Hello,
I have installed FDS and activated dsgw which listens on a particular port, let's say 29154.
I have managed to access it on port 80 by running apache2 on the same host and setting up mod_proxy in a particular way but it does only work for some pages.
RewriteRule ^/clients(.*) /directory/clients$1 [R] <Location /annuaire/> ProxyPass http://ds.myorg.com:29154/ ProxyPassReverse http://ds.myorg.com:29154/ </Location>
My problem is that there are hard-coded references to this port in the html files. For an example, after authentication, I have :
<INPUT TYPE="button" VALUE="Return to Main" onClick="top.location.href=\'http://ds.myorg.com:29154/clients/dsgw/bin/lang?context=dsgw&file=\'">
Is there a way to configure this ?
Thanks in advance,
Mikael Kermorgant wrote:
Hello,
I have installed FDS and activated dsgw which listens on a particular port, let's say 29154.
I have managed to access it on port 80 by running apache2 on the same host and setting up mod_proxy in a particular way but it does only work for some pages.
RewriteRule ^/clients(.*) /directory/clients$1 [R] <Location /annuaire/> ProxyPass http://ds.myorg.com:29154/ ProxyPassReverse http://ds.myorg.com:29154/ </Location>
My problem is that there are hard-coded references to this port in the html files. For an example, after authentication, I have :
<INPUT TYPE="button" VALUE="Return to Main" onClick="top.location.href=\'http://ds.myorg.com:29154/clients/dsgw/bin/lang?context=dsgw&file=\'">
Is there a way to configure this ?
I would use squid instead of Apache for a reverse proxy. It should automatically fix things up for you.
Or you can have Apache re-write the URLs for you. See here for an example: http://www.daveyp.com/blog/index.php/archives/76/
rob
389-users@lists.fedoraproject.org