Quote by: mevansJohn,
You can't remove the admin URL completely or you will break access to the admin functions. Instead, change it from
http://www.yoursite.com/admin
to
/admin
That should get you access from both the internal and external networks.
Thanks!
Mark
Another trick is that you could try overriding the local DNS resolution of the public host name with a HOSTS file entry.
Let's say you have GL installed on an internal system:
www.internal.net (192.168.1.10) ..
and you NAT this to an external/public dyname address with an assigned domain name of www.external.com.
Assuming you have installed GL with a 'www.external.com' identity, eg. this is what it's $_CONF]'site_url'] is in the configuration, then all should work OK for external users, and regardess of what the actual external address is (this changes of course in dynamic environments) - for internal users, you can add the following line to the workstation HOSTS file:
192.168.1.10 www.external.com
In Windows 2000 and beyond, this can be found in:
C:\Windows\System32\drivers\etc
Now, everything should work without having to truncate to relative paths.
-m