We'll create fresh WordPress site with MultiDomain installed. You have 20 minutes to test the plugin after that site we'll be deleted.
If you need more customization between domains, WordPress MU is a better option.
Note that you usually won’t need to configure your primary domain — MultiDomain will automatically fall back to your WordPress defaults if not configuration is present for a domain.
In config.php:
<?php
$domains = array(
array(
'domain' => 'myalternatedomain.com',
'siteurl' => 'http://myalternatedomain.com',
'home' => 'http://myalternatedomain.com'
)
);
?>
In config.php:
<?php
$domains = array(
array(
'domain' => 'example1.com',
'siteurl' => 'http://example1.com',
'home' => 'http://example1.com'
),
array(
'domain' => 'example2.com',
'siteurl' => 'http://example2.com',
'home' => 'http://example2.com',
'blogname' => 'Example 2'
),
array(
'domain' => 'example3.com',
'siteurl' => 'http://example3.com',
'home' => 'http://example3.com',
'template' => 'twentyten',
'blogname' => 'I have a different name...',
'blogdescription' => '..and description'
)
);
?><h3>Tag Usage</h3>
The provided short codes let you tailor your content per domain if needed. [MultiDomain_else] and [MultiDomain_default] are identical.
[MultiDomain_if domain="example1.com"]
Content only people visiting on example1.com will see.
[/MultiDomain_if]
[MultiDomain_else]
Content anyone visiting on any other domain will see.
[/MultiDomain_else]
Normal content everyone will see.