I had an issue with email delivery to Exchange’s server and Outlook from my WP.
However, all seemed to work according to “Check & Log Email” ‘s Sent Status at green.
Fortunately, “Post SMTP Mailer/Email Log” plugin helped to find out that the IP address was in the Banned Sending IP list of Office, for this new website.
Even with the IP and domain allowed in Exchange settings and DNS set, it was blocked.
If this can help others, one day.
Good day.
Max.
less say I have tow domains primary and secondary
the primary is “one.com”
the secondary is “two.com”
I map both by record type ‘A’ to the static IP.
I did make a web site with the subdomain “two.one.com”
when I change the URL to “two.com” the site is loaded but I can’t access the dashboard.
how I should configure it properly, I have looking for tutorials but I did found an answer.
I thanks for your help
]]>Their response to my ping screen dump is that it is a good ping with good response times and so far no explanation of the wrong IP.
Is this purely a DNS thing or am I hallucinating?
]]>https://www.ads-software.com/plugins/admin-dashboard-site-notes/
]]>I am trying to move my wordpress.com site to my hosting (Godaddy). I changed the server dsn so that they point at my hosting but still doesnt work. Godaddy says that everything is fine from their side, and that there’s a problem from WordPress. Apparently is impossible to contact people from wordpress, so here I am: desperate and hopeless. With a client deadline in 12 hrs.
here’s the site: giorgiobosisio.com –> can anyone help me out, please? What does this landing page mean and how can I solve the situation? The old site is gone too…
]]>If you let me know what further information would help you assess this, I’ll try to supply it.
https://www.ads-software.com/extend/plugins/admin-dashboard-site-notes/
]]>I am totally new to the domain of WordPress, and not from a programing background, my apology if it’s a ‘dumb’ question .
But I would still be glad if someone helps me about this.
I can’t seem to find mention of DSN in the Codex; in particular, it does not seem to be mentioned in the installation guide. My Hosting Manager does have pop-up help for this choice; unfortunately, all it says is “Select this option to create, recreate, or remove a DSN for this database.”
Google reveals that “Data Source Name provides connectivity to a database through an ODBC driver.” I can’t find ODBC in the WordPress Codex either, and some posts indicate this is not a WordPress problem.
Can anyone suggest what choice to make?
]]>Fair warning: I’m fairly comfortable around computers, but when it comes to MySQL, PHP, or anything aside from raw HTML, I’m way out of my league. I’ve been seesawing back and forth with this problem for most of the day, and I’m totally lost.
I was hoping you’d all be able to help.
I have a web hosting provider, NearlyFreeSpeech.net. They run PHP 4.4.0, and MySQL 4.1.x.
I tried following the installation instructions on the webpage, but stumbled quite a bit under the “create a username for the database” bit for the SQL database, as I couldn’t find the buttons and whatnot. I think I still managed to create a username for the database, but I’m sure I messed something up.
Anywho, when accessing the install.php, I get the following (I’m sure very familiar) error message:
——
Error establishing a database connection
This either means that the username and password information in your wp-config.php file is incorrect or we can’t contact the database server at DATABASENAME.db. This could mean your host’s database server is down.
——-
Notice DATABASENAME.db (changed from its real name). The email I received upon creating a MySQL database stated the following:
—-
You MUST use your DSN when connecting to your database from PHP
and CGI scripts. If you use ‘localhost’ or do not specify a DSN, you
will get an error message.
—–
Okay, fine, when I look up DSN on their FAQ, I get:
—–
The DSN, or hostname, for connecting to MySQL is the name you gave when you created it, followed by the extension .db. The full connection information can be found in the email sent to you when you created your database.
—–
Right, so I’m now totally lost and confused. No matter what variables I change in any of the wp-admin.php files up top, I get the same error message.
Pretend I’m a moron and help me out here.
Thanks!
Josh
The problem is that the installation wizard tells me everything is in www.mydomain.com/blog and www.mydomain.com/blog/wp-admin
which it isn’t really because the DNS servers for mydomain.com are still pointing to the old host.
I’d like to set WP up, install a theme etc before I switch the DSN servers but can’t seem to get in. I’ve tried substituting the IP address for my domain in the URL but that doesn’t work.
When I FTP to the new site, I can see all the directories and files it created but don’t know how to log in as administrator.
Can you help?
]]>