On 6/15/05, David Adam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> (You're probably not going to like this answer - all I can say is that I'm
> sorry, I'm not an Apache developer and I'm not a mod_rewrite guru. Nor do
> I manage more than about fifty users with CGI web pages, and our attitude
> to them is very mu
> > Have you tried looking at the X-Forwarded-For header? (Appears in CGI
> > scripts as HTTP_X_FORWARDED_FOR) This is passed automatically by
> > mod_proxy, as far as I know.
>
> yes I know this but all the scripts of my customers are looking for
> REMOTE_ADDR etc. So how can I forward this to my
Hi,
> Have you tried looking at the X-Forwarded-For header? (Appears in CGI
> scripts as HTTP_X_FORWARDED_FOR) This is passed automatically by
> mod_proxy, as far as I know.
yes I know this but all the scripts of my customers are looking for
REMOTE_ADDR etc. So how can I forward this to my inter
On Wed, 15 Jun 2005, Werner Schalk wrote:
> I do use mod_proxy as a reverse / forward proxy as follows:
>
> Inet -> Server (public IP, Apache 2) -> Internal Server (same system, virtual
> server using Linux vserver - private IP address, Apache 2)
>
> Now all the requests that are send to the public
Hi,
I do use mod_proxy as a reverse / forward proxy as follows:
Inet -> Server (public IP, Apache 2) -> Internal Server (same system, virtual
server using Linux vserver - private IP address, Apache 2)
Now all the requests that are send to the public IP address are forwarded to
the internal ser