Can't you just have the user have an attribute that tells it what company it belongs too? This presupposes that they have to log in. This is what we do with our hosted subscription
application and it seems to work very well.

Otherwise for a non-login system, I have used the wirehose framework to show different
catalogs etc. dependent on the subdomain.

-James

On Aug 13, 2007, at 10:16 PM, Cheong Hee (Datasonic) wrote:

I have the same application that is currently used by different group of users (or company). I did it in JavaMonitor and gave them different name for application instances and initialized them with few own parameters in
JavaMonitor.  So that when each group of them will access through:
www.mydomain.com/aaa after webserver redirection for group "aaa"
etc..
This made me maintains list of application instances.

The other option is to let user go to the common home page, and have a
selector to choose so that to differentiate the group of users.
But this could be an issue, as it means other groups/companies are exposed
to anyone who go to the common home page.

Is there any better way of design so that the same application could be used
to access their own database, while not to create list of different
application instances in JavaMonitor?

Cheers

Cheong Hee


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