Discuss Digest, Vol 35, Issue 8

Mark Woodward markw-FJ05HQ0HCKaWd6l5hS35sQ at public.gmane.org
Sun Sep 12 21:02:29 EDT 2010


What you want to do is pretty easy if you know what you are looking for.

Hosting multiple web sites from the same IP is trivial if they are 
hosted on the same machine. Google for "apache mass hosting."

If you want to host different web-sites on different computers, but on 
the same IP, that a bit more difficult. You need to answer requests on a 
specific machine on a specific IP, but you can use Linux LVS or Nginx to 
answer the requests, analyze the request line and direct it to the 
correct server for the operation.


> From: Myrle Francis<mafmanet-Re5JQEeQqe8AvxtiuMwx3w at public.gmane.org>
> Subject: Trying to learn something but not sure what to Google...
> To: discuss-mNDKBlG2WHs at public.gmane.org
> Message-ID:<4C8A5F25.8020004-Re5JQEeQqe8AvxtiuMwx3w at public.gmane.org>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
>
> Hello (and as always thank you in advance)
>
> I have a Linux web server that I use with dydns and understand with a
> single web server I set up port forwarding but..
>
> what I don't understand is how to get two web servers working behind my
> router(dd-wrt) if they are both using port 80.
>
> I understand on a LAN DNS would take the address web1.network.com and
> send it to the proper machine using dns with port 80.  How does this
> work with two web servers (ie web1.network.net and web2.network.net)
> behind my router.  do I have to set up a dns server in a dmz?
>
> also in  my first example my web1 is not in in a DMZ (maybe that is a
> bad idea..) but on it own private network.
>
> i'm just looking for what he buzz word is so I can  Google it and any
> help would be appreciated.
>
>
> thanks
> Myrle.
>    





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