Re: [Dnsmasq-discuss] URL redirection

2011-07-03 Thread richardvo...@gmail.com
That question was about matching part of the URL path. This one seems just to be about hostnames, which DNS does affect (in most cases). On Sat, Jul 2, 2011 at 5:08 PM, Matthias Andree matthias.and...@gmx.de wrote: Am 02.07.2011 09:30, schrieb Tomas Sironi: Hi people. I'm sure someone has

Re: [Dnsmasq-discuss] URL redirection

2011-07-03 Thread Matthias Andree
Am 03.07.2011 04:22, schrieb richardvo...@gmail.com: That question was about matching part of the URL path. This one seems just to be about hostnames, which DNS does affect (in most cases). Same story - virtual hosting (multiple server names on one server/on one IP address) is ubiquitous, so

Re: [Dnsmasq-discuss] URL redirection

2011-07-02 Thread Lee Maisel
H... Can't imagine what he's up to... LOL Tomas Sironi wrote: Hi people. I'm sure someone has already asked about this, but i wonder if dnsnasq is capable of redirect secified url's. For example, I want all the queries to facebook.com http://facebook.com to go to myserver.dyndns.org

Re: [Dnsmasq-discuss] URL redirection

2011-07-02 Thread Lee Maisel
Oh! Sorry, LOL that makes sense. So instead of just blocking AD sites for your network, have it go to something that loads quick or redirect, to avoid the ads. Great Idea! Lee Tomas Sironi wrote: Ok, I know. Facebook is not the best to put as example. I don't want to make phishing.

Re: [Dnsmasq-discuss] URL redirection

2011-07-02 Thread richardvo...@gmail.com
And here I was thinking block access to facebook from the company network. But DNS wouldn't exactly be the best way to do so. On Sat, Jul 2, 2011 at 11:34 AM, Lee Maisel mai...@lobo.net wrote: Oh! Sorry, LOL  that makes sense.  So instead of just blocking AD sites for your network, have it