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.