I know what I did really stupid, but I won't get into details of why. Is there anyway at all to login to my site again? Or did I seriously mess up? I have a couple of other accounts logged in on different computers, but they have no admin rights.
I was greeted with the above line today when I tried to login to my site, using the Admin (0) account. I have had other users report the same problem.
Initially you are able to login, so the authentication is working. As soon as you click on any link, you are taking to the "Access denied - You are not authorized to access this page."
I haven't made any changes to the site recently. Does anyone have any suggestions? I haven't seen much in the forum's so far.
Small question here, some of the pages in my site will display the path at the top of the node (shown below) and will have the menu expanded appropriately; others will just have "Home" available at the top of the node and will have the menu on the side instantly collapsed. Does anyone know how to control this setting? I thought that it might have to do with "Menu--> Navigation parent item" settings but when I've made changes to this setting in hopes of keeping the trail visible the changes didn't stick. Any ideas would be appreciated.
On the site there are categories for separate calendars (event/term/1, event/term/2 etc)
When I update calendar with node/add/event there is no chance to direct the new event into desired calendar. All the updates are in the same calendar, not in categorized calendar.
Hi.
I'd installed taxonomy access control a while back, and had set some category permissions to not be viewed by anon users. It worked in denying anon users access to the content but it also seems to have stopped them having access to some other categories (even though they are set be able to view and list them)
I even set anon users to be able to list/view uncategorised nodes, but still get the access denied message
Feeling defeated I tried disabling the taxonomy_control and turning off the module, but the same problem still persists