After Expedition installation, I tried the web page and reach "Apache2 Ubuntu Default Page"

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After Expedition installation, I tried the web page and reach "Apache2 Ubuntu Default Page"

L1 Bithead

After the installation of Expedition on the Ubuntu server, I navigate to the webpage of the IP given. I do not get the Expedition login page. I instead get a default Apache2 page. Wondering if there is some other feature or web-related service I need to setup/configure (like PHP or something like that). 

 

Below is the information listed on the web page:

This is the default welcome page used to test the correct operation of the Apache2 server after installation on
Ubuntu systems. It is based on the equivalent page on Debian, from which the Ubuntu Apache packaging is
derived. If you can read this page, it means that the Apache HTTP server installed at this site is working
properly. You should replace this file (located at /var/www/html/index.html) before continuing to operate your
HTTP server.
If you are a normal user of this web site and don't know what this page is about, this probably means that the site
is currently unavailable due to maintenance. If the problem persists, please contact the site's administrator.
Configuration Overview
Ubuntu's Apache2 default configuration is different from the upstream default configuration, and split into
several files optimized for interaction with Ubuntu tools. The configuration system is fully documented in
/usr/share/doc/apache2/README.Debian.gz. Refer to this for the full documentation. Documentation for the
web server itself can be found by accessing the manual if the apache2-doc package was installed on this server.
The configuration layout for an Apache2 web server installation on Ubuntu systems is as follows:
/etc/apache2/
|-- apache2.conf
| `-- ports.conf
|-- mods-enabled
| |-- *.load
| `-- *.conf
|-- conf-enabled
| `-- *.conf
|-- sites-enabled
| `-- *.conf

apache2.conf is the main configuration file. It puts the pieces together by including all remaining
configuration files when starting up the web server.
ports.conf is always included from the main configuration file. It is used to determine the listening ports
for incoming connections, and this file can be customized anytime.
Configuration files in the mods-enabled/, conf-enabled/ and sites-enabled/ directories contain particular
configuration snippets which manage modules, global configuration fragments, or virtual host
configurations, respectively.
They are activated by symlinking available configuration files from their respective *-available/
counterparts. These should be managed by using our helpers a2enmod, a2dismod, a2ensite, a2dissite,
and a2enconf, a2disconf . See their respective man pages for detailed information.
The binary is called apache2. Due to the use of environment variables, in the default configuration,
apache2 needs to be started/stopped with /etc/init.d/apache2 or apache2ctl. Calling /usr/bin/apache2
directly will not work with the default configuration.
Document Roots
By default, Ubuntu does not allow access through the web browser to any file apart of those located in /var/www,
public_html directories (when enabled) and /usr/share (for web applications). If your site is using a web
document root located elsewhere (such as in /srv) you may need to whitelist your document root directory in
/etc/apache2/apache2.conf.
The default Ubuntu document root is /var/www/html. You can make your own virtual hosts under /var/www. This
is different to previous releases which provides better security out of the box.
Reporting Problems
Please use the ubuntu-bug tool to report bugs in the Apache2 package with Ubuntu. However, check existing bug
reports before reporting a new bug.
Please report bugs specific to modules (such as PHP and others) to respective packages, not to the web server
itself

1 accepted solution

Accepted Solutions

Hello @RickBeck 

 

can you type the following commands "uname -m" and "lsb_release -a" and show the output?

View solution in original post

10 REPLIES 10

L1 Bithead

RickBeck_0-1628624845351.png

 

Hello @RickBeck 

 

That generally means that expedition was not installed. I would try to re-run the shell script and see if there are any errors.

Thanks Azuniga, I'll try re-running that install and paying closer attention to the status output.

It is still failing. The messages pass quickly and so I am looking for where to find these logs. I did not seem to find it in the /var/log/apache2/error.log, I mainly see certificate error information in that log. 
I am searching, but if someone where the specific log location I should check, I would appreciate any guidance. If not, then I guess I can try again and output the message to a text file (>) and pipe it. 

Well, the Linux information in my brain from a long long time ago is really rusty. Time to get these gears cranking again 🙂

L1 Bithead

RickBeck_0-1628626726150.png

looks like unable to locate package expedition-beta and /var/www/html/OS/BPA/updateBPA306.sh -- no such file or directory 

Hello @RickBeck 

 

can you type the following commands "uname -m" and "lsb_release -a" and show the output?

L1 Bithead

Hi @azuniga 

RickBeck_0-1628628183007.png

 

i686 and Ubuntu 16.04.7 LTS

L1 Bithead

Seems like from another post I need to run the AMD version... I'll start a fresh with that in VMware

L1 Bithead

@azuniga , I was using the wrong version. Now that I have the x86_64 version of Ubuntu running in VMware, it works on first attempt. Thank you for your help.

Cyber Elite
Cyber Elite

anyone run into this issue that needed to use the ARM64 version of ubuntu (and was able to fix it somehow?)

Tom Piens
PANgurus - Strata specialist; config reviews, policy optimization
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