On Fri, May 10, 2019 at 12:31:43PM -0400, cox123456a wrote:
Hi there,
> Thanks for the detailed explanation. I agree with your diagnostic.
> I really need a way to bring 80 to 8000 and make it work.
Another way to approach this could be to change your code. It would make
it more efficient (avoi
On Fri, May 10, 2019 at 12:31:43PM -0400, cox123456a wrote:
Hi there,
> I really need a way to bring 80 to 8000 and make it work.
I've not used it; but you could try "absolute_redirect off"
(http://nginx.org/r/absolute_redirect) and see if your clients are happy
with the response from that.
Ins
Added port 8000:
listen 8000 default_server;
Unfortunatelly It does not work. Same behaviour I'm out of ideas...
Posted at Nginx Forum:
https://forum.nginx.org/read.php?2,284120,284124#msg-284124
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Hi Francis,
Thanks for the detailed explanation. I agree with your diagnostic.
In fact I've tried to listen on port 8000 and it works properly. The problem
is that I cannot let this port open on LAN, just 80 due to security
requirements. And port 80 cannot be opened to the internet, so I need to
On Fri, May 10, 2019 at 07:57:14AM -0400, cox123456a wrote:
Hi there,
> When I click to change the module (from admin to analytics, for example),
> I'm loosing the port number:
> http://170.180.190.200:8000/admin => http://170.180.190.200/analytics (Page
> breaks as the port is missing)
You can
I've post this on SO but no solution after weeks, so I think here I have a
better chance as this is being critical to myself.
I have the following NGINX setup:
server {
listen 80 default_server;
root /var/www/serviceserver1;
index index.html index.htm;
location /api {
prox