In the process of trying to enable suexec module I starting getting these warnings (when I restarted apache). I get them when suexec is enabled & disabled:
* Restarting web server apache2
[Wed Oct 05 01:29:40 2011] [warn] NameVirtualHost 12.345.67.89:443 has no VirtualHosts
... waiting [Wed Oct 05 01:29:41 2011] [warn] 12.345.67.89:443 has no VirtualHosts
...done.
I'm running Ubuntu 10.04, Apache2.2, PHP, MYSQL...
I'm running one site via https:// with a signed cert, ssl, etc, along with several other non-encrypted sites. This was previously working fine, but now (since I restarted the server after trying to enable suexec) I receive the above errors. If the *:443 virtual host is enabled, apache will not restart, and will not serve anything. If I disable the *:443 virtualhost, apache will not restart, and won't serve any of the domains I am hosting.
The only thing I messed with, except the suexec configuration (via command line), was the sites-enabled config file for the ssl-enabled domain, which looks like this:
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerAdmin name@gmail.com
ServerName mysite.com
ServerAlias www.mysite.com
DocumentRoot /srv/www/mysite.com/public_html/
ErrorLog /srv/www/mysite.com/logs/error.log
CustomLog /srv/www/mysite.com/logs/access.log combined
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost *:443>
SSLEngine On
SSLCertificateFile /etc/apache2/ssl/mysite.com.crt
ServerAdmin name@gmail.com
ServerName mysite.com
ServerAlias www.mysite.com
DocumentRoot /srv/www/mysite.com/public_html/
ErrorLog /srv/www/mysite.com/logs/error.log
CustomLog /srv/www/mysite.com/logs/access.log combined
</VirtualHost>
Anyway, I'm not sure what's going on here but I'm reluctant to dig too deep into the other apache / ssl configs since I didn't change anything there and everything was working before.
I'm stumped.
EDIT
Some more info:
/etc/apache2/ports.conf:
Listen 12.345.67.89:80
<IfModule mod_ssl.c>
Listen 443
</IfModule>
<IfModule mod_gnutls.c>
Listen 443
</IfModule>
NameVirtualHost 12.345.67.89:443
/etc/apache2/sites-enabled/000-default
makes no mention of port 443
... nor does /etc/apache2/sites-available/default