Viewing Articles Tagged With: web-servers
If you run a Windows Server which takes advantage of the built in DNS Server, you have a nice graphical interface for viewing and managing your DNS records. However, the vast majority of the time you probably just look at these records as opposed to updating them.
Yesterday we showed you how to setup Perl on your IIS6 box, and today we'll show you how to get it up and running on Windows Server 2008 systems running IIS7.
Perl is a very popular scripting language which is used to develop a wide variety of tools, and today we'll show you how to setup IIS 6 on Windows Server 2003 to serve up Perl scripts.
Yesterday we showed you how to install PHP on IIS for Windows Server 2003, and today we'll walk through the same process for Windows Server 2008, which is similar but a little different.
When it comes to gathering statistics on web sites, you can never have enough. While one of the most popular method for tracking statistics is through services such as Google Analytics, log file analysis remains a reliable way to track your visitors as they are immune to script blockers.
If you've got a web application that uploads files to the server through a PHP script, you might have noticed that by default you can't upload terribly large files. Here's how to change it.
Have you ever needed to quickly share a folder with another machine?
