You need to use a redirector helper to select which "backend" to send th
e requests to.
-- Henrik Nordstrom Squid Hacker Sebastian Graf wrote: > > Hi guys, > > I'm new to squid maybe my question is stupid. > > I have one webserver (machine) with two Apache installations > One runs on port 80 the other runs on 8080. I want to hide the > fact that one runs on 8080 (customers have firewall) so i tried to > use squid to accelerate the 8080. That works fine, but when > i try to access a page on the 80 server i get the message > sorry your page has moved to bla bla bla which is of course again > a page that squid will direct to the accelerated 8080. > > In other words what i want to do is if the user accesses a directory > like http://<my_server>/estore then have squid going to the 80 port > otherwise go to the 8080. > > Right now squid accelerates every call to the 8080 port... > > Is that possible > > TIA > > Sebastian > > -- > -------------------------------------------------- > Sebastian Graf -- Executive Vice President > PROMATIS Corp. > 3223 Crow Canyon Road, Suite 300 > San Ramon, CA 94583 > Phone: +1 (925) 904 0380 -- Fax: +1 (925) 904 0385 > mailto:sebastian.graf@PROMATIS.com > http://www.PROMATIS.com > > Building World-Class eBusiness Solutions: > http://www.get-INCOME.comReceived on Thu May 17 2001 - 01:25:21 MDT
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