# Realms in Zulip Zulip allows multiple _realms_ to be hosted on a single instance. Realms are the Zulip codebases's internal name for what we refer to in user documentation as an organization (the name "realm" comes from [Kerberos](https://web.mit.edu/kerberos/)). Wherever possible, we avoid using the term `realm` in any user-facing string or documentation; "Organization" is the equivalent term used in those contexts (and we have linters that attempt to enforce this rule in translateable strings). We may in the future modify Zulip's internals to use `organization` instead. The [production docs on multiple realms](../production/multiple-organizations.md) are also relevant reading. ## Creating realms There are two main methods for creating realms. - Using unique link generator - Enabling open realm creation #### Using unique link generator ```bash ./manage.py generate_realm_creation_link ``` The above command will output a URL which can be used for creating a new realm and an administrator user for that realm. The link expires after the creation of the realm. The link also expires if not used within 7 days. The expiration period can be changed by modifying `REALM_CREATION_LINK_VALIDITY_DAYS` in settings.py. ### Enabling open realm creation If you want anyone to be able to create new realms on your server, you can enable open realm creation. This will add a **Create new organization** link to your Zulip homepage footer, and anyone can create a new realm by visiting this link (**/new**). This feature is disabled by default in production instances, and can be enabled by setting `OPEN_REALM_CREATION = True` in settings.py. ## Subdomains One can host multiple realms in a Zulip server by giving each realm a unique subdomain of the main Zulip server's domain. For example, if the Zulip instance is hosted at zulip.example.com, and the subdomain of your organization is acme you can would acme.zulip.example.com for accessing the organization. For subdomains to work properly, you also have to change your DNS records so that the subdomains point to your Zulip installation IP. An `A` record with host name value `*` pointing to your IP should do the job. We also recommend upgrading to at least Zulip 1.7, since older Zulip releases had much less nice handling for subdomains. See our [docs on using subdomains](../production/multiple-organizations.md) for user-facing documentation on this. ### Working with subdomains in development environment By default, Linux does not provide a convenient way to use subdomains in your local development environment. To solve this problem, we use the **zulipdev.com** domain, which has a wildcard A record pointing to 127.0.0.1. You can use zulipdev.com to connect to your Zulip development server instead of localhost. The default realm with the Shakespeare users has the subdomain `zulip` and can be accessed by visiting **zulip.zulipdev.com**. If you are behind a **proxy server**, this method won't work. When you make a request to load zulipdev.com in your browser, the proxy server will try to get the page on your behalf. Since zulipdev.com points to 127.0.0.1 the proxy server is likely to give you a 503 error. The workaround is to disable your proxy for `*.zulipdev.com`. The DNS lookup should still work even if you disable proxy for \*.zulipdev.com. If it doesn't you can add zulipdev.com records in `/etc/hosts` file. The file should look something like this. ```text 127.0.0.1 localhost 127.0.0.1 zulipdev.com 127.0.0.1 zulip.zulipdev.com 127.0.0.1 testsubdomain.zulipdev.com ``` These records are also useful if you want to e.g. run the Puppeteer tests when you are not connected to the Internet.