Hi, yeah rules get much more complicated. I was wanting to avoid getting responses about making the rules do less work and get more suggestions around potential solutions.
I have found ARR limited beyond regex in my experience. On 20 November 2013 11:38, David Connors <[email protected]> wrote: > It depends on the logic. Doing the rule like your example about is a piece > of piss in ARR. > > I have a site that is 50% SharePoint and 50% Wordpress all published > through ARR - works fine. > > David Connors > [email protected] | M +61 417 189 363 > Download my v-card: https://www.codify.com/cards/davidconnors > Follow me on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/davidconnors > Connect with me on LinkedIn: http://au.linkedin.com/in/davidjohnconnors > > > On 20 November 2013 08:26, Dave Walker <[email protected]> wrote: > >> Hi, >> >> yeah we use that now to get us past some issues we have with services etc >> in dev however there is quite a mess of setup - from my experience anyway - >> about each application needing to know alot about other applications which >> didnt really work for me. We also like putting logic into the routing and I >> don't believe you can do this with ARR? >> >> Thanks >> >> >> On 20 November 2013 08:55, David Connors <[email protected]> wrote: >> >>> Have you had a look at application request routing in iis7? >>> On 19 Nov 2013 22:38, "Dave Walker" <[email protected]> wrote: >>> >>>> Hi, >>>> >>>> at work we have a setup with Zeus (stingray now I think) sitting as a >>>> load balancer in front of our web pools. Over time we've used the LB for a >>>> whole lot more than we should have and now have a bunch of logic sitting in >>>> there directing traffic around. >>>> >>>> e.g. we have rules like >>>> >>>> if(string.startsWith('/framework')){ >>>> pool.use('static.content'); >>>> } >>>> >>>> One of the problems with this is that it makes our automated testing on >>>> our local environments more difficult. If we are wanting to test the >>>> integration of two or more sites (something we do quite often) on our >>>> local, development, test, and production environments, then we need >>>> something sitting between the load balancer and the pools doing the work. >>>> >>>> We've talked in the past about using NGINX or Varnish as this layer as >>>> they are scalable solutions however the experience on windows for these >>>> isnt' great. >>>> >>>> I was wondering if anyone had any suggestions or ideas for what/how we >>>> can solve this from a local development machine all the way up to a >>>> production environment. >>>> >>> >> >
