At 10:12 AM 02/10/2000 +0900, Brian Takashi Hooper wrote:
Hi there James -
I have done my share of struggling with this kind of configuration... here's a few ideas to try:
On Wed, 09 Feb 2000 12:35:14 -0500 "James W. Howe" <jwh@allencreek.com> wrote:
I'm trying to get my Zope installation to work with IIS. I've read various items from the mailing lists and I've read the how-to's and I still can't get it to work correctly. The closest I've come is getting the Zope welcome screen. I've never been able to see any contents of my site.
I think I've followed the process correctly. [...]
5. I've modified by access file to just be of the following format:
<domain>/<userid>:
The domain is uppercase and the userid is how it was defined in the user manager. I don't believe it should be necessary to change the access file. The idea is to get Zope to handle the authentication, not IIS. 6. I've set the permissions on the zope.pcgi file to disable anonymous but activated basic and challenge/response. Actually, it should be the opposite, I think. Enable anonymous access. Disable both basic and challenge/response.
I can't seem to get Zope to do authentication. If I disable basic and challenge/response and enable anonymous, IIS wants me to set a default user for anonymous. I no longer get any authentication dialog and all I can see is Zope's opening screen. I can't see the management interface at all (not surprising since I didn't really authenticate).
It is (in my experience) also necessary to turn off custom error pages for 404 errors.
I have done that. James Howe internet: mailto:jwh@allencreek.com Allen Creek Software, Inc. pgpkey: http://ic.net/~jwh/pgpkey.html Ann Arbor, MI 48103