Tom,
I'd be curious what the output of your 'apachectl -t -D DUMP_VHOSTS'
looks like?
I've come across this problem as well in a related degree, and
interrogating the output of the 'DUMP_VHOSTS' above will at least tell
you the top-to-bottom order your vhost requests will travel down in your
configuration.
One way I had to solve it was take my VirtualHost container for
'_default_', put it in it's own configuration file and include it prior
to any other vhost config files in httpd.conf. It looked a bit like
this in my httpd.conf:
NameVirtualHost *:80
Include conf/mydefault-vhost.conf # which would contain your default
vhost container for url2.mydomain.com
Include conf/*-vhost.conf # contain your others like url1, urlfoo,
urlboo, urlbar, etc., it would be one config, or many, your choice.
Using this approach, I did notice that a blanket wildcard/greedy
include of all *.conf file gives you varying results, especially if you
were managing all your vhosts in separate configuration files for
clarity/organization sake like I was.
Otherwise, sounds like you've verified client-side caching. My last
logical thought would be perhaps if you're not using CNAME's in DNS for
this and right-out calling them from the client without any hostname
resolution on those FQDNs, that you need to add that those host aliases
of 'url1.mydomain.com' and 'url1.mydomain.com' to your /etc/hosts or
equiv in Windows.
-A
On Thu, 3 Jan 2013 08:05:26 -0800 (PST), Tom Frost wrote:
If I use either url1.mydomain.com or url2.mydomain.com they both go
to the url2.mydomain.com VirtualHost site.
I have cleared caches and done a Ctrl-F5 to force the page to
reload.
I'm sure that its something to do with epages, as I said there is a
lot of other config in there but I'm honestly not sure what is what.
Thanks again for your help, any more suggestions would be
appreciated.
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