by dabempire | Feb 24, 2011 | FTP, Knowledgebase
Log into your account Control Panel (mydomain.com/cpanel) and go to the File Manager, and then the “WWW” or “public_html” folder. Identify the file that you want to change permission by clicking on the file/directory link. After selecting the link the right menu will update itself and show you a list of things you can do to the file/directory. Select “Change Permissions”. There should be three groups. Each group should have checkboxes for the permission types. Definitions: (User=Owner, Group=Group, World=Other/Public) 1. set plain html pages to rw- for the user, no permission for the group, and r–for world (default) 2. set scripts to rwx for the user, r-x for the group, and r-x for world 3. set data/config files to rw- for the user, no permission for the group, and rw- for world Select “Change” to...
by dabempire | Feb 24, 2011 | FTP, Knowledgebase
Log into your account and go to the directory where the files are located. Highlight the file or directory that you want to change permission. Locate the “file permission” or “chmod” command on your FTP software software (you may need to refer to the manual or help file) There should be three groups. Each group should have either checkboxes or a selection for the permission type. 1. set pages to rw- for the owner, no permission for the group, and r–for other 2. set scripts to rwx for the owner, no permission for the group, and r-x for other 3. set data/config files to rw- for the owner, no permission for the group, and rw- for...
by dabempire | Feb 24, 2011 | FTP, Knowledgebase
First you’ll need an FTP client. A nice google search will turn up hundreds of programs to use. Once you have downloaded an FTP program, we suggest that you read the documentation in order to become familiar with its. Some examples are: Fetch http://www.dartmouth.edu/pages/softdev/fetch.html WS_FTP http://www.csra.net/junodj/ws_ftp32.htm CuteFTP http://www.cuteftp.com/Cuteftp/ Filezilla http://filezilla.sourceforge.net/ You’ll need to enter the ‘hostname’ of your site (often called a domain name or server, depending on the FTP program). For example, if your site is viewable at ‘www.yourdomain.com’, the hostname would simply be ‘yourdomain.com’. If your domain hasn’t been set up yet you can still upload your site directly to your server hostname or IP address. You should have received those in a welcome email. Next, you’ll probably be prompted for a username and password. These values should have been given to you when you first signed up. If you have any questions as to what they are, please open a support ticket. When you login via ftp, your web root is public_html folder. This is the folder where you need to upload your web site...