Hi All.

I could have the proxying to work perfectly, using the awesome step-by-step
link at
https://devops.profitbricks.com/tutorials/configure-apache-as-a-reverse-proxy-using-mod_proxy-on-ubuntu/.
Whenever I opened a URL of type http://Intermediatary/path/to/url in
*Server*'s browser, the contents of page http://HTTP-Server/path/to/url
opened up.

Still, this requires the *Intermediatary* to have a public static
IP-Address.
Can this be done away with?

Will be grateful for any replies.


Thanks and Regards,
Ajay


On Wed, Mar 22, 2017 at 11:22 PM, Ajay Garg <ajaygargn...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Hi Rainer.
>
> Thanks for the help.
>
> I did some more googling, and (if I am not wrong), it seems
> https://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.4/mod/mod_proxy_http.html almost fits in
> our needs.
>
> We run mod_proxy on the *Intermediatary*.
> The end-user then opens a browser in *Server*, types in the
> hostname://path of the *Intermediatary*, and the mod_proxy then proxies the
> HTTP-stuff bi-directionally between the *HTTP-Server* and *Server*.
>
> My only concern, is that this solution needs the *Intermediatary* to have
> a public static IP.
> Is there a way objective can be achieved without needing to provide a
> public static IP to *Intermediatary*?
>
>
>
>
> On Wed, Mar 22, 2017 at 8:26 PM, Rainer Canavan <
> rainer.cana...@sevenval.com> wrote:
>
>> > Now, we require something like opening an IFrame on the Server, and
>> provide
>> > virtual access to the HTTP-Server (via Intermediatary), something like
>> what
>> > Teamviewer does. We have the ability to modify to Server and
>> Intermediatary,
>> > but not HTTP-Server in the general case.
>> >
>> > It would be great to have a Teamviewer-like experience, providing
>> access of
>> > the HTTP-Server on the Server (via Intermediatary as the
>> tunnelling-proxy).
>> > We are running Linux-flavours on Server and Intermediatary.
>>
>> I don't understand what half of your statements may exactly mean, but
>> this doesn't appear to be an apache httpd related request. I think
>> the dynamic proxy option of most ssh clients (-D for openssh), used
>> as a SOCKS proxy in your browser may solve your problem. If that
>> doesn't help, some sort of VPN tunnel may be an alternative.
>>
>> rainer
>>
>> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
>> To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@httpd.apache.org
>> For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@httpd.apache.org
>>
>>
>
>
> --
> Regards,
> Ajay
>



-- 
Regards,
Ajay

Reply via email to