On Tue, Jan 28, 2020 at 9:18 AM o1bigtenor <o1bigtenor@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Tue, Jan 28, 2020 at 7:21 AM Eric Covener <covener@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > So I'm coming back to my previous question - - - - how do I set up different > > > FQDNs (hostnames) on 'one' machine? > > > > On your client you test from? Edit /etc/hosts and make up whatever > > hosts you want. > > For other users? Actually setup the hostnames you need to all point to > > the same IP. > > > OK this I've experimented with. > If I edit the /etc/hosts file I can add any number of names and they > all resolve > to localhost (or the machine but they all resolve to the same place). > When I change > the hostname - - - - the FQDN - - - - well I don't see how there is > more than one > option for that. So when an application complains that there isn't an > 'appropriate' > FQDN (or whatever the actual wording in the complaint was) then the hostname > or FQDN was 'not' set. > > So I can set up /etc/hosts like: > 192.168.1.2 white > 192.168.1.2 yellow > 192.168.1.2 green > 192.168.1.2 red > and I have different hosts. But my FQDN is still 'pink' well that > doesn't seem to work. > > So what could I do to resolve this issue? > > I cannot use 192.168.1.2 for my FQDN. > I do not know how to have more than one FQDN. > > Do I change my machines FQDN to pink.com and then use the other hosts > in /etc/hosts? > You can make up FQDN's in /etc/hosts the same way and they'll also resolve for your clients and be matchable by name-based virtual hosts. The machines notion of its own single FQDN is not relevant to 99% of httpd configurations. It's only relevant if you omit the ServerName directive and the server has to guess. --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx For additional commands, e-mail: users-help@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx