i'm neither an expert nor has a thorough knowledge regarding the subject.
but from my elementary point of view i'd say you cannot just make your
own domain name and expose it in public domain and expect anyone with
internet can just enter your url and presto they are in your website. dns
must be handled and regulated by a governing body of some sort otherwise
the same dns will have more than one ip assigned to it. but of course you
can pull this off inside your private network where you know all dns in
existence and avoid collision.

in short, if you want your domain to be seen in public you must pay for
it. a lot of dns reseller exist here in the philippines nowadays
especially in the manila and cebu area. and you can pay them thru
bank-to-bank transfer if you don't have a credit card. (.com costs about
P400/year. .ph=P1800/yr, etc)

but maybe you want to be a domain reseller, the reason why you went
through all these troubles in the first place. this i don't how or where
or what agency to go to. but they're there, somewhere ... in
google...heheh. but the dot ph (.ph) regulating body must be here in the
philippines.

  ----- Original Message -----
  From: aldiones
  To: [email protected]
  Subject: Re: [klug] Using Virtual IP of domain
  Date: Tue, 27 Mar 2007 10:10:49 +0800

  salamat kaayo sa pag share sa inyng ideas and experiences.

  salamat kaayo kay at least i know now na naa diay way... salamat gyud
  kaayo.

  i will keep this thread alive once i try out the stuff you guys put
  here.

  salamat! :)

  On 3/27/07, botp <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

    On 3/26/07, aldiones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
    > Naay linux server assigned only with 1 real IP.

    ok. i assume here that "real" means public IP address.

    > Since mo host man sya ug
    > daghan na domains, nag himo ug pipila na virtual IPs through IP
    Aliasing.

    oops. there's a cloud of conflict in there.

    Choose which:

    1 virtualizing the several  domains into one IP.
    2 virtualizing several IPs into one domain.

    The first requirement of the above is a proper DNS setup. You can
    then
    use any (web)server that supports the above, apache will do.

    > One of the domains gi installan ug cgiproxy. Kung ipa-agi sa
    cgiproxy ang
    > request to the whatismyip.com site, ang mugawas na IP is ang
    ang real IP sa
    > server, dili ang virtual IP sa domain.
    > Ang question: Naa bay way or is it even possible na instead na
    ang real IP

    Now, that is another question. Here you want a reverse proxy
    server.
    You can proxy or map (a public server/domain/url) to one or more
    (usually) internal or private servers/domain/url. Since you may
    be
    using Apache as a web server, it is practical that you may use it
    also
    for your reverse proxy.  You can use squid if you like (from
    experience, apache config for reverse proxy is more straight
    forward).

    > sa server ang ipakita, ang virtual IP sa domain ang ipakita?
    Realistic ni
    > sya?

    of course, a lot of sites do it. Almost all big sites do  proxies
    and
    virtuals (either virtual names or virtual IP) for security and
    load
    balancing purpose.

    mas maayo siguro para klaro,  e-drawing imong gusto buhaton. An
    ascii
    text drawing will do. send lang dayon sa klug.

    hinay-hinay lang sa setup. Make sure your dns is functioning
    properly.
    test it. then setup your virtuals (choose hosts or ip-based).
    test
    again. kung k na ang virtuals, setup your reverse proxy. test
    again.
    Ayaw kabalaka, daghan mi maka-test sa imong setup.

    kind regards -botp




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