404 means the file is not found. If you have already uploaded the file then the name may be misspelled or it is in a different folder. Other Possible Causes You may get a 404 error for images because you have Hot Link Protection turned on and the domain is not on the list of authorized domains.
If you go to your temporary url (and get this error, there maybe a problem with the rule set stored in an.htaccess file. You can try renaming that file to.htaccess-backup and refreshing the site to see if that resolves the issue.
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It is also possible that you have inadvertently deleted your document root or the your account may need to be recreated. Either way, please contact your web host immediately. Are you using WordPress?
See the Section on 404 errors after clicking a link in WordPress. Missing or Broken Files When you get a 404 error be sure to check the URL that you are attempting to use in your browser.This tells the server what resource it should attempt to request.
In this example the file must be in public_html/example/Example/ Notice that the CaSe is important in this example. On platforms that enforce case-sensitivity example and Example are not the same locations.
For addon domains, the file must be in public_html/addondomain.com/example/Example/ and the names are case-sensitive. Broken Image When you have a missing image on your site you may see a box on your page with with a red X where the image is missing. Right click on the X and choose Properties. The properties will tell you the path and file name that cannot be found.
This varies by browser, if you do not see a box on your page with a red X try right clicking on the page, then select View Page Info, and goto the Media Tab. In this example the image file must be in public_html/cgi-sys/images/ Notice that the CaSe is important in this example. On platforms that enforce case-sensitivity PNG and png are not the same locations. When working with WordPress, 404 Page Not Found errors can often occur when a new theme has been activated or when the rewrite rules in the.htaccess file have been altered. When you encounter a 404 error in WordPress, you have two options for correcting it. Option 1: Correct the Permalinks • Log in to WordPress.
• From the left-hand navigation menu in WordPress, click Settings > Permalinks (Note the current setting. If you are using a custom structure, copy or save the custom structure somewhere.) • Select Default. • Click Save Settings. • Change the settings back to the previous configuration (before you selected Default). Put the custom structure back if you had one.
• Click Save Settings. This will reset the permalinks and fix the issue in many cases. If this doesn't work, you may need to edit your.htaccess file directly. Option 2: Modify the.htaccess File Add the following snippet of code to the top of your.htaccess file. The.htaccess file contains directives (instructions) that tell the server how to behave in certain scenarios and directly affect how your website functions.
Redirects and rewriting URLs are two very common directives found in a.htaccess file, and many scripts such as WordPress, Drupal, Joomla and Magento add directives to the.htaccess so those scripts can function. It is possible that you may need to edit the.htaccess file at some point, for various reasons.This section covers how to edit the file in cPanel, but not what may need to be changed.(You may need to consult other articles and resources for that information.) There are Many Ways to Edit a.htaccess File • Edit the file on your computer and upload it to the server via FTP • Use an FTP program's Edit Mode • Use SSH and a text editor • Use the File Manager in cPanel The easiest way to edit a.htaccess file for most people is through the File Manager in cPanel. How to Edit.htaccess files in cPanel's File Manager Before you do anything, it is suggested that you backup your website so that you can revert back to a previous version if something goes wrong. Open the File Manager • Log into cPanel. • In the Files section, click on the File Manager icon. • Check the box for Document Root for and select the domain name you wish to access from the drop-down menu.
• Make sure Show Hidden Files (dotfiles)' is checked. The File Manager will open in a new tab or window.
• Look for the.htaccess file in the list of files. You may need to scroll to find it. To Edit the.htaccess File • Right click on the.htaccess file and click Code Edit from the menu.
Alternatively, you can click on the icon for the.htaccess file and then click on the Code Editor icon at the top of the page. • A dialogue box may appear asking you about encoding. Just click Edit to continue. The editor will open in a new window.
• Edit the file as needed. • Click Save Changes in the upper right hand corner when done. The changes will be saved. • Test your website to make sure your changes were successfully saved.
If not, correct the error or revert back to the previous version until your site works again. • Once complete, you can click Close to close the File Manager window.
