I'll throw in some more info ...
<snip>
</snip>Note that http://www.mysite.com and http://mysite.com are actually considered separate domains as far as Witango is concerned, even though they both point at the same set of files. And Domain Scope variables are not accessible by a TAF executed under a different Domain name.
This is correct. But you can also use domains.ini to group hostnames into a Witango domain. So if you had this in your domains.ini:
[Domains]
mysite = a site that is mine
anothersite = some other site [mysite]
1=mysite.com
2=www.mysite.com
3=www.foo.com [anothersite]
1=anothersite.com
2=www.anothersite.comThen once a domain var was assigned from mysite.com it would be available to requests going to mysite.com, www.mysite.com or www.foo.com. But it would not be available on anothersite.com or www.anothersite.com.
Also, the <@DOMAIN> tag will return the value in the brackets for the domain grouping. So for all requests going to mysite.com, www.mysite.com or www.foo.com, <@DOMAIN> would return "mysite". You can use the <@DOMAIN> value in your database and TAFs to determine what domain you're in.
- Jeff --
Jeffrey Bohmer VisionLink, Inc. _________________________________ 303.402.0170 www.visionlink.org _________________________________ People. Tools. Change. Community. ________________________________________________________________________ TO UNSUBSCRIBE: Go to http://www.witango.com/maillist.taf
