cyabro
Well-Known Member
- Reaction score
- 420
- Location
- New Zealand
Hey,
I'm just busy trying to setup our PC Repair Tracker site and everything has been going well until I tried to replace the default printable logo file.
For those that use PCRT this file is logoprintable.png and it lives in the /repair/images and /store/images folders.
Since then I am unable to view this file in a browser and all I get is this error:
Forbidden
You don't have permission to access /repair/images/logoprintable.png on this server.
I've checked the file permissions and they are the same as all the other image files, in the same folder, and I can view them no problem.
I've tried uploading the file again and also putting back the original but the problem still exists.
Everything else in PCRT appears to be working as it should.
This looks like a file permissions problem as opposed to a PCRT problem so that's why I'm posting here and hopefully someone with more Linux knowledge than me, which is almost none
, will be able to help.
What else can I try?
This is running on a Linux CentOS virtual machine hosted on Windows Azure as we get some free use being a Microsoft Cloud Partner.
I'm just busy trying to setup our PC Repair Tracker site and everything has been going well until I tried to replace the default printable logo file.
For those that use PCRT this file is logoprintable.png and it lives in the /repair/images and /store/images folders.
Since then I am unable to view this file in a browser and all I get is this error:
Forbidden
You don't have permission to access /repair/images/logoprintable.png on this server.
I've checked the file permissions and they are the same as all the other image files, in the same folder, and I can view them no problem.
I've tried uploading the file again and also putting back the original but the problem still exists.
Everything else in PCRT appears to be working as it should.
This looks like a file permissions problem as opposed to a PCRT problem so that's why I'm posting here and hopefully someone with more Linux knowledge than me, which is almost none

What else can I try?
This is running on a Linux CentOS virtual machine hosted on Windows Azure as we get some free use being a Microsoft Cloud Partner.