That is exactly... but make sure to define both the www.foo1.com and foo1.com host headers for the foo1 site.
Works great... but if you provide e-mail services, make sure the e-mail program can deal with virtual hosting. Also, if you ever need to use SSL, the site(s) needing it will need explicit IP addresses defined. John Mack ---------- Original Message ---------------------------------- From: "Adaryl Wakefield" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Date: Tue, 27 Apr 2004 11:15:36 -0500 >Im running IIS 5. I was studying how to host multiple sites and wanted to check my >understanding. If wanted to host two sites: www.foo1.com, www.foo2.com on the same >server its just a matter of having their dns entries point to the IP of our server >and in IIS changing the host headers for that site so traffic for www.foo2.com goes >to a different directory than www.foo1.com. Am I missing anything? > > >Adaryl "Did you reboot?" Wakefield >Aviator by passion >Programmer by sheer force of will > > ========================================================= Kansas City ColdFusion User Group's website & listserv is hosted through the generous support of Clickdoug.com To send email to the list, email [EMAIL PROTECTED] To (un)subscribe, email [EMAIL PROTECTED] with your request. For hosting solutions http://www.clickdoug.com Featuring Win2003 Enterprise, RedHat Linux, CFMX 6.1. ======================================================
