Yes, wildcard certs work that way. We have a wildcard for our whole
domain and we can use one IP address for the whole lot in Apache, at
which point we then use named virtual hosts to sort out the sites.
It's a real cost saver, if you have a lot of subdomains.

On 5/17/07, John Paul Ashenfelter wrote:

> You can use named virtual hosts, but you can only use one
> *certificate* on the server, so practically speaking all of the other
> virtual hosts get a certificate mismatch which throws up a scary
> message to the user (though my understanding is that if the hosts are
> all in the same domain, you can use a wildcard certificate to help,
> but I've never tried)

-- 
mxAjax / CFAjax docs and other useful articles:
http://www.bifrost.com.au/blog/

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|
ColdFusion MX7 by AdobeĀ®
Dyncamically transform webcontent into Adobe PDF with new ColdFusion MX7. 
Free Trial. http://www.adobe.com/products/coldfusion?sdid=RVJV

Archive: 
http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/CF-Talk/message.cfm/messageid:278400
Subscription: http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/CF-Talk/subscribe.cfm
Unsubscribe: http://www.houseoffusion.com/cf_lists/unsubscribe.cfm?user=89.70.4

Reply via email to