Alias hostname for localhost
Solution 1:
When the browser sees http://localwebapp/
it first tries to determine the IP address of localwebapp
. If this succeeds, the browser establishes a TCP connection with that host, using a specific port (which is 80 for HTTP, unless some other port is mentioned in the URL).
Resolving localwebapp
to an IP address does not take port information into account, so pointing http://localwebapp/
to http://localhost:1234/
can only be done by means of a HTTP redirection.
To make http://localwebapp:1234/
the same as http://localhost:1234/
, edit the hosts
file of your operating system by adding the line
127.0.0.1 localwebapp
The location of the hosts
file depends on the operating system. For UNIX-like operating systems, its usually /etc/hosts
.
Solution 2:
the second option (just alias the hostname without the port information) is possible by adding localwebapp to your hostsfile ( /etc/hosts
in *NIX, c:\windows\system32\drivers\etc\hosts
in windows)
adding
127.0.0.1 localwebapp
should do the trick (assuming your local python script does not do virtual hosting and serves the same content for all domains requested)
Solution 3:
You can make localwebapp
as alias for localhost
in /etc/hosts
. Then you can run a webserver (Apache and friends) to detect that hostname.
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName localwebapp
# redirect elsewhere
Redirect localhost:1234
</VirtualHost>