On Sat, Feb 28, 2009 at 4:30 PM, Derek Ragona
de...@computinginnovations.com wrote:
At 09:40 AM 2/28/2009, Andrei Brezan wrote:
Hello list,
I have a strange problem and I don't know what to relate it to. My
ISP
changed my IP from (eg) 10.1.1.1 to 15.1.1.1. I have changed my zone
On Saturday 28 February 2009 07:43:13 Andrei Brezan wrote:
Andrei Brezan wrote:
ping mail.domain.com it tries to get to 10.1.1.1 the old ip and gets
time to live exceeded fro an ip along the route. When i try to ping
domain.com it gets all ok as it pings the new ip.
Disregard my noise.
At 09:40 AM 2/28/2009, Andrei Brezan wrote:
Hello list,
I have a strange problem and I don't know what to relate it to.
My ISP
changed my IP from (eg) 10.1.1.1 to 15.1.1.1. I have changed my zone
files to reflect that change.
dig -t mx domain.com results in mail.domain.com 3600 IN A
Hello list,
I have a strange problem and I don't know what to relate it to. My ISP
changed my IP from (eg) 10.1.1.1 to 15.1.1.1. I have changed my zone
files to reflect that change.
dig -t mx domain.com results in mail.domain.com 3600 IN A 15.1.1.1
(the new ip). However when i try:
ping
Andrei Brezan wrote:
Hello list,
I have a strange problem and I don't know what to relate it to. My ISP
changed my IP from (eg) 10.1.1.1 to 15.1.1.1. I have changed my zone
files to reflect that change.
dig -t mx domain.com results in mail.domain.com 3600 IN A 15.1.1.1
(the new
please read apache manual and set up httpd.conf right. it's not only
possible, but very often used, i have 30 sites on one IP
On Sun, 4 Nov 2007, Brian Finniff wrote:
My question is, if you are running a website for 2 different people on the
Internet and they both wanted to acquire a
On Sun, Nov 04, 2007 at 06:00:27PM -0500, Brian Finniff wrote:
My question is, if you are running a website for 2 different people on the
Internet and they both wanted to acquire a domain but you only have one IP
address, would it be possible to forward each domain to the same IP address
My question is, if you are running a website for 2 different people on the
Internet and they both wanted to acquire a domain but you only have one IP
address, would it be possible to forward each domain to the same IP address and
somehow each one becomes distinct? If so, how is this possible?
Of course, just setup a virtual host in your httpd.conf file point
the dns to the same ip. Apache will take care of the rest.
Brian Finniff wrote:
My question is, if you are running a website for 2 different people on the
Internet and they both wanted to acquire a domain but you only have
Hi,
Of course, just setup a virtual host in your httpd.conf file point
the dns to the same ip. Apache will take care of the rest.
To be a litthe bit more precise, in your Apache configuraton you need
something like:
NameVirtualHost 10.0.0.1
VirtualHost 10.0.0.1
ServerName
Brian Finniff wrote:
My question is, if you are running a website for 2 different people on the
Internet and they both wanted to acquire a domain but you only have one IP
address, would it be possible to forward each domain to the same IP address and
somehow each one becomes distinct? If so,
to a single IP via DNS (you can even enable wildcard
records in certain DNS server software that will match *.yourdomain.com to a
default IP).
That tells {client_software} that {this_FQDN} is {this_IP}.
{client_software}will use that information in whatever form is suitable to
{client_software
generic in the answer, you can map as many FQDN (fully
qualified domain name) as you want to a single IP via DNS (you can
even enable wildcard records in certain DNS server software that will
match *.yourdomain.com to a default IP).
That tells {client_software} that {this_FQDN} is {this_IP
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