If you plan to develop dynamic pages, Dreamweaver needs the services of a testing server to generate and display dynamic content while you work. The testing server can be your local computer, a development server, a staging server, or a production server.
Before you set up a testing server folder, you must define a local and remote folder. You can often use the settings of your remote folder for your testing server because dynamic pages placed in the remote folder can normally be processed by an application server.
The second paragraph above is not accurate. Assuming the application server you want to use is running on your local computer, you don't need to define a remote folder before defining a testing server. You can use the settings of your local folder, assuming it's pointing to a folder in the app server's root folder. - Charles Nadeau, Dreamweaver, Adobe Systems.nhowieson said on Sep 24, 2008 at 10:49 AM :
Might have been worth mentioning somewhere above that it is practically impossible to set up a testing server using IIS7 on Vista to test PHP pages.
IIS6 on XP - no problem. But with Vista it seems I would need a doctorate in computer science to get it to work. Have given up.
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