exactly, as I said in my example. But requests come in a "real" ip, not 0.0.0.0 . I want to know that ip



On Fri, Jan 18, 2013 at 4:21 PM, Stas Boukarev <stassats@gmail.com> wrote:
Vassilis Radis <radisb@gmail.com> writes:

> Well, (acceptor-address *acceptor*) returns nil if it has been started with
> no :address initarg. The acceptor-address returns the :address argument at
> the initialization of the acceptor which designates on which ip or hostname
> the server listens (if :address is not supplied server listens on all the
> interfaces), not on which ip address a request came through.
>
> Example:
>
> I have 2 interfaces on my machine: eth0 (192.168.1.1) and eth1 (8.8.8.8) .
> If I start an acceptor with no address supplied, hunchentoot receives
> requests on both of these interfaces and (acceptor-address *acceptor*)
> returns nil which implies that it listens on 0.0.0.0 .But each request has
> to come through one of them. How can I find on which one a request came
> through?
NIL means 0.0.0.0

--
With best regards, Stas.

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