Nick,

Thanks for the help, but we're still not quite right.

I'm not using an nginx instance to load balance here; it's just an
application pointing directly at a singular app instance, on which I
have installed this service.
It could well be just a lack of sysadmin skills as Frederic pointed
out; I've no idea how to open ports using security groups.

Martin.

On Jul 28, 5:02 pm, Nickolas Toursky <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi Martin,
>
> You have numerous options here, depending on what do you wish exactly.
>
> 1. Make port 8080 of application servers accessible byhttp://mydomain.com/:
> Create a file /etc/nginx/app.conf, with a line APP_PORT="8080".
>
> 2. Make it accessible viahttp://jetty.mydomain.com/:
> Assign this application to www instance, then edit
> /etc/nginx/nginx.conf to forward this particular hostname to app
> server's port 8080.
>
> 3. Make it accessible viahttp://jetty.mydomain.com:8080/:
> Assign an application to app role.
>
> Nick
>
> 2009/7/28 Martin Sweeney <[email protected]>:
>
>
>
> > I have Jetty (http://jetty.mortbay.org/) running on port 8080 on my
> > app server (no load balancer) on farm #2127.
>
> > If I browse internallyhttp://localhost:8080I see the correct page,
> > but any attempt to view the port externally (http://mydomain.com:8080)
> > just times out.
>
> > nmap tells me the port is open
>
> > Any pointers on how to expose this port to the outside world, or...if
> > I'm completely off track with this?
>
> > Martin.
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