On Sun, 3 Jul 2005, Ben wrote: > I did. Here's a snip: > > NameVirtualHost xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx:80 > > <VirtualHost xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx:80> > DocumentRoot /www/svgeek > ServerName www.svgeek.com > </VirtualHost> > > <VirtualHost xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx:80> > DocumentRoot /www/bluesky > ServerName www.blueskyinnovations.com > </VirtualHost> > > <VirtualHost xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx:80> > DocumentRoot /www/bluesky > ServerName www.power-boot.com > </VirtualHost> You can simplify this setup like: NameVirtualHost xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx:80 <VirtualHost xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx:80> DocumentRoot /www/svgeek ServerName www.svgeek.com </VirtualHost> <VirtualHost xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx:80> DocumentRoot /www/bluesky ServerName www.blueskyinnovations.com ServerAlias www.power-boot.com </VirtualHost> Or if you want to consolidate a set of URLs to a single URL: NameVirtualHost *:80 <VirtualHost *:80> ServerName dag.wieers.com DocumentRoot /var/www/dag.wieers.com/ </VirtualHost> <VirtualHost *:80> ServerName dag.wieers.be ServerAlias www.dag.wieers.com www.dag.wieers.be Redirect Permanent / http://dag.wieers.com/ </VirtualHost> This way you prevent people bookmarking an older URL that might be out of use after some timeframe. Tip: It's also much better for Google, since all links to your site will go to a unique location (not spread over different domains holding the same content). Kind regards, -- dag wieers, dag@xxxxxxxxxx, http://dag.wieers.com/ -- [all I want is a warm bed and a kind word and unlimited power]