Internal Server Error 500 Joomla
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Joomla 2.5 Error 500
issues on restored sites and how to solve them You have to make sure joomla internal server error after moving site that there are no settings transferred in files from your old server which are not compatible with your new host. The most htaccess for joomla notable culprits are .htaccess and local php.ini directives. If your site was using Admin Tools' .htaccess Maker If you have used Admin Tools' .htaccess Maker please remember that after restoring the site to a different location http://forum.joomla.org/viewtopic.php?t=344518&start=30 you will need to reconfigure and create a new .htaccess. Login to the back-end of your site, go to Components, Admin Tools, .htaccess Maker, then change the domain and directory names at the bottom of the page and finally click on Save & Create .htaccess. This is mandatory, every time you move your site to a different host, domain name, subdomain or directory. I can't log in to my site after I restored https://www.akeebabackup.com/documentation/troubleshooter/prbasicts.html it to a new location This is a very common mistake with Joomla! 1.6/1.7 and later versions. What you probably not remember is that you modified the cookie setup parameters in your site's Global Configuration page. The thing is, if you modify the cookie domain name and/or path, it's very likely that you will no longer be able to log in to your site if the domain name, subdomain or directory changes - exactly what happens when you restore a site to anywhere except its original location! Luckily, the workaround is very simple. Please edit the configuration.php file in the root of your site and find the lines starting with public $cookie_domain and public $cookie_path. Modify them so that they read: public $cookie_domain = ''; public $cookie_path = ''; Save the file, clear your browser's cookies and cache, quit and restart your browser and try logging in to your site. You should be able to login without any problem now. Another thing that you should be aware of is that the same problem could be caused by your .htaccess file. It's always a good idea to at least temporarily rename .htaccess to something else (e.g. htaccess.bak) when you're trying to troubleshoot a login issue. A .htaccess file may define redirections which get in the way d
error An internal server error has occurred!" Ok. So you just change your Joomla 3.x site to search engine friendly URLS, changed to mod rewrite and also renamed the htaccess.txt to .htaccess but every article page returns the error “Error 500 - http://www.andrewbrettwatson.com/index.php/more/joomla-help/506-how-to-fix-internal-server-error-on-joomla-sites-which-are-not-installed-in-the-web-hosting-root Internal server error An internal server error has occured!” is that the problem? Ok here is a solution: First remember this is just one possible solution. It won’t work for everybody. It depends on what is going wrong with your site. It should work if this is your problem: Joomla is installed in a folder that is not the root folder of your hosting service. When you turn Joomla SEF (in Global configuration: Search Engine Friendly URLs = YES and Use Apache mod_rewrite internal server = YES) the site breaks and starts showing Error 500 - Internal server error An internal server error has occurred! The important part there is that in this case, it happens when Joomla is NOT installed in the root directory. So to fix this we have to tell the server to consider the folder where it IS located to be the root folder for Joomla. We do this by editing the .htaccess and looking for the following line: # RewriteBase / internal server error and we change it to: RewriteBase / This (effectively) tells the server to consider the root folder for Joomla is the folder that it (.htaccess) is in. If the problem was caused by the location of your Joomla install, this SHOULD work. If it doesn’t work, it is likely that the Internal Server Error is caused by something else, that is to say the Error 500 was due to a different problem. To help better understand the problem try this: Check with a different browser, if you change something and the page has not completely refresh you might get this error Refresh the page (cmd+r on Mac or F5 on windows). Sometimes you just have to wait a while or force the browser to get the latest version to fix this error. If that is the case it means other visitors to the site probably haven’t seen this error. Clear you browser cache or your browser history and then reload the page Clear your Joomla cache (login to the Administrator backend and click system>clear cache) Turn off Joomla Caching (login to the Administrator backend and click system>global configuration in the System tab you will find cache settings, turn them off) Clear your template cache. Some Joomla templates have cache login to the Administrator backend and click Extension>Template Manager - look for caching option and turn of ALL compression options (CSS/GZIP) Turn off your hosting caching. You web host may have a setting for caching your content. Ask them