There are so many social bookmarking services and communities out there, why do you have to choose one to focus on? Now you don’t have to choose. Mahalo Follow 3 Beta is a Firefox extension that allows you to submit a webpage to multiple social bookmarking sites with a single click, literally.
Continue reading ‘First look at Mahalo Follow 3 Beta: submit to multiple social bookmarking sites simultaneously, literally!’
If you liked this post, please subscribe to my feed. Thanks for visiting!
These are the steps I took to setup multiple hosts for Nginx on a 256MB Slicehost VPS running Gentoo Linux. They should work in other similar Linux environments. YMMV.
I followed this multiple hosts layout intended for a single admin/user, and adapted for Nginx this virtual host permissions setup written for Apache.
Place your user account in the web server (Nginx) group:
sudo usermod -a -G nginx myuser
Logout, login again, check if you are in the “nginx” group by typing:
Create the “public_html” or “htdocs” or whatever directory that will hold all your websites:
mkdir /home/myuser/public_html
Create a directory for your “default” or “catch-all” website:
mkdir /home/myuser/public_html/default
Make sure the “public_html” directory is owned by your user and belongs to the web server group:
sudo chgrp -R nginx /home/myuser/public_html
Make any files and directories created in the future under “public_html” inherit the same ownership and permissions, so you don’t have to set these permissions again:
sudo chmod -R 2750 /home/myuser/public_html
Edit Nginx’s config file:
sudo nano /etc/nginx/nginx.conf
Modify the “server” section to look something like this: (source)
server {
listen 80 default;
server_name _ *;
access_log /var/log/nginx/localhost.access_log main;
error_log /var/log/nginx/localhost.error_log info;
location / {
index index.html,index.htm,index.php;
root /home/myuser/public_html/default;
}
location ~ .*.php$ {
include /etc/nginx/fastcgi_params;
fastcgi_pass 127.0.0.1:1026;
fastcgi_index index.php;
fastcgi_param SCRIPT_FILENAME /home/myuser/public_html/default/$fastcgi_script_name;
}
}
Start Nginx:
sudo /etc/init.d/nginx start
Set Nginx to automatically start on bootup:
And you’re done! If you need to add another website in the future, simply add another “server” section to nginx.conf.