The big caveat here, for me, is that IIS7 and Apache do
rewriting...but just a bit differently. Just enough, as always, to
make me want to tear my hair out.

If you aren't doing rewriting, then that simplifies matters significantly.

On Thu, Feb 25, 2010 at 6:52 PM, Charlie Griefer
<[email protected]> wrote:
>
> While I do advocate keeping your development setup as close to the
> production setup as possible, I've always used Apache locally, even if I was
> using IIS remotely.  Made it easier to do things like multiple sites and
> setting up the .dev sites as outlined above and in the blog entry i linked
> above.
>
> I believe that nowadays IIS does the multiple sites thing.  If that's the
> case, you should still be able to set up the foo.dev and bar.dev sites in
> IIS, which gives you the equivalent of top level domains, even though
> they're subdirectories within your webroot.
>
> On Thu, Feb 25, 2010 at 6:34 PM, Jeff U <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>
>> Definitely should have included that.  WinXP, IIS, CF9 Development Server,
>> used built-in webserver.  Prefer to keep it that way for simplicity sake.
>>  Thanks guys.
>>
>>
>
> 

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