On Tue, May 19, 2009 at 07:00:44PM +0000, Daniel Lemay wrote: > Hi, > > I have a service like the following: > > virtual=x.x.x.x:7777 > real=192.168.58.1:7777 masq > real=192.168.58.2:7777 masq > service=http > request="index.html" > receive="Test page" > scheduler=rr > protocol=tcp > > > The url I want to monitor is: http://example1:7777/index.html > > The following wget works: wget http://example1.com:77777/index.html, > but http://example1:7777/index.html and > http://192.168.58.1:7777/index.html doesn't (the address is resolved, > but the server (oracle stack)) doesn't return the page (Bad request). > > > In my /etc/hosts I have the following line: > 192.168.58.1 exemple1.com example1 > > I suppose the Oracle stack is "badly configured" (only works with FQDN) > but I have no control on this. > > My questions: > > 1) Is ldirectord creating the url with the IP or it gets the name in > /etc/hosts? I supposed the IP since it doesn't work and the FQDN is the > first in my /etc/hosts file. > > 2) Is there a way for me to "force" ldirectord to used the FQDN in the url?
Hi Daniel, In all cases ldirectory will connect to 192.168.58.1 port 7777. I suspect that oracle is expecting the HTTP client to specify a virtual host inside the HTTP request, which would explain the behaviour that you have obverved with wget. You should be able to observe this using a tool like ngrep. Could you try adding the virtualhost directive to your configuration? Something like the following: virtual=x.x.x.x:7777 real=192.168.58.1:7777 masq real=192.168.58.2:7777 masq service=http request="index.html" receive="Test page" scheduler=rr protocol=tcp virtualhost=example1.com _______________________________________________ Please read the documentation before posting - it's available at: http://www.linuxvirtualserver.org/ LinuxVirtualServer.org mailing list - lvs-users@LinuxVirtualServer.org Send requests to lvs-users-requ...@linuxvirtualserver.org or go to http://lists.graemef.net/mailman/listinfo/lvs-users