This looks like a reverse lookup, but very strange. Janine's case is also weird. The access log is a small chunk of code, so it might be easy to figure it out.
Which versions of AOLserver are being used here? tom jackson On Wednesday 14 November 2007 16:18, Juan José del Río [Simple Option] wrote: > That's very weird, Janine. Maybe some other knows what's going on. > > In my case, I have a weird behaviour too... > > 213.99.4.203, 212.170.235.17 - - [14/nov/2007:19:32:31 +0100] "GET / > HTTP/1.0" 200 3295 "" "Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows > NT 5.0; es-ES; rv:1.8.1.9) Gecko/20071025 Firefox/2.0.0.4" 0.077743 > > What about this? I don't know what's going on with the *TWO* IPs > > Regards, > > Juan José > > > - > Juan José del Río | Comercio online / e-commerce > +34 616 512 340 | [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > > Simple Option S.L. > Tel: +34 951 930 122 > Fax: +34 952 792 455 > http://www.simpleoption.com > > On Wed, 2007-11-14 at 15:49 -0800, Janine Sisk wrote: > > Does anyone know what causes the IP address to be reported as > > "unknown" for a handful of acesses each day? > > > > > unknown - - [13/Nov/2007:12:32:06 -0800] "GET / HTTP/1.0" 200 17880 > > > "" "Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; U; Intel Mac OS X; en-US; rv:1.8.1.9) > > > Gecko/20071025 Firefox/2.0.0.9" " > > > > janine > > > > > > -- > > AOLserver - http://www.aolserver.com/ > > > > To Remove yourself from this list, simply send an email to > > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> with the body of "SIGNOFF AOLSERVER" in the > > email message. You can leave the Subject: field of your email blank. > > -- > AOLserver - http://www.aolserver.com/ > > To Remove yourself from this list, simply send an email to > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> with the body of "SIGNOFF AOLSERVER" in the > email message. You can leave the Subject: field of your email blank. -- AOLserver - http://www.aolserver.com/ To Remove yourself from this list, simply send an email to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> with the body of "SIGNOFF AOLSERVER" in the email message. You can leave the Subject: field of your email blank.