p, hit me up - off list at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Joseph DeVore
VeloxWeb Technologies
-Original Message-
From: Matt Robertson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, October 30, 2001 8:22 AM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: Re: *RESOLVED* - RE: Subdomain of a domain
Not me, I'm not smart enough ;
on [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, October 30, 2001 8:22 AM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: Re: *RESOLVED* - RE: Subdomain of a domain
Not me, I'm not smart enough ;D. I do my own dns and can set up a subdomain
easily on that side. However it looks to me like the entry in IIS is in one
of tw
-Talk
Subject: Re: *RESOLVED* - RE: Subdomain of a domain
Not me, I'm not smart enough ;D. I do my own dns and can set up a subdomain
easily on that side. However it looks to me like the entry in IIS is in one
of two places. Came up empty looking thru the MS KB, although I'm sure its
Not me, I'm not smart enough ;D. I do my own dns and can set up a subdomain
easily on that side. However it looks to me like the entry in IIS is in one
of two places. Came up empty looking thru the MS KB, although I'm sure its
in there I just couldn't find it. A quickee example would be much
a
: CF-Talk
Subject: RE: Subdomain of a domain
Joseph please.
My boss explained it to me and showed it to me recently but it all didnt
click with me.
Thanks
Kola Oyedeji
Web developer
Macromedia Certified Advanced ColdFusion 5 Developer
http://www.Alexandermark.com
(+44)020-8429-7300
DeVore [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: 30 October 2001 10:04
> To: CF-Talk
> Subject: RE: Subdomain of a domain
>
>
> Are you interested in doing this on Windows/IIS?
> It's easy if you run your own DNS.
>
> I can tell you how to do it in less than 5 minutes.
Sent: Tuesday, October 30, 2001 1:52 AM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: RE: Subdomain of a domain
I'm kinda interested in this as well anyone have any resources where I can
read up on this?
Kola Oyedeji
Web developer
Macromedia Certified Advanced ColdFusion 5 Developer
http://www.Alexandermark.com
(+4
L PROTECTED]]
> Sent: 29 October 2001 20:21
> To: CF-Talk
> Subject: RE: Subdomain of a domain
>
>
> Larry,
>
> The "www" portion, as well as the "sales" portion, of the domain you
> show in your question are called the "host" names. "Ww
cflocation.
Just an added thought.
Thanks,
Robert Filipovich
- Original Message -
From: "Lee Fuller" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "CF-Talk" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, October 29, 2001 3:20 PM
Subject: RE: Subdomain of a domain
> Larry,
>
>
no one IP will do it...
in your web server you can set each one up...
the thing with DNS is most people handle it there if they have access to
DNS... so they define separate A-Records for each...
you could define one as *.domain.extension...
then just use cold fusion to rip them to the right d
Larry,
The "www" portion, as well as the "sales" portion, of the domain you
show in your question are called the "host" names. "Www.domain.com"
can, and often does, point to a different IP address from, for example,
"mail.domain.com". This allows traffic to be routed to different
programs or se
You could have two IPs bound to it but it's not needed. All you have to do
is create the record in DNS.
Thank you,
Dan Phillips
Lead Support Technician\ColdFusion Administrator
Express Technologies, Inc.
dba Halfpricehosting.com
dba CFXhosting.com
-Original Message-
From: Larry Junck
>> My question is, do these people have two IP's associated with this domain
or
>> is this an entry in DNS
>> that I am missing somewhere on how to set up?
You can do it either way, with or with out two IP's, but the easiest way is
to just create a DNS record that points to the same IP address, a
13 matches
Mail list logo