Hmmm, I thought it was for this purpose. What is the server command
used for? Have you ever used that?

2010/11/4 Adam J Richardson <[email protected]>:
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> Hi Riza,
>
>> Yes I have a directory "path/to/repo" where I have the fossil
>> repositories (with .fossil extensions, two
>> examples created - example1.fossil and example2.fossil - with fossil
>> new and one cloned - the fossil
>> repository) and the fossil.exe. One of the created fossil repository
>> is named example1.fossil (the
>> repo_name was just made up :) ). I run the server in this directory
>> like so
>>
>>    fossil.exe server .\
>
> That command actually does start a web server, but I don't think it's
> the intended usage. You could instead do (tested in XP, works fine):
>
> c:\> start fossil.exe server .\example1.fossil --port 8081
> c:\> start fossil.exe server .\example2.fossil --port 8082
>
> You could make that into a batch script if you have more than two
> fossils. Don't forget the 'start' to spawn duplicate command line
> environments for your web servers.
>
> Good luck,
> Adam J Richardson
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