You have different logon means for different purposes. After setting up ispCP you should have received the path to the login page, accessible from your web browser. If you have an admin, reseller, or end user account all of you will use the same login page ... but each with their own user name and password obviously. The admin account allows you to maneuver throughout all areas of ispCP, including end user accounts. The reseller account allows you to maneuver everywhere except the admin section which is a good thing since it prevents you from accidentally messing up admin functions that have been set up already. The end user login keeps the end user restricted to their domain ... which is the way that it should be ... only having access to related web statistics, alias domains, sub domains, email accounts, and ftp accounts.
FTP is a whole different story. Although you can use FTP (at least I think you can) from within ispCP, I do remember from using VHCS that that really sucked since files could only be transferred one at a time. Sometimes the "built-in" FTP behaved a little buggy too. So that's where Filezilla comes in ... OpenSource i.e. Linux, Mac, and Windows compatible.
If you use Filezilla and expect your end users to use FileZilla as well, then that will be a completely
separate login method for the end users. First you create the FTP account via ispCP, then you install Filezilla, followed by entering the FTP account info. for the FTP user that you created. If your end user customers require FTP access (most of them would), you'll have to have them install Filezilla on their machines as well, followed by providing them with the FTP information to their account
which you previously set up within ispCP. This Filezilla login is completely separate and has nothing to do with the ispCP login.
Email works the same way. Your server admin should be able to provide you with the path to your webmail login. Then you use the information from the email accounts that you've created within ispCP to access your webmail. Your end users would do the same thing ... go to the path of the webmail page ... followed by entering user name (actual assigned email address) and password that was created during the creation of the email account. Hope this helps someone ...
(08-04-2011 10:27 AM)joximu Wrote: Server: be sure the given name resolves to the server ip - you also can enter the ip address of the server...
Username: user@domain.tld
Logon type: this should be default.
Server type: Unix/Linux/FTP etc...
Filezilla should definetly work...
/J
Duh, I went braindead there for a minute. IP works just fine with every FTP user.