Hello,

I'd like to do the same thing with you, but I did not totally understand 
what to do in routes.py. Seems like I should modify routes_in and 
routes_out? Did you manage?

Cenk

On Friday, February 8, 2013 8:31:36 PM UTC+1, Jim S wrote:
>
> Thanks Massimo.  Since I'm wsgi illiterate I'll try it with routes.py.  My 
> skills aren't much in this area but I'll give it a try and see what I can 
> come up with.
>
> -Jim
>
> On Friday, February 8, 2013 12:54:08 PM UTC-6, Massimo Di Pierro wrote:
>>
>> I just talked to them about this. If you have multiple web2py instances 
>> you can have multiple wsgi config files pointing different domains to the 
>> different apps. I do not like this solution very much.
>>
>> You can indeed use routes.
>>
>> Perhaps we can add a feature to web2py so that instead of using routes.py 
>> the relevant parameters is set in the wsgi config file to you can have 
>> multiple ones (for different domains) pointing to one of the same web2py 
>> instance but behaving differently.
>>
>> Massimo
>>
>> On Friday, 8 February 2013 07:30:11 UTC-6, Jim S wrote:
>>>
>>> Hi
>>>
>>> Just got started with PythonAnywhere.  I have multiple web2py apps I'd 
>>> like to host there under the same web2py instance.  However, I want 
>>> different domain names to point to them.  Can I use the web2py routes.py to 
>>> do that, or is there a better way to handle it with pythonanywhere.  Their 
>>> support didn't offer much for me.
>>>
>>

-- 

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"web2py-users" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to web2py+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.


Reply via email to