Please do not feed the troll anymore,folks, or we’ll be inundated with this crap forever. Let the thread die,or let him wallow in it by himself. Warning to all future readers: Few heeded the caveat above, so if you follow this thread you are going to be primarily following a course of one person’s sad obsession with negativity and violence. Salvador is in actuality a place where many of us on the forum, and many other locals and gringos alike, have found happy, rich, tranquil lives. If you have not been to Salvador, please do not hesitate to visit in safety, and take the great opportunity to dive into it’s unique culture, amazing music and lovely beaches–and to meet the marvelous, warm, welcoming locals. Salvador, Bahia = alegria!
Bahiana772009-11-28 11:55:59 •. I frequently post about the good things. Friends, music, beautiful landscapes, beaches, agua de coco, mangoes, bananas, papayas, passion fruit, dropping with a breeze thumping into the ground. As one ages one finds that the human experience is pretty much the same everywhere. We all age, live, laugh, love.
In fact I love Brazil. I just don’t like the wave of violence that is sweeping across many parts of Brazil. Unfortunately Salvador is now like the Wild West of the USA of a hundred years ago. Bobbyitaparica2009-07-16 11:52:22 •. [QUOTE=bobbyitaparica].starts name calling [/QUOTE] It isn’t name calling when it’s true. You are a troll. Troll: someone who posts controversial, inflammatory, irrelevant or off-topic messages in an online community By definition, you are a troll.
Stop or go away. And 42 pages of trash later, other posters have come to this conclusion: [QUOTE=delco] GBoF should now consider moving the debate onto finding solutions for these problems rather than pointlessly banging the same old drum.[/QUOTE] Sad case really. Bahiana772010-01-05 14:35:39 •.
By definition, you are a troll. Stop or go away. [/QUOTE] You are funny Bahiana!! The topic here is “Violence in Salvador.” You are irrelevant, off topic and certainly acting as if you own the board. By your own definition you, are the troll!
If you have any ideas to help solve the violence problem in Salvador, please post here. Also post news about violence in Salvador here. If you don’t want to see it, don’t read it. The police are on track to kill 300 people in Salvador this year.
Do you consider this just the same old news as always? Nothing inflammatory or controversial. The numbers are not disputed. Please eat a mango, drink some agua de coco and balanca na rede. Bobbyitaparica2009-07-16 15:26:16 •. Do you think we could pay the police to make it 301?? [/QUOTE]Oh please name names kiteflyer, if you get the right name I’ll go half’s with you on the cost Brazil has a worldwide reputation as being an extremely violent and dangerouscountry and one of the most violent places in the world outside of awar zone, what do people expect when they come here, tea in the park I really don’t understand why people get so excited by violent crimeand or the police killing people, in the UK where the police generallydon’t carry guns and are meant to be professionals, they have killedloads of people over the years, most of them innocent people.
The world is a violent place and people need to learn to live with itor you are likely to become a victim yourself very quickly. What I have noticed is that if you ask someone who is moaning aboutcrime “Have you been the victim of violent crime in Brazil” you tend toget the answer “No” far more that you get the answer “Yes”. A very interesting opening post by the way •.
This brings up the question I started out with. The police have killed 134 people in Salvador alone this year. The Brits come in and laugh it off with a casual “Brazil is like a warzone attitude.” Nice joke about ordering one more from the cops.
You have to find the guy with the tabela. I’ll bet he gives discounts for encomendas like buy three, get one free. Bahiana gets pissed off that I am bringing up a negative point about Salvador and calls me a troll. The funny thing is that my neighbors from all social groups poor to rich mostly say “mata ladrao.” Lynchings are quite common. Judicially the death penalty does not exist, but it is there in the streets.
So why is it that in 2009 300 people in Salvador can be killed by the cops and there is no coverage outside of Brazil. Just a smiling Lula giving Barack Obama a nice soccer shirt. The violence is getting close to my home. A gas staion manager was murdered last year on his way to the bank with the weekend purse. Some kids borrowed a car and robbed the farmacy near my house. The cops saw the car later that day, grabbed the owner and killed him.
This was a few weeks ago. My Gardiner was stabbed in the stomach because he only had 20 reais or so for the theives in Salvador last year. I have a French neighbor who has been beaten and robbed a number of times.
Last year at the mercadinho there was a shootout. Some dumb ass tried to rob a place that never has more than 20 reais in the caixa. My point is that things are getting out of control. Does anybody see the violence going down where they are? [QUOTE=bobbyitaparica]This brings up the question I started out with.
