[f-nsp] Re: serveriron http on ports other than 80

Bulger, Tim TBulger at ea.com
Thu Dec 5 07:06:19 EST 2002


Errr... 'no port http translate'.. Sorry for the spam.

-----Original Message-----
From: Bulger, Tim 
Sent: Thursday, December 05, 2002 11:56 AM
To: Bill McCaffrey; burnside at kattare.com
Cc: foundry-nsp at puck.nether.net
Subject: RE: [f-nsp] Re: serveriron http on ports other than 80

I believe you are looking for the 'no http port translate' command.. I
suggest searching the ServerIron docs on their site.

-----Original Message-----
From: Bill McCaffrey [mailto:bill at neopets.com] 
Sent: Thursday, December 05, 2002 11:33 AM
To: burnside at kattare.com
Cc: foundry-nsp at puck.nether.net
Subject: [f-nsp] Re: serveriron http on ports other than 80


I don't know about the high port issue, but you can set the health check
to
expect a certain value or string - that should take care of the proxy
issue.

Take a look at this page, it explains more about setting the health
check
status code.

http://www.foundrynet.com/solutions/appNotes/HealthChecks.html


----- Original Message -----
From: <burnside at kattare.com>
To: "Bill McCaffrey" <bill at neopets.com>
Cc: <foundry-nsp at puck.nether.net>
Sent: Thursday, December 05, 2002 3:10 AM
Subject: serveriron http on ports other than 80


> Greetings,
>
>     I'm running several instances of Apache per server.  Many of them
on
> ports above 1024.  (so that normal users can start/stop them.)  Two
> issues I've run into:
>
>     I've tried configuring TCP health checks on the high ports (10000,
> 10010, etc.) via the TCP/UDP port config and it seems to fail the
health
> checks  on the real server every time.  (and thus serves nothing.)  If
I
> connect directly to the servers on the high ports I get the pages I
expect.
>
>     The second issue is that I cannot bind from a low point to a high
> point.  I was kind of hoping to be able to bind port 80 on the virtual
> server to port 10000 (or whatever) on the real server.  This is
> necessary because right now I use apache on port 80 to proxy up to
port
> 10000 (or whatever) on the individual webservers.  So... if the health
> checks just check port 80, the proxy may be up just fine, but the high
> port server may not be up.  Thus the client may see a "proxy failure"
> page if the port 80 server is alive and the port 10000 server is dead.
>
>     Sorry about all the questions.  I just got this serveriron
recently
> and despite reading through most of the docs on the website, there is
> still much I am having trouble figuring out.  ;-)
>
> Cheers,
>
> ~Ethan B.
>
> --------------------------
> Ethan Burnside - Founder
> Kattare Internet Services
> http://www.kattare.com
> --------------------------
>

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