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In my IIS 7.5 hosted in a Windows Server 2008 R2 I have several websites with no DNS address assigned. Let's take for instance the site (as named in IIS) with site name mySite. I have for this site the standard binding with no host name.

enter image description here

Suppose that my server IP address is, for instance, 101.22.23.01. Therefore it seems logic to me that in order to access the website, I should place in the address bar of my browser:

[IP_address]/[sitename]

in this case:

101.22.23.01/mySite

but it does not work. Shall I specify something else in the bindings?

2 Answers 2

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You will need to use host headers and create the appropriate DNS records to host multiple websites using the same IP Address.

edit: For example, you will need to create bindings for each site. Create a binding for port 80 and enter the www.mysite.com in the hostname field and create the dns entry (or setup a local hosts file for testing) to point to that IP Addres. Create a second binding for port 80 and enter www.myothersite.com in the hostname field and create the DNS entry.

In other words, you can't access those multiple sites without dns mapping or setting up the sites to bind on another port or IP Address

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  • Thanks for your answer. However my purpose was to test the sites without creating a DNS record. Assume that all the sites use a different port, there should be some way to access them by using the IP address and let IIS route the request tot he appropriate site... Oct 1, 2012 at 14:22
  • if they are using a different port, you get to them by going to the port (mysite.com:81) if it's bound to port 81. hostheaders is the way IIS routes requests if they are bound to the same IP and port.
    – Rex
    Oct 1, 2012 at 14:23
  • In theory, you could setup a default page to process any request hitting the server, parse the data after and then redirect the user to the appropriate site.. but I think that's kludgey, prone to failure, and over complicating the issue.
    – Rex
    Oct 1, 2012 at 14:25
  • sorry, I edited my question mayeb now it looks more clear Oct 1, 2012 at 14:28
  • edit: Based on the picture of the binding, you can just go to 101.22.23.01 and it will go to that site.
    – Rex
    Oct 1, 2012 at 14:30
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You can add host name(mySiteHostName.com) and IP address(101.22.23.01) in the binding.

You need to add entry in your client hosts file. C:\Windows\System32\drivers\etc\hosts file

101.22.23.01 mySiteHostName.com.

Now you can test in client machine without creating dns record.

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