> 3) Restart
>
> # apachectl restart
>
> On Fri, Jul 3, 2009 at 7:12 PM, Jim March <
1.jim.march@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> Sigh. OK, I've got all the IP/router stuff done. Kewl. Now to give
>> it some password security!
>>
>> First thing I tried was the security settings within Zoneminder.
>> Looked good, got to where login was needed for user "admin" on a
>> password I set, cool, except couldn't see any images anymore - local
>> or remote. Checked the security restrictions on user "admin", it's
>> supposed to have all possible rights per the ZM management screens.
>> WTF? Turn off login security in ZM and sure enough, I can see my
>> cameras again.
>>
>> God. Dammit.
>>
>> Well by now I'm convinced that ZM is buggier than an ant farm anyways,
>> so to heck with it, this thing is running Apache, I oughta be able to
>> control it there, right?
>>
>> Heh.
>>
>> I ask about it on TFUG and Matt was kind enough to provide a link to a
>> decent-looking tutorial on Apache security:
>>
>> On Fri, Jul 3, 2009 at 4:57 PM, Matt Jacob<
matt@mattjacob.com> wrote:
>> > If you're running Apache as your web server, it's fairly trivial to
>> > set up HTTP Basic Authentication:
>> >
>> >
http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/howto/auth.html
>> >
>> > Matt
>>
>> Ehhhh...it ain't working.
>>
>> Hmmmm. So let's go over what I did, see if I blew it? (Given I've
>> never run the back-end to a website EVER, not unlikely...)
>>
>> OK, here's exactly what I did:
>>
>> 1) I figured out where my web-stuff was sitting (including index.html):
>> /var/www
>>
>> 2) I put a file there name of .htaccess containing:
>>
>> ---
>> AuthType Basic
>> AuthName "Restricted Files"
>> # (Following line optional)
>> AuthBasicProvider file
>> AuthUserFile /usr/local/apache/passwd/passwords
>> Require user zmuser
>> ---
>>
>> 3) I made sure the directory /usr/local/apache/passwd/passwords
>> existed with everybody-can-read-it permissions (only root can write).
>>
>> 4) I ran the command:
>>
>> sudo htpasswd -c /usr/local/apache/passwd/passwords zmuser
>>
>> ...and gave it a password DIFFERENT from the user login password (user
>> is logging into XUbuntu as zmuser and passwords are NOT default).
>>
>> And...shouldn't that have done it? Yet it acts like there's still no
>> security at all.
>>
>> There's directories under /var/www that contain data being served -
>> should I copy that .htaccess file down into them?
>>
>> Note that I don't need separate user access levels for multiple
>> users...there's just the shop owner going to use this.
>>
>> Thanks!
>>
>> Jim
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