Anything outside the tags has two functions: (1) The defaults for the Virtual Hosts, and (2) the actual settings for anything that doesn't match any of the Virtual Hosts. The solution is to put a ServerName line in each Virtual Hosts section. -BVG > Charlie Bullen wrote: > > I am currently hosting 1 domain on my server. It is a Gateway > microserver running redhat linux and Apache 1.3 > > THe server name setting is > > ServerName microserver.travelexecutives.com > > this is the configuration for the travelexecutives.com domain > > > ServerAdmin webmaster@travelexecutives.com > DocumentRoot /home/groups/home > ServerName microserver.travelexecutives.com > ErrorLog logs/travelexecutives.com-error_log > TransferLog logs/travelexecutives.com-access_log > > > I now want to host another domain, travelcruise.com on the same > server. > I still have several IP address available. Based on my reading of the > my > redhat manual and Apache documentation, I think I should add the > following to the httpd.conf file if I use the IP address > 63.226.30.195. > I have established the /home/groups/travelcruise > directory > > ServerAdmin webmaster@travelexecutives.com > DocumentRoot /home/groups/travelcruise > ServerName microserver.travelexecutives.com > ErrorLog logs/travelcruise.com-error_log > TransferLog logs/travelcruise.com-access_log > microserver.travelexecutives.com > > > What is not clear is should I keep the servername the same for all = > domains, namley microserver.travelexecutives.com > or should I change it to microserver.travelcruise.com ? > > Regards, > > Charlie