Virtual Private Server User Guide
About This Document
How to Use this Guide
This guide refers to documents located in other parts of our support site, as well
as outside resources. Interland offers these outside resources as additional
reference materials but can take no responsibility for the accuracy of the content
of those sites.
This guide uses detailed, step by step procedures to help get you started and
points you in the right direction when you re ready to use more advanced features.
You may want to keep a copy of this guide within easy reach, but if you do, always
check the Answer Center first for the most updated version. Whether you read this
guide straight through or just go to the particular section that interests you, we
recommend that you read at least the introductions of each section to familiarize
yourself with your plan.
Because we offer different product levels, certain chapters or sections may apply
only to a particular product. If a section applies only to specific product types, the
product(s) to which that section applies will be noted in the introduction.
At the end of this guide, we have included a glossary of terms and addresses of
usage policies.
Conventions Used in the Guide
The following Interland terms and conventions that are used throughout this
guide:
User name Your user name is assigned to you in the welcome e mail you
received from Interland. It looks like this: user12345.
Password Your password is also assigned to you in your welcome e mail,
and it looks like this: AB123. You need the user name and password to log on
to your administration console and any time you connect to your Web site to
publish, etc.
Domain name Your domain name is the name you registered so that people
can find your Web site.
Secret word Your secret word may have been assigned to you, or you may
have requested one when you set up your account. You will use your domain
name and secret word to log on to the support site and other Interland
services.
Certain special characters on your keyboard are represented throughout this
guide in ALL UPPERCASE letters.
Control characters, which you enter by holding down the "CTRL" key (or
"CTL" or "CONTROL," depending on your keyboard) and typing another key,
are represented as CTRL X, where X is some letter.
Technical Training Department
August 2004
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