From: "Matt Paddock" <mapdock@pair.com>
Is it enough to build content and do development on my home system and upload to my Pair site(s), or do I really need to be accessing and developing through an installed copy of Zope on Pair?
There are scripts somewhere on the net that allows you to do this. Of course, you lose all possibility of dynamic content as static HTML pages are generated, but for many sites that isn't a problem. You do lose a lot of the best things about Zope, though...
If the latter is true, how can I best configure Zope to be accessible through my Pair account. Reading WEBSERVERS.txt I actually was able to fire up pcgi and log into the Zope in- terface through http://my.web.address.com:8080/manage. So, if I can do that, does it mean I'm all set and ready to be building my site with Zope on Pair?
Basically, yes. Of course it would be better if you could run it on port 80 instead. There are two ways of doing this: If you have not only a web address of your own, but an IP-address of your own, you can just start the Zope-server with port 80 instead of 8080 in the startup script. More likely though, you share ip-adresses, and Pair's apache are using virtual hosting to forward your adress to your site. In that case, you need to agree on a port to use with Pair (8080 seems to be fine since it worked) and they need to set up their apache server to point to your Zope server, via proxypass. Beware though, many providers may not been keen on you running your own servers. Of course, if they had something between the ears they would already bee providing you with a Zope server, but they don't, do they? :-)