Originally Posted by
mc12345678
So it worked and then it stopped working... what changed?
I wish I knew
Originally Posted by
mc12345678
If I remember correctly, though I probably didn't, I thought in one of the posts related to this that php related information as gathered from the admin->version area had been provided. That same information if gathered again may show what "new" options have been disabled or how php has been altered. Otherwise, would look again at the htaccess file to validate that it contains the content expected. Not too long ago on a server not so far far away, had a service modify or as they thought of it "update" the htaccess of a site. Made their things work "wonderfully" but completely disabled everything else about the site... fortunately only went unnoticed a couple of hours for a site that mostly provides information rather than paid for services, but still...
Point being, if identify what changed, can identify what to do next.
I cannot remember making any changes myself to files that would kill access to the Admin portal. After the fix, I added and used the Plugin CKEditor....
The sites, from my limited understanding, appear to work in tandem. Neither site nor admin worked, then both started working when the changes were made to the set-time-zones.php file.
In /my_admin/.htaccess:
PHP Code:
#
# @copyright Copyright 2003-2013 Zen Cart Development Team
# @license http://www.zen-cart.com/license/2_0.txt GNU Public License V2.0
# @version GIT: $Id: Author: DrByte Sat Dec 21 17:00:00 2013 -0500 Modified in v1.5.3 $
#
# This is used with Apache WebServers
#
# The following blocks direct HTTP requests to all filetypes in this directory recursively, except certain approved exceptions
# It also prevents the ability of any scripts to run. No type of script, be it PHP, PERL or whatever, can normally be executed if ExecCGI is disabled.
# Will also prevent people from seeing what is in the dir. and any sub-directories
#
# For this to work, you must include either 'All' or at least: 'Limit' and 'Indexes' parameters to the AllowOverride configuration in your apache/conf/httpd.conf file.
# Additionally, if you want the added protection offered by the OPTIONS directive below, you'll need to add 'Options' to the AllowOverride list, if 'All' is not specified.
# Example:
#<Directory "/usr/local/apache/htdocs">
# AllowOverride Limit Options Indexes
#</Directory>
###############################
DirectoryIndex index.php
# deny *everything*
<FilesMatch ".*\..*">
Order Allow,Deny
Deny from all
</FilesMatch>
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