Sam,
  From what I know, which is not much, a server name could be any ID given
to a computer.  It could be an IP, it could be a domain or "sub"domain, or
it could be any ID defined in a /etc/hosts or equivelent (which would only
have to be defined on the visitor's computer).  I believe this value is
defined to be whatever your VirtualHost is defined to be.  There could be
ServerAliases which resolve better than the actual servername.

  You can try a local getbyhostname() (which may be OS-dependent an/or
deprecated) or something similar, but there is no gurantee you will get a
good reverse-IP-lookup resolve.  Try searching the web for "man
getbyhostname".  You may need to find something newer to handle IPv6
addresses (if that is a concern).

  It is true that when a visitor uses "localhost" to access a webserver, it
is translated into "127.0.0.1" (I believe on both sides).

  I know it's not the best and most definitive answer, but I hope it helps
a little.

Dave



On 5/9/07, Sam Carleton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

I am working on the access to my kiosk system, one condition I need to
handle in a unique way is when a web browser is run on the same
physical machine as Apache.  It is obvious when using localhost or
127.0.0.1.  But when the URL is the machine name, I seem to be getting
an IP address.  I do see in r->server->server_hostname, is there any
way to convert that into the IP address?

Sam




--
David Wortham
Senior Web Applications Developer
Unspam Technologies, Inc.
(408) 338-8863

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