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I'm hosting locally a web-site (http://gfd.us) which I'd like to expose to internet. I have a second level domain name (from NoIP service) publicly available: http://myname.ddns.net which points to Default Web Site on my IIS server.

The problem here is that the internal web-site expects a second level domain name as well, i.e. http://secondname.gfd.us.

Right now to solve this problem I'm using the mod_rewrite module form IIS by binding to a specific port, i.e.

mod_rewrite rule parameters

  1. Pattern - (.*)
  2. Condition - {SERVER_PORT} = 91
  3. Rewrite URL: http://secondname.gfd.us/{R:1}

Everything works as expected, when I open http://myname.ddns.net:91 it will actually open the internal web-site http://secondname.gfd.us

What I don't like here is that if I need to use a different second level domain name for exposed web-site, i.e. http://coolname.gfd.us, then I need to have another rule bound to another port. I'd like to have this more dynamic.

I tried to change the Pattern to be like this (.*)\gfd_(.*) and the rewrite URL to be http://{R:2}.gfd.us/{R:1}, but it doesn't work as expected. When I open http://myname.ddns.net:91/gfd_coolname the site itself opens with needed second level domain name, but all of the CSS, JS and images files are pointing to wrong URLs as they are not being rewritten correctly.

Is this possible to achieve using mod_rewrite ?

1 Answer 1

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You probably should ditch mod_rewrite and configure many Host-Headers for this website,

so along with gfd.us you should add configuration for the same IP and file location with host header myname.ddns.net

It also looks like you can use wildcard since IIS10 if you want to.

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