I'm not sure about reading URLs (incoming or outgoing), but for re-writing them, there is an example in http://web2py.com/book/default/chapter/04#Pattern-Based-System showing a re-write involving the query string:
'/test/default/index?vars=\g<any>' Presumably if <any> could be a match of the subdomain, this would work. Anthony On Saturday, October 1, 2011 6:23:10 PM UTC-4, Jonathan Lundell wrote: > > On Oct 1, 2011, at 3:13 PM, Jonathan Lundell wrote: > > On Oct 1, 2011, at 2:13 PM, Farsheed Ashouri wrote: > > I think i have no problem with DNS. cause i put a * value in subdomain > setting of DNS and now i have access to any sub-domain i want. > So you say there is no way to solve this in routes.py? > > > With the regex mode, perhaps. > > > On second thought, I *think* that the regex router doesn't give you access > to the query string. So you might have to make the user part of the arg > string (part of the URL path) in order for the router to work for you. >