eFestivals Posted October 9, 2012 Report Share Posted October 9, 2012 you can only have one domain name registered to an IP address not correct, not correct at all. I've got two distinct domains on 194.116.175.220 I've got about 40 distinct domains on 91.192.194.155 And I've got about 100 distinct domains on yet another single IP address. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pinhead Posted October 9, 2012 Report Share Posted October 9, 2012 Ahh, are you referring to (the linux equivalent of) Host Header Translation? I believe See use IIS, so they would be able to use this. The IP gets you to the IIS Server, but then IIS reads the URI stem from the address field delivered via the http get request from the browser in order to direct to one or more hostnames for that particular Domain that it is serving. Thus, if you banged in the IP, IIS would read the IP where it expects a <hostname>.<domainname> string but then it would not know which virtual server to route the request to. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Paul ™ Posted October 9, 2012 Report Share Posted October 9, 2012 Woooshhhh Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
eFestivals Posted October 9, 2012 Report Share Posted October 9, 2012 Ahh, are you referring to (the linux equivalent of) Host Header Translation? I believe See use IIS, so they would be able to use this. The IP gets you to the IIS Server, but then IIS reads the URI stem from the address field delivered via the http get request from the browser in order to direct to one or more hostnames for that particular Domain that it is serving. Thus, if you banged in the IP, IIS would read the IP where it expects a <hostname>.<domainname> string but then it would not know which virtual server to route the request to. I wouldn't know the technical names for these sorts of things, but that sounds just about right for what I've been trying to explain. It's defo not the case that only one domain can exist in the DNS for any IP. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pinhead Posted October 9, 2012 Report Share Posted October 9, 2012 It would certainly explain why editing the hosts file would work over typing the IP into the browser address field. Yes, we have one IIS box here hosting about 32 sites on the same IP. We also have another IIS box hosting different sites where each site is on a different IP and each IP is mapped to the adapter on that box - so one host, multiple IP's - then internally IIS routes to the correct site via IP requested. Some development ones can be accessed by adding a port number (e.g. 192.168.0.10:81). Some of our public ones use Host Header http://www.microsoft.com/technet/prodtechnol/WindowsServer2003/Library/IIS/883a9544-3f70-4d46-a6df-bbadbd1fe7de.mspx?mfr=true to direct to different virtual hostnames for the same Domain (www.domain.com, glastonbury.domain.com etc.). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
trickydickie Posted October 9, 2012 Report Share Posted October 9, 2012 Pinhead, i too am confused... you are correct using the IP addy should just take you to the web site. It should go -. look in cache -> then hosts file-> then ISP DNS -then next DNS then -> .com putting in the IP address in the address bar should have given the same results - it did not for me - wonder if this was all just a coincidence DNS changes take time to propagate ... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
trickydickie Posted October 9, 2012 Report Share Posted October 9, 2012 Wow.. in the time I wrote my last post... things have moved on a little, I'll get my coat Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jomilky Posted October 10, 2012 Report Share Posted October 10, 2012 (edited) Woooshhhh Edited October 10, 2012 by jomilky Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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