Bind ip alias
Mark Lowe
mark.lowe at boxstuff.com
Sun May 23 20:10:27 UTC 2004
Hi Jason
I see what you're saying with the apache configuration but I'm sure
bind isn't setup up right as when I ping www.hosteddomain.com. from
another machine it returns the ip alias ip
ping www.hosteddomain.com
PING www.hosteddomain.com (10.0.0.10): 56 data bytes
64 bytes from 10.0.0.10: icmp_seq=0 ttl=64 time=0.259 ms
64 bytes from 10.0.0.10: icmp_seq=1 ttl=64 time=0.242 ms
64 bytes from 10.0.0.10: icmp_seq=2 ttl=64 time=0.259 ms
And so on..
I assume that I should get the external ip if things are setup right.
On 23 May 2004, at 21:41, Jason Staudenmayer wrote:
> I think what your after has nothing to do with bind. Look at apache
> redir
> and virtual hosting.
> If you only have one outside address and want multiple domains on that
> 1
> address that's the way to go.
> The only catch is you MUST use the FQDN and not the IP.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Mark Lowe [mailto:mark.lowe at boxstuff.com]
> Sent: Sunday, May 23, 2004 3:32 PM
> To: redhat-list at redhat.com
> Subject: Bind ip alias
>
>
> Hello
>
> I've been struggling with this for a while now, and could really do
> with someone telling be where I've been going wrong.
>
> We have one server with 1 IP. I've made a number of IP aliases which
> all works fine and dandy. I'm trying to map individual domain names to
> a ip alias.
>
> For example
>
> $ttl 38400
> @ IN SOA mainhost.maindomain.com.
> root.mainhost.maindomain.com. (
> 1084742277
> 10800
> 3600
> 604800
> 38400 )
> hosteddomain.com. IN NS ns.maindomain.com.
> www.hosteddomain.com. IN A 10.0.0.10
> ftp.hosteddomain.com. IN A 10.0.0.10
> mail.hosteddomain.com IN A 10.0.0.10
> hosteddomain.com. IN A 10.0.0.10
>
>
> The problem is when I ping or traceroute to hosteddomain.com it gives
> me the the aliased IP rather than the external one.
>
> How to I get things so to the outside world hosteddomain.com is the
> real ip and to the server its the aliased one?
>
> The main reason I'm trying to get this working is so I can have an ssl
> certificate for domains hosted on our webserver
>
> <VirtualHost 10.0.0.10:80>
> ServerName www.hosteddomain.com
> ..
>
> <VirtualHost 10.0.0.10:443>
> ServerName www.hosteddomain.com
> #Point to ssl cert and such like.
> ..
>
> If anyone can shed any light on this it would be a great help
>
> Cheers
>
> Mark
>
>
>
>
>
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