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Yes, you can (sometimes) resolve an IP Address back to a hostname. Within DNS, an IP Address can be stored against a PTR record. You can use nslookup to resolve both hostnames and IP addresses, though use of nslookup has been deprecated for quite some time. For best results, you should really get a hold of the dig tool.
I have IIS7 on my computer, and I can access it through other computers in my house on the same network through my computer's IP address - 192.168.1.10x Instead of typing in http : //192.168.1.10x...
Before entering a server name of IP address make sure you check the Outbound Rules checkbox. Enter the server name or IP address where the HTTP requests will be forwarded. You will see that the from field in the Outbound rules section will mimic the server name/IP that has just been entered.
When you access the server using a URL with just the IP address of the server, the IP address will be sent in the Host header instead of a domain name. GET / HTTP/1.1 User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; WOW64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/40.0.2214.91 Safari/537.36 Host: 67.212.88.10 Accept: */*
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It is possible to find an IP address of an expired domain if you know where the previous DNS server is. For example if you want to know IP address of domain.com from DNS server nsserver.com, you just type: nslookup domain.com nsserver.com. The result should be like that: Server: nsserver.com Address: 1.2.3.4#53. Name: domain.com Address: 4.3.2.1
Use TCP/IP Properties to manually assign: IP Address Subnet Mask Gateway (Router) IP Address. Then assign static IP Address (from your Router / ISP Settings) for two Manual DNS Addresses. Restart the Desktop PC and assure it is connecting to the Internet properly. Now any other computer can access it by the same IP address, or (as suggested ...
I ran into this exact problem: I was able to connect from macOS via IP address but not via FQDN (like rdp-host.example.com). Adding .local to the end of the hostname did not work nor did pruning DNS servers from system preferences. What did work was adding a dot to the end of the hostname: rdp-host.example.com.
In name-based virtual hosting, also called shared IP hosting, the virtual hosts serve multiple hostnames on a single machine with a single IP address. This is possible because when a web browser requests a resource from a web server using HTTP/1.1 it includes the requested hostname as part of the request.
The -2 is because of the very first address (the network address 209.85.128.0) , and the very last one, which is the broadcast address (209.85.255.255), both addresses cannot be used to point to a host. This is for IPv4 addresses, of course. The whois will return different information when you use a domain name such as google.com.