Redtaco4x4 All American 1410 Posts user info edit post |
Heres what I'm trying to do: Myself and a friend have hostnames registered through Dyndns.com. He's getting rid of his internet service at home and won't be able to host his website there anymore. I'm going to host his site on my system and try and let him keep his hostname. Using dyndns.com, we can both set the IP address direction to my system easy enough, but how can I set things up so his name goes to his site and my name goes to my site? It would be easy to put all his stuff in a folder and do something like Hissite.com/hispage/ but I don't like that. Any other ways? Am I making any sense here?
[Edited on December 11, 2005 at 3:41 PM. Reason : diagram didn't work quite right...] 12/11/2005 3:40:35 PM |
Genki All American 590 Posts user info edit post |
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/q190008/ 12/11/2005 4:03:54 PM |
joe17669 All American 22728 Posts user info edit post |
if using apache, you can use vhosts 12/11/2005 4:09:13 PM |
spookyjon All American 21682 Posts user info edit post |
It's incredibly easy to do with apache. 12/11/2005 6:35:49 PM |
Raige All American 4386 Posts user info edit post |
Hey cool Genki! Thanks for that link. I've know how to do it with different IP's but not different headers. Never looked either. Showed me a bunch of other cool things too. 12/11/2005 9:35:46 PM |
Gimmick Veteran 130 Posts user info edit post |
these folks are misleading you
the unfortunate truth is that computers have not advanced far enough to perform this feat 12/11/2005 11:09:07 PM |