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RE: OT: (ish) Web publishing question


  • To: ukha_d@xxxxxxx
  • Subject: RE: OT: (ish) Web publishing question
  • From: "Paul Gordon" <paul_gordon@xxxxxxx>
  • Date: Wed, 06 Mar 2002 20:38:53 +0000
  • Delivered-to: mailing list ukha_d@xxxxxxx
  • Mailing-list: list ukha_d@xxxxxxx; contact ukha_d-owner@xxxxxxx
  • Reply-to: ukha_d@xxxxxxx

a single port 80 connection would be nice, but is it *really* that
important? - if you control the firewall policy, you can open those ports
(to http only of course). For me, the important part was not *having* to
remember a whole bunch of non-standard port numbers for http, but rather
being able to use a friendly URL with "/server1" rather than
":84".

Paul G.



>From: "Ian Lowe" <ian@xxxxxxx>
>Reply-To: ukha_d@xxxxxxx
>To: <ukha_d@xxxxxxx>
>Subject: RE: [ukha_d] OT: (ish)  Web publishing question
>Date: Wed, 6 Mar 2002 00:14:06 -0000
>
>but this won't work..
>
>The server:port is just a nicer way of having the different ports
>accesible..
>you still need all of the ports open an directed through your firewall.
>
>I have also been looking for a solution to having lost of web
"servers"
>(Homeseer, IIS, Apache) accesibl from the outside world via a single
>port:80
>connection.
>
>not found one yet. :(
>


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