Hi.
I know next to nothing about load balancing per se, so this will be a
very naive question related to the data below : does it matter ?
I mean, I can see that the load appears to be uneven, but the grand
total seems to be about 10% of the available cpu time.
So do you really care if one
Thank you both for the information. I am still confused on the
fundamental issue though. Is it possible for a proxy to be effectively
invisible? I keep getting different answers from different people.
If I go to a.proxy.com which is proxying a.site.com then I expect that
a good browser will
jamanbo jamanbo wrote:
Thank you both for the information. I am still confused on the
fundamental issue though. Is it possible for a proxy to be effectively
invisible? I keep getting different answers from different people.
If I go to a.proxy.com which is proxying a.site.com then I expect that
On 7/19/08, André Warnier [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
jamanbo jamanbo wrote:
If I go to a.proxy.com which is proxying a.site.com then I expect that
a good browser will refuse to accept cookies in the .site.com domain.
But if it were possibly to configure the proxy so that the browser
thought
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 7/19/08, André Warnier [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
jamanbo jamanbo wrote:
If I go to a.proxy.com which is proxying a.site.com then I expect that
a good browser will refuse to accept cookies in the .site.com domain.
But if it were possibly to configure the proxy so that
I have this URL
http://www.server.com/index.php?article1.html
and work like that
http://www.server.com/?article1.html
But I really really need this
http://www.server.com/article1.html
And I need to work like previous URL and I need to make the changes in
.htaccess file
PLEASE I had try
Hi.
From a recent thread originally dedicated to find out if a proxy server
can be really transparent, I'll first quote a summary from solprovider.
quote
I think the confusion is between an network proxy server and a Web
reverse proxy server.
A network proxy server handles NAT (Network
If the applications use Cookies, the
application Cookies must be rewritten by the Web proxy server because
the browsers use the server name of the Web proxy server, not the
application servers.
1. The browser requests http://myapp.example.com.
2. The Web proxy server myapp.example.com sends
jamanbo jamanbo wrote:
If the applications use Cookies, the
application Cookies must be rewritten by the Web proxy server because
the browsers use the server name of the Web proxy server, not the
application servers.
1. The browser requests http://myapp.example.com.
2. The Web proxy server
On 7/19/08, jamanbo jamanbo [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
If the applications use Cookies, the
application Cookies must be rewritten by the Web proxy server because
the browsers use the server name of the Web proxy server, not the
application servers.
1. The browser requests
On 7/19/08, André Warnier [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am not the ultimate specialist here, but I am interested, because I'd
like to make sure too.
And there is still something that bothers me in the explanations above :
I assume that what you mean by accessing a site via a proxy is this :
On 7/19/08, André Warnier [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
From a recent thread originally dedicated to find out if a proxy server can
be really transparent, I'll first quote a summary from solprovider.
quote
I think the confusion is between an network proxy server and a Web
reverse proxy
On 7/19/08, Alberto García Gómez [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have this URL
http://www.server.com/index.php?article1.html
and work like that
http://www.server.com/?article1.html
But I really really need this
http://www.server.com/article1.html
And I need to work like previous URL and
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