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
>
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