The police have killed 134 people in Salvador alone this year. The Brits come in and laugh it off with a casual “Brazil is like a warzone attitude.”[/QUOTE]We Brit’s have the dunkirk sprit, don’t you know that when most of us were growing up almost half the world was coloured pink I’m not sure the Brit’s are laughing the violent crime off, I think it is more a case of laughing that people are surprised about the level of crime in Brazil. Brazilian TV encourages them [/QUOTE] Yes there are two shows in Salvador which regularly interview the bandits. Some are so stupid they say things on camera like “I can’t wait to get back on the streets again and rob more people so I can drink pinga, smoke crack and enjoy life because THAT is what I do.
Sou ladrao mesmo e gosto roubar. “I’m a thief and I like to steal.” I guess the TV stations tell the police “If we put them on TV we might solve more crimes.” I can see a new law, since Brazil is a great place for laws about not showing the faces of the criminals on daytime television. A big fight would ensue over freedom of the press/tv camera. [QUOTE=Paulistano USA][QUOTE=London Lad][QUOTE=Hyenaeatpeople]The police should start shooting foreings in Brazil. It would be very funny[/QUOTE]And where do you think they should start, what nationality should be first?[/QUOTE] That’s a stupid question, CANADIANS of course!
Blame Canada, blame Canada! [/QUOTE] The police in Salvador do a good job protecting the “foreings” during Carnaval. The nice “foreings” spend lots of money, creating jobs for the locals who all are “foreings as well because their forefathers came from Africa and Europe. Not many true “indeings” left.
I don’t understand the hostility. I’m just trying to understand why the police in Salvador, one city in Brazil, have killed over 130 people this year and are on track to kill 40 people in July. All this and FIFA wants to send tens of thousands of “foreings” to Salvador for the World Cup. If the police in every City of Europe and the States with a population of three million killed 130 people so far this year and were on track to kill 300, there would be a major uproar. [QUOTE=bobbyitaparica][QUOTE=Paulistano USA][QUOTE=London Lad][QUOTE=Hyenaeatpeople]The police should start shooting foreings in Brazil. It would be very funny[/QUOTE]And where do you think they should start, what nationality should be first?[/QUOTE] That’s a stupid question, CANADIANS of course!
Blame Canada, blame Canada! [/QUOTE] The police in Salvador do a good job protecting the “foreings” during Carnaval. The nice “foreings” spend lots of money, creating jobs for the locals who all are “foreings as well because their forefathers came from Africa and Europe. Not many true “indeings” left. I don’t understand the hostility.
I’m just trying to understand why the police in Salvador, one city in Brazil, have killed over 130 people this year and are on track to kill 40 people in July. All this and FIFA wants to send tens of thousands of “foreings” to Salvador for the World Cup. If the police in every City of Europe and the States with a population of three million killed 130 people so far this year and were on track to kill 300, there would be a major uproar.
[/QUOTE]When I was in Bahia I felt very safe, we didn’t go to Salvador so I can’t comment about how safe it is there. But what I have noticed about Brazil is that most cities seem to havesafe and well policed areas, while other areas are left to policethemselves and it seems to me that these are the areas with the highcrime rate. I am very sure that Brazil will send lots of people to see how theWorld Cup is policed in South-Africa a place where you can makecomparison with Brazil as they have many of the same problems.
[QUOTE=London Lad] [Brazil has a worldwide reputation as being an extremely violent and dangerous country and one of the most violent places in the world outside of a war zone, what do people expect when they come here, tea in the park [/QUOTE] Not so sure about this comment. When I was about to leave for my new life in Brazil nobody I knew had anything but envy about my opportunity nor expressed anything other than that I was heading for a sunkissed tropical paradise. I’m not saying that for some places your comment isn’t true, but I wonder if it is a worldwide perception. [QUOTE=LouieLoco]not only that, but there was a story in a tarde that stated that 87% of murders in salvador (not by police) are unsolved. People know this as well. You can kill someone in the city and have a 90% chance of no reprucussions. That is scary.
[/QUOTE] I feel better now. At least the 130 murders (by the police) must be the 13% of solved murders in Salvador this year. But where is the outrage? I’ve been going to Brazil for over 22 years and I have never seen numbers like this. We haven’t even started with the general murders at large.
How many so far in Grande Salvador Louie?