Just as a side note, you might want to check out cfcdoc:
http://www.spike.org.uk/projects/cfcdoc/

it is a bit simpler, can run in any directory - even for local builds,
and offers customization.

thx.

jc

-- 
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Jon Cline
Chief Product Evangelist
Enthusiast, Inc
www.enthusiastinc.com
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
626.256.3505

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*Need help?  Email [EMAIL PROTECTED]

On 8/11/05, Barney Boisvert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Is there a way to look at an IP address and determine if the IP is
> > public or private?
> 
> Indirectly.  10.x.y.z isn't publicly routable, so it has to be
> internal.  Same with 192.168.x.y.  So any request coming from an IP in
> those ranges is either an internal request, or is being proxied by a
> machine with an internal address.
> 
> > This is working with the assumption that dev and
> > stage zones would not be publicly accessible.
> 
> Are you saying that they'd be private, but still run on the same
> server and the public site?  Because that seems a little weird.
> Hardware is so damn cheap these days, and dev/staging doesn't require
> much power, so there's little reason not to have separate servers for
> that.
> 
> cheers,
> barneyb
> 
> On 8/11/05, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > There's a lot of functionality in cfide.componentutils.cfcexplorer as
> > well as service factory.  They are great resources for developers but
> > was not sure of what controls are in place to manage access in a hosted,
> > shared, or production environment.
> >
> > Is there a way to look at an IP address and determine if the IP is
> > public or private?  This is working with the assumption that dev and
> > stage zones would not be publicly accessible.
> >
> > Tom
> >
> --
> Barney Boisvert
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 360.319.6145
> http://www.barneyb.com/
> 
> Got Gmail? I have 50 invites.
> 
> 
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