Once you’ve read our FTP Getting Started Guide, you know that your cPanel username and password can be used as an FTP account. But, did you know that if you’ve created an Addon domain that you have a separate FTP account for that domain that you can use? When you’re publishing to an Addon domain, you can choose to use either the cPanel username or the Addon domain FTP account. In fact, sometimes it’s easier to use the Addon domain’s FTP account for publishing. In this article we’ll go over directory structure and why using that Addon domain FTP account can be the best way to publish to an Addon domain. When you created the addon domain within cPanel, it automatically created the FTP account for you.
Directory Structure
When your cPanel account is setup, a main domain was assigned to it. That main domain’s document root (by default) is the public_html folder. When you create an Addon domain in cPanel, a new folder is automatically created along with a new FTP account. By default, the new folder is given the same name as the Addon domain, but you can edit this if you prefer. That new folder is created inside the public_html so the Addon domain document root would be: public_html/addondomain.com.
Understanding Your Addon Domain’s FTP Account
When FTP accounts are created, each account is assigned to a directory or folder. When an account is assigned to a directory, it can reach that directory (and any subdirectories) but cannot go above the directory it is assigned to. When cPanel automatically creates the FTP account for your Addon domain, it is assigned to that Addon domain’s document root directory. This is helpful since it prevents publishing files to another Addon domain or to your main domain.
Here’s an example of using an Addon domain FTP account to log into FTP with a popular FTP program, FileZilla:
Notice that there’s not much information from the FTP client to tell you what folder you are currently in. This can be confusing from some, so if you’re ever in doubt about which folder an FTP account is assigned to, you can double check this by viewing the FTP accounts in your cPanel and clicking on the “…” link in the path column for that FTP account:
So, any time you are publishing to an Addon domain with either an FTP program or a web publishing tool such as DreamWeaver or iWeb it can be helpful to use that Addon domain’s FTP account. This can prevent overwriting another site’s file without having to input what can be a lengthy folder structure like public_html/addondomain.com in your software’s publishing settings.
If you need further assistance please feel free to contact our support department.
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N,o that was not the problem. Problem was that hosting account doesn’t have the same relation to all domain accounts. It acts different with one account. I don’t know it it is my provider’s game, or if it is by design (which would be extremely stupid), but I’ve resolved it by modifying .htaccess file with main directory to subdirectory redirect. Still had some additional problem with it when installing WordPress, but I hope it’s all over, and thath all future domain accounts will work without entangling each other.
Ok, but this means that the main domain admin will have access to all addon domain folders. If I have 1 main and 3 add on domains, can I make 4 folders in public_html, and make all users have access only for their own folder, while I can have a master FTP access to public_html and all 4 subfolders?
Hello Marko,
By design, cPanel you can give only person total admin access. If you’re trying to host multiple domains, you can give specific FTP access that accesses only specific folders, and you can also provide specific database access. There is only ONE master FTP account by default – you would need to login to FTP using the cPanel user credentials. You can only go
If you want to give individual cPanel access, you would need to have either a VPS/Dedicated server account, or have a Reseller Hostingaccount.
I hope this helps to answer your question, please let us know if you require any further assistance.
Regards,
Arnel C.