- From: Jan Brittenson <bson@bugmotel.eng.sun.com>
- Date: Wed, 15 Feb 1995 14:54:21 -0800
- To: march@europa.com
- Cc: http-wg%cuckoo.hpl.hp.com@hplb.hpl.hp.com
Date: Sun, 12 Feb 1995 12:50:45 -0800 From: march@europa.com (M. Hedlund) > Not only is it likely, it is happening quite a bit. There are plenty of > businesses buying machines and connections exclusively to put up web > servers, and they often want to split costs with other businesses. It's even more complicated than that. I have a permanent 24 h link home over modem, and five machines home on my net. I've set up a web tree elsewhere, right at a T1 socket, but can't stick it into my named database for obvious reasons. I want to have www.homenet.com point to it (by DNS), and have the server at the T1 socket do the right thing. Modifying httpd to look at the header and pick the root from a config file would be trivial, if the information were just passed. Playing games with IP addresses is not an option in my case, since I doubt the T1 link owner will let me play around with their routers and interface configurations. Since any old Sparc-1 with 2GB disk and 32MB memory will make a splendid server, the expensive resource is net bandwidth. In the future, more and more small businesses, individuals, and organizations (the San Francisco Aids Foundation is trying to do something very close to what I'm trying to do), will buy shares in a dedicated off-site web server. It'll sit right next to an existing T1 socket to reduce telco costs I can't see why there's even any discussion about this. Just add the damn field to the spec so people can get things working. -- Jan Brittenson bson@eng.sun.com
Received on Wednesday, 15 February 1995 14:58:20 UTC