Haha - the problem is I'm an idiot :) Your message made me go back and check my assumptions, and sure enough, I took stupid pills today.
I had created a test page that spits out the request headers in HTML, and I checked the page in Firefox bypassing the proxy, then checked it *by telnetting to port 80* using the proxy. Of course there were no user-agent request headers when I used telnet! I saw the lack of request headers and thought "the proxy is dropping them!" <sheepish-grin/>, -T On Thu, Dec 17, 2009 at 6:01 PM, Nick Kew <n...@webthing.com> wrote: > Todd Volkert wrote: > >> Actually, I'm not even sure what I'm trying to do is possible - can >> someone confirm that I'm attempting something that can be done? :) >> >> Basically, I have foo.war and bar.war and own the foo.com <http://foo.com> >> and bar.com <http://bar.com> domains. I want to deploy the two web-apps >> in Tomcat on port 8080 and have httpd send http://www.foo.com/ to >> http://localhost:8080/foo/ and http://www.bar.com/ to >> http://localhost:8080/bar/ so that each web-app looks like its own >> top-level web-app in its own domain. Is this doable, 'cause I can't seem to >> find anyone out there who's done it :) >> > > What's the problem? > > The rules for which request headers are passed through are determined > by the HTTP standard, not by Apache. In some cases you have choices, > documented in the mod_proxy_http page. > > If you tell us what's really the problem, maybe someone can help. > > -- > Nick Kew > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > The official User-To-User support forum of the Apache HTTP Server Project. > See <URL:http://httpd.apache.org/userslist.html> for more info. > To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@httpd.apache.org > " from the digest: users-digest-unsubscr...@httpd.apache.org > For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@httpd.apache.org > >