Just to close this out, m#regex# worked perfectly, thanks for the tip.
On Thu, Aug 25, 2016 at 4:27 PM, Eric Covener wrote:
> On Thu, Aug 25, 2016 at 3:59 PM, Brian A. Davis
> wrote:
> >
>
> The limitation is that you cannot use the separator inside the regex,
> even when you escape it. It's
I will investigate that.
On Thu, Aug 25, 2016 at 4:48 PM, Daniel wrote:
> Why not just use the directive "UseCanonicalName on"?
>
> El 25/8/2016 10:27 p. m., "Eric Covener" escribió:
>
>> On Thu, Aug 25, 2016 at 3:59 PM, Brian A. Davis
>> wrote:
>> >
>>
>> The limitation is that you cannot u
I'm not sure if that will working when using Apache for a forward proxy.
I only want to allow proxied request to *.foo.com. where foo.com is the
domain of the target of the request, not the domain of the apache server.
On Thu, Aug 25, 2016 at 4:48 PM, Daniel wrote:
> Why not just use the direc
Why not just use the directive "UseCanonicalName on"?
El 25/8/2016 10:27 p. m., "Eric Covener" escribió:
> On Thu, Aug 25, 2016 at 3:59 PM, Brian A. Davis
> wrote:
> >
>
> The limitation is that you cannot use the separator inside the regex,
> even when you escape it. It's a limitation in th
On Thu, Aug 25, 2016 at 3:59 PM, Brian A. Davis wrote:
>
The limitation is that you cannot use the separator inside the regex,
even when you escape it. It's a limitation in the expression engine
used for If, not the regex library.
You can use m#...# in your case.
--
Eric Covener
cove...@gmai
Hello,
I'm trying to reject requests hitting my apache proxy which are NOT going
to *.foo.com, *.foo.com:443 or *.foo.com/blahblahblah. I'm trying to avoid
bogus requests like foo.com.baddomain.com.
The regex I'm using is:
\.foo.com(?:\:\d{2,5}|\/.*)?$
This is working exactly how I want on http