i want to delete the unnecessary previous posts of mine, Can u tell me how
delete the requests and responses that we have posted


On Fri, Dec 13, 2013 at 2:54 AM, Charles W Buege <cbu...@moreycorp.com>wrote:

> Everyone -
>
> This is a request for education on proper terminology and I hope I'm
> asking this in the right place.  If I'm not, please feel free to point me
> in the right direction.
>
> I've been working with the Apache server (primary under CentOS, but some
> under Red Hat and on XAMPP stacks as well) and have been tasked with a
> project.
>
> Periodically, we need to have our web sites down for maintenane - updates,
> backups, etc.  What I've been told to do is find a way to have a 'front
> end' to our web sites so that, when they are down for maintenance, that
> then end-users will receive a message 'This site is down for maintenance
> till XX:XX AM/PM' or such.
>
> Here are my questions:
> - What would you call what I am trying to setup?  The reading I've done
> implies that what I really want to setup is a reverse proxy server.  Is
> that what I want to do?
> - If it isn't a reverse proxy I want to set up, what do I want to setup?
> - Of the different types of solutions available, I've been tasked to spend
> as little money as possible (some surprise, huh?) so I'd want to do this
> via open source solutions.  Does anyone have any
> suggestions/recommendations for what I could use for this?  I've read about
> using Nginx in front of Apache, I've heard of Squid, I've heard about
> Tomcat, but as I said I'm still pretty new to this and am more than willing
> to take any suggestions that anyone wants to send me.
> - Is this a type of 'clustering/high availabity' project I'm really
> looking at here?  I've been hearing those terms thrown about as well.
> - If anyone has any suggestions for where I can go from here to learn more
> about the proper terminology so I don't sound like a complete noob (even
> though in this case, I kinda am), I'll take that direction too.
>
> In case it makes any kind of a difference, the Apache instances are pretty
> simple - PHP, MySQL and that's about it - not very involved (for now).  I'm
> hoping that I can learn what/how to do this correctly and, when I'm ready
> to add more capabilities, that I'll be able to extrapolate out from there
> what I'd need to do.
>
> Thanks to any direction I can get from anyone!!
>
> Charles
> cbuege at moreycorp dot com - if you feel like e-mailing me directly!!
>
>
>
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-- 

Thanks & Regards,

Nagaraju K

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