realized that my static test may not have been the test I thought
it was. Since you are using the
ColdFusion built in web server it would've to
serve the static pages as well. I have never really used the
built-in web
server. Free
version s of
IIS ,
Apache and others are easy to get and
install I have always used one of these so that the web server is
separate from the application server.
Win XP has a
developer version of IIS but it isn't installed by
default. One needs the installation media to install it after the fact.
Just go into the Control Panel -> Add|Remove Programs -> Add|Remove
Windows Components and add it. It is limited to one running
virtual
host at a time. But otherwise it is a useful web server for
development .
You will have to reconfigure ColdFusion to use the IIS web server if you go this
route.
| From: vvsvvs |
Date: Thursday, September 20, 2007
|
I recently read that in addition to Localhost, the development version of ColdFusion
will now allow access via 2 client machines. I am running MX7 using the built
in webserver, and'd like to be able to test on a second machine. Both
machines are hooked up to the internet via a
DSL router and have XP Pro.
I thought it'd be as easy as just putting the IP address of the machine
with ColdFusion installed on it (w/:8500 appended) into a browser on the second
machine, but when I do so, I get "internet explorer cannot
display the web
page". I figure there must be some little thing I'm missing somewhere --
firewall settings? (I use the Windows XP Pro builtin) file sharing settings?
preferences in IE somewhere?
Any help'd be most appreciated!
| From: vvsvvs |
Date: Thursday, September 20, 2007
|
Tried static already, and no go. Which network/client settings'd you
suggest, and where do I find them? And have I got the URL format correct:
http://[ip address here]:8500
I swear I did it this way a few years ago, and it'd work until I loaded a
page on the primary machine's browser, after which I'd get the
message that the
dev version only supports calls from one ip address.
| From: vvsvvs |
Date: Friday, September 21, 2007
|
After dealing with PWS for all those years, I was happy to abandon it and use
the internal webserver instead; one less thing to install after each rebuild is
a good thing in my book. But maybe I'll have to try IIS if I can not figure
this out. Thanks Ian for the idea.
Still
open to specific suggestions as to what browser or network settings I
should double-check from any knowledgable parties'd be appreciated! I may
still have the same problem even with IIS...
| From: ksmith |
Date: Monday, October 01, 2007
|
Can you successfully
ping each machine from the other? Can you share a
folder
and open it on the other machine? If you can, it then appears to be a firewall
or network issue. If not it looks like a network issue. Does running
ipconfig
give you the IP you expect?
Next Message: Enable Performance Monitoring won't stay checked inCF8
Blogs related to Cold Fusion over a home network?
I have a cold fusion reactor I'd like to sell this guy
So let me get this right. Peter thinks a bunch of wireless devices will be communicating via a center server. Tell me this isn't the
Network Computer. Go ahead. Do it, punk. Tell me this isn't the idea I came up with
over ten years ago.
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