Mod_rewrite?
--- allan juul <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > hi > > i need advice before i waste too much time on the > bleeding obvious. > > we have a setup where we will reverse proxy content > both to our own > backend-servers (which run on IIS) and other > external servers which > content we dont control. one of the reasons we proxy > is because of > speed/performance > > we have an Apache 2.054 up front on port 80 and the > backend is on the > same machine which is running windows 2004 > > > we need to fix broken img src, and absolute links > and that sort of thing > coming from the external servers > > i have fiddled with mod_proxy_html to rewrite stuff > and that works ok, > but have some features that doesn't mix well with > our solution (content > -type is encoded utf-8, where we proxy to iso-8859-1 > for instance. or > some html tags are stripped etc.) also caching > becomes slower because of > this output filter it seems (i guess because of > unknown content-length) > > it seems way overkill to have a mod_perl enabled > frontend, but i'm > pretty confident we could write a mod_perl filter to > do the content > rewrites we need. > > so, is a mod_perl-enabled Apache acting as a proxy > just a sick idea. it > will proxy content and the filter will have to scan > all response content > > hope someone can wipe this down right away ;) > > ./allan > __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com