On Mon, Jan 27, 2020 at 4:17 PM Richard
<lists-apa...@listmail.innovate.net> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Date: Monday, January 27, 2020 09:42:51 -0600
> > From: o1bigtenor <o1bigte...@gmail.com>
> >
> > So I don't really need to use 'virtual hosts'. What I am actually
> > needing to do is to use different ports to the same 'stack' rather
> > than creating different 'stacks'.
> >
> > By this I mean that I don't need to use different server
> > configurations for each application rather than I need to 'just'
> > assign different ports to the different applications and this
> > should work.
>
> I think you may be confusing "virtual machines" and "(apache) virtual
> hosts". A virtual machine (VM) is indeed a whole "stack" (as you are
> referring to things). A[n apache] virtual host environment is simply
> configuring an instance of apache to serve content (more or less) as
> if it's on different VMs. This will allow you to use different
> document roots for each content set as well as serve out on different
> ports and/or hostnames from a single machine.
>
> In general I try to avoid serving content on non-standard http/https
> ports as it tends to be confusing to users. Using different hostnames
> and/or IPnumbers is cleaner and causes fewer headaches.
>
It may have not been clear but I was asking as to whether I should be
using virtual hosts or something else (maybe different port numbers).

Different hostnames - - - - how do I have that on one physical machine?

Are you recommending using subdomains? (I think that's what its called!?!)

TIA

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