Nice! Thank you for answering! Em ter, 19 de fev de 2019 às 17:57, Jeremy Payne <[email protected]> escreveu:
> i've configured putty to send traffic through ATS, same should work for > FTP. > your FTP client will just have to support using a HTTP proxy. > > On Tue, Feb 19, 2019 at 2:47 PM Eric Chaves <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > Hi Jeremy, thanks replying. I'm still working to have a basic version > working on my AWS infrastructure (I'm having a hard time to work my way > around the logs, I confess) so I wasn't able to test much yet. =) > > > > Your point on manually setting the proxy on the my application's is > correct and are expected. > > > > Would you be able to confirm if the ATS knows how to handle the FTP > protocol, or is it HTTP "aware" only? > > > > Cheers, > > > > Em ter, 19 de fev de 2019 às 17:32, Jeremy Payne <[email protected]> > escreveu: > >> > >> CONNECT method should work here.. Have you tried that ? > >> Of course you'll have to explicitly set a proxy at the client end. > >> > >> > >> On Tue, Feb 19, 2019 at 12:46 PM Eric Chaves <[email protected]> wrote: > >> > > >> > Hi Folks, > >> > > >> > I'm new to traffic-server and I'd like to evaluate it to be used as a > non-cache forward proxy between my application servers and some 3rd > partners servers. My applications server are dynamically allocated (AWS EC2 > auto-scaled) but my partners services require us to reach them with a > single IP addres, hence the idea of using ATS. > >> > > >> > In my scenario one important feature is the ability to handle other > protcolos other than HTTP/S like FTP/S (and not required but desired SFTP). > >> > > >> > I've scouted the ATS docs but didn't found any specific reference for > those other protocols. > >> > > >> > If possible I would like to hear from more experienced users if ATS > is a good choice for this use case and if can handle other protocols than > HTTP. > >> > > >> > Thanks in advance for any help, > >> > > >> > Eric